HP C737990900 Technical Reference Manual page 167

Ultrium drives generation 2 scsi and fc drives volume 3: the scsi interface
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RAW
see
read-after-write
read-after-write
RAW improves data integrity by reading data immediately after it is written
and writing the data again if an error is found.
Not generally available for use with the drive. A reserved field should contain
reserved
all zero bits.
SCSI
Small Computer System Interface—a standard command specification and
command set that enables computers and peripherals to communicate with
each other. HP's Ultrium drives adhere to the SCSI specifications (see
Chapter 1, "Interface Implementation" in Volume 3, The SCSI Interface, of the
HP Ultrium Technical Reference Manual) and support all features required by
those standard.
Single-Ended and Low Voltage Differential SCSI
These terms define how the signals are transmitted along the cable.
With single-ended (SE) SCSI, each signal travels over a single wire and each
signal's value is determined by comparing the signal to a paired ground wire.
Signal quality tends to decrease over longer cable lengths or at increased
signal speed.
With low voltage differential (LVD) signaling, signals travel along two wires
and the difference in voltage between the wire pairs determines the signal
value. This enables faster data rates and longer cabling with less susceptibility
to noise than SE signaling and reduced power consumption.
Narrow and Wide, Fast, Ultra and Ultra2 SCSI
Narrow SCSI devices can transfer data one byte at-a-time (and are sometimes
called "8-bit SCSI" devices). They can conform to either the SCSI-2 or SCSI-3
protocols. They have a 50-pin connection to the SCSI bus.
Wide SCSI devices can transfer two bytes of data simultaneously ("16-bit
SCSI"). They usually have a single, 68-pin connection to the SCSI bus. (This
physical arrangement is part of the SCSI-3 specification.) They may support
either SCSI-2 or SCSI-3 protocols. Wide and narrow devices can
simultaneously be connected to the same bus without problem, provided
certain rules are followed.
Fast SCSI can transfer data at up to 20 MB/s wide, using a cable of up to 6
meters total length.
Ultra SCSI can transfer data at up to 40 MB/s wide, but the cable length
cannot exceed 3 meters (it is also known as "Fast20").
glossary 167

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