Dell POWEREDGE R610 User Manual

Page 175

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Glossary

175

SAS — Serial-attached SCSI.
SATA — Serial Advanced Technology Attachment. A standard interface between the

system board and storage devices.
SCSI — Small computer system interface. An I/O bus interface.
SD card — Secure digital flash memory card.
SDDC — Single Device Data Correction.
SDRAM — Synchronous dynamic random-access memory.
sec — Second(s).
serial port — A legacy I/O port with a 9-pin connector that transfers data one bit at a

time and is most often used to connect a modem to the system.
service tag — A bar code label on the system used to identify it when you call Dell for

technical support.
SMART — Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology. Allows hard drives to

report errors and failures to the system BIOS and then display an error message on the

screen.
SMP — Symmetric multiprocessing. Used to describe a system that has two or more

processors connected via a high-bandwidth link and managed by an operating system,

where each processor has equal access to I/O devices.
SNMP — Simple Network Management Protocol. A standard interface that allows a

network manager to remotely monitor and manage workstations.
SSD — Solid State Drives.
striping — Disk striping writes data across three or more disks in an array, but only

uses a portion of the space on each disk. The amount of space used by a "stripe" is the

same on each disk used. A virtual disk may use several stripes on the same set of disks

in an array. See also guarding, mirroring, and RAID.
system board — As the main circuit board, the system board usually contains most of

your system’s integral components, such as the processor(s), RAM, controllers for

peripherals, and various ROM chips. Also referred to as a motherboard or planar.
system configuration information — Data stored in memory that tells a system what

hardware is installed and how the system should be configured for operation.
system memory — See RAM.
System Setup program — A BIOS-based program that allows you to configure your

system’s hardware and customize the system’s operation by setting features such as

password protection. Because the System Setup program is stored in NVRAM, any

settings remain in effect until you change them again.
TB — Terabyte(s); 1024 gigabytes or 1,099,511,627,776 bytes. However, when

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