Subject: Re: Does anyone know what the maximum hard drive
To: Andy Ball <ball@cyberspace.org>
From: Geoff Blake <geoff@palaemon.co.uk>
List: port-sparc
Date: 03/16/2002 18:16:05
On Sat, 16 Mar 2002, Andy Ball wrote:
> Hello Andrew!
>
> AB> The 160Mb/sec SCSI doesn't run at 160MHz because it is wider
> > than the 8 bits of the old sparcs...
>
> That's one of the reasons, the other is double-transition clocking:
> data is transferred on both the rising and falling edges (of the
> clock?), effectively doubling the maximum possible throughput for any
> given clock speed.
Do you mean that the data is valid at the +ve clock transition and
(next byte) at the -ve transition? OK I know that the data is NRZ so I
suppose that this is practical, just requires a phase skew between
clock & data :-)
> 40 MHz x 2 transfers per clock x 2 bytes per transfer = 160 Mb/S
>
> ...theoretical peak, I imagine individual disks are still slow
> enough not to saturate an Ultra160 bus.
That's what cache's are for :-)
>
> AB> Could you imagine trying to get reasonable propogation
> > characteristics at 160Mhz from unscreened ribbon cable?
>
> No thanks! ;-)
Can you imagine what such signals do to the RF spectrum :-(
Regards
Geoff
--
Geoff Blake Please reply to: Using Linux on
Chelmsford geoff (a) palaemon . co . uk Intel & NetBSD
Essex UK geoff @ g8gnz . ampr.org on Sun Sparc
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