A SCSI Chain
The advantage of SCSI is that several peripherals can be daisy chained to one host adapter, using only one slot in the bus.
SCSI Signaling The total length of the SCSI chain is based on the signaling used. Following are the three types. Single Ended Single-ended SCSI allows devices to be attached to a total cable length up to six meters or only three meters, depending on type (see below). Single-ended signaling uses data and ground lines. High Voltage Differential Signaling (HVDS) Also called just "differential SCSI" because it was available before there was a second differential option, HVDS supports cable lengths up to 25 meters. In order to increase distance, differential signaling uses data low and data high lines and costs more than single-ended (see differential signaling). Low Voltage Differential Signaling (LVDS) Ultra2 SCSI introduced LVDS, which supports cable lengths up to only 12 meters. LVDS requires less power and is less costly than HVDS, because the transceivers are built into the controller chips. SCSI Versions The different SCSI types provide backward and forward compatibility. If a new SCSI host adapter is used with an older SCSI drive, the drive will run at its maximum speed. If an older SCSI host adapter is used with a newer drive, the drive will run at the host adapter's maximum speed. Following are the various SCSI types:
SCSI SPECIFICATIONS Tfr Bus Length In Bus Rate Meters For Width Max MB Device Types: Type (bits) Dev Sec SE LVD HVD Pins SCSI-1 8 8 5 6 12* 25 25 SCSI-2 8 8 5 6 12* 25 50 Fast SCSI 8 8 10 3 12* 25 50 Wide SCSI, aka Fast Wide SCSI 8 16 20 3 12* 25 68 Ultra SCSI 8 8 20 3 - - 50 Wide Ultra SCSI 16 16 40 - 12* 25 68 Wide Ultra SCSI 16 8 40 1.5 - - 68 Wide Ultra SCSI 16 4 40 3 - - 68 Ultra2 SCSI 8 8 40 - 12 25 50 Wide Ultra2 SCSI 16 16 80 - 12 25 68 Ultra3 SCSI, aka Ultra160 16 16 160 - 12 - 68 Ultra4 SCSI, aka Ultra320 16 16 320 - 12 - 68 Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) 1 16K 300 See SAS. 12* - LVD was not part of these specs; however, if all devices are LVD, 12 meters applies. If any device is single ended, then length in SE column applies. Information for this chart was obtained from the SCSI Trade Association (STA), San Francisco, CA (www.scsita.org).
ASPI and CAM The Advanced SCSI Programming Interface (ASPI) and Common Access Method (CAM) provide common software interfaces between drivers and SCSI host adapters. ASPI was developed by Adaptec, and CAM is an ANSI standard. Most SCSI products are ASPI or CAM compliant. Prior to ASPI and CAM, hooking up two SCSI devices often meant plugging in two host adapters, negating SCSI's advantage of connecting multiple peripherals. IDs, LUNs and Termination External SCSI devices have two ports, one for the incoming cable and another for the outgoing cable to the next device. An internal SCSI device has a single port that attaches to a ribbon cable with multiple connectors. Each device must be set to a unique ID number, which is normally done by flipping rotary switches on external devices or by setting jumpers on internal ones. The ID determines the device priority, which starts at 7 and goes to 0 and then from 15 to 8. The host adapter defaults to 7, the highest priority. SCAM Sets IDs Automatically A subset of Plug and Play, called "SCSI Configured Automatically" (SCAM), allows IDs to be set by software rather than manually. Both the host adapter and peripheral must support this. Logical Unit Numbers (LUNs) Each SCSI device can be further broken up into logical units, identified by logical unit numbers (LUNs) 0 to 7 for 8-bit devices and 0 to 15 for 16-bit devices. Although most SCSI drives contain only one disk inside and are addressed as LUN 0, optical disc libraries and RAID arrays contain multiple drives, each of which can be addressed independently via LUN numbers. See LUN. Termination The device at the end of a SCSI chain must be terminated by setting a switch or plugging a resistor module into the open port. Usually, host adapters default to terminated. If both internal and external devices are used, the host adapter termination must be removed, and termination must be applied to the ends of both chains.
Computer Desktop Encyclopedia THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY. All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.Copyright © 1981-2010 by Computer Language Company Inc. All rights reserved.
Computer Desktop Encyclopedia THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY. All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.Copyright © 1981-2010 by Computer Language Company Inc. All rights reserved.
Computer Desktop Encyclopedia THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY. All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.Copyright © 1981-2010 by Computer Language Company Inc. All rights reserved.
Computer Desktop Encyclopedia THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY. All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.Copyright © 1981-2010 by Computer Language Company Inc. All rights reserved.
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