Terminating the bus, Scsi differential - lvd, Sas interface – Dell TL2000 User Manual

Page 48: Fibre channel interface, Interface, Fibre, Channel, Terminating, Scsi, Differential

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The

Medium

Changer

device

is

required

to

be

addressed

via

LUN

1

of

the

lowest-numbered

drive

position

of

each

logical

library.

The

Medium

Changer

device

may

additionally

be

addressed

via

LUN

1

of

other

drives

in

any

logical

library.

Any

bus

containing

a

Medium

Changer

device

via

LUN

1

of

a

drive

is

referred

to

as

a

control

and

data

path.

Any

other

bus

is

referred

to

as

a

data

path.

For

information

about

control

paths,

see

“Using

Multiple

Control

Paths”

on

page

3-2.

Terminating

the

Bus

The

SCSI

bus

and

all

of

the

wires

in

the

SCSI

cable

must

be

properly

terminated

according

to

the

SCSI

standard.

You

can

plug

an

external

terminator

into

one

of

the

SCSI

connectors.

A

terminator

must

be

installed

on

the

last

device

on

each

end

of

a

string

of

multiple

devices.

A

terminator

is

included

with

each

SCSI

Ultrium

Tape

Drive.

SCSI

Differential

-

LVD

LVD

tape

devices

support

a

bus

length

of

25

meters

(82

ft.)

point-to-point,

and

12

meters

(39

ft.)

using

multi-drop

interconnection

(daisy-chaining).

For

each

daisy-chained

device,

the

maximum

cable

length

must

be

reduced

by

0.5

meters

(1.6

ft.).

Important:

A

faster

bus

does

not

imply

that

an

attached

device

will

support

that

data

rate,

but

that

multiple

devices

can

operate

on

the

bus

at

that

maximum

speed.

For

a

detailed

table

of

SCSI

terms

and

related

specifications,

refer

to

the

SCSI

Trade

Association

Web

site

at

http://www.scsita.org/terms/scsiterms.html

.

To

ensure

best

performance,

if

possible,

avoid

daisy-chaining.

SAS

Interface

A

drive

sled

with

a

SAS

(Serial

Attached

SCSI)

interface

can

be

linked

directly

to

controllers.

SAS

is

a

performance

improvement

over

traditional

SCSI

because

SAS

enables

multiple

devices

(up

to

128)

of

different

sizes

and

types

to

be

connected

simultaneously

with

thinner

and

longer

cables;

its

full-duplex

signal

transmission

supports

3.0

Gb/s.

In

addition,

SAS

drives

can

be

hot-plugged.

SAS

drives

will

auto-negotiate

speed.

There

are

no

configurable

topologies

thus

no

feature

switches

associated

with

SAS.

The

SAS

Ultrium

3

and

Ultrium

4

Half

height

drive

sleds

are

single

ported

and

can

only

be

attached

to

one

host.

While

the

Ultrium

4

Full

height

drive

is

dual

ported

and

can

be

attached

to

a

maximum

of

two

hosts,

the

intention

of

the

second

port

is

for

redundancy

for

failover

rather

than

sharing.

Sharing

between

these

two

hosts

is

limited

to

active/passive

cluster

failover.

LAN-free

drive

sharing

is

not

supported.

Ultrium

3

and

Ultrium

4

SAS

drive

sleds

use

the

SFF-8088

connection

at

the

drive

sled

end

and

SFF-8088

or

SFF-8470

at

the

host

adapter

end.

Initially,

only

point-to-point

connections

are

supported.

Fibre

Channel

Interface

Fibre

Channel

allows

for

an

active

intelligent

interconnection

scheme,

called

a

Fabric,

to

connect

devices.

Everything

between

the

ports

on

Fibre

Channel

is

called

the

Fabric.

The

Fabric

is

most

often

a

switch

or

series

of

switches

that

takes

the

responsibility

for

routing.

The

library

allows

the

selection

of

the

following

Fibre

channel

port

behaviors:

3-8

Dell

PowerVault

TL2000

Tape

Library

and

TL4000

Tape

Library

User's

Guide

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