Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

Types of External Memory, Study notes of Software Engineering

An overview of the different types of external memory used in computing systems. It covers magnetic disks, solid-state drives (ssds), optical storage, and magnetic tape. The key characteristics, mechanisms, and organization of these storage technologies. It covers topics such as read/write mechanisms, data formatting, disk velocity, fixed vs. Movable read/write heads, removable vs. Non-removable disks, raid configurations, and the advantages and disadvantages of ssds compared to hard disk drives (hdds). The document also delves into the specifics of optical storage, including cd-roms, dvds, and the now-defunct hd-dvd format, as well as the use of magnetic tape for backup and archival purposes. Overall, this document offers a comprehensive understanding of the various external memory technologies that have been and are currently used in computing systems.

Typology: Study notes

2022/2023

Uploaded on 06/12/2024

doffannoel-sihotang
doffannoel-sihotang 🇮🇩

1 document

1 / 5

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
Types of External Memory
• Magnetic Disk
• Solid State Drive (SSD)
• Optical
• Magnetic Tape
Magnetic Disk
• Disk substrate coated with magnetizable material
• Substrate used to be aluminium
• Now glass is commonly used
Read and Write Mechanisms
-Recording & retrieval via head
-May be single read/write head or separate ones
-Head is stationary platter rotates
-Write through magnetic pulses
-Read (traditional) magnetic field moving relative to head
-Read (contemporary) separate read/write heads better magnetic field operation
Data Organization and Formatting
• Concentric rings or tracks
• Tracks divided into sectors
• Minimum block size read or written is one sector
Disk Velocity
• Bit near center of rotating disk passes fixed point slower than bit on outside of disk
• Rotate disk at constant angular velocity (CAV)
• Can use zones to increase capacity
Finding Sectors
• Must be able to identify start of track and sector
• Accomplished by "formatting" disk
• Gaps between tracks, sectors and fields needed to provide for less precise
tolerances on disk mechanism to rotate disks and position heads
Fixed Read/Write Heads
- One read write head per track
- Heads mounted on fixed ridged arm
- Rotating drum with magnetic surface
- Rarely used today
Movable Read/Write Heads
- One read write head per magnetic surface
- Mounted on a movable arm
- Requires mechanical movement that is very fast and
very precise
Removable Disk
- Can be removed from drive and replaced with another disk
- Provides drive with unlimited storage capacity
- Easy data transfer between systems
- Examples: "floppy disk" or Zip disks
- rarely used today
Non removable Disk
- Permanently mounted in the drive
- Typical hard disk in majority of computing systems
Multiple or Single Platters
pf3
pf4
pf5

Partial preview of the text

Download Types of External Memory and more Study notes Software Engineering in PDF only on Docsity!

Types of External Memory

  • Magnetic Disk
  • Solid State Drive (SSD)
  • Optical
  • Magnetic Tape Magnetic Disk
  • Disk substrate coated with magnetizable material
  • Substrate used to be aluminium
  • Now glass is commonly used Read and Write Mechanisms -Recording & retrieval via head -May be single read/write head or separate ones -Head is stationary platter rotates -Write through magnetic pulses -Read (traditional) magnetic field moving relative to head -Read (contemporary) separate read/write heads better magnetic field operation Data Organization and Formatting
  • Concentric rings or tracks
  • Tracks divided into sectors
  • Minimum block size read or written is one sector Disk Velocity
  • Bit near center of rotating disk passes fixed point slower than bit on outside of disk
  • Rotate disk at constant angular velocity (CAV)
  • Can use zones to increase capacity Finding Sectors
  • Must be able to identify start of track and sector
  • Accomplished by "formatting" disk
  • Gaps between tracks, sectors and fields needed to provide for less precise tolerances on disk mechanism to rotate disks and position heads Fixed Read/Write Heads
  • One read write head per track
  • Heads mounted on fixed ridged arm
  • Rotating drum with magnetic surface
  • Rarely used today Movable Read/Write Heads
  • One read write head per magnetic surface
  • Mounted on a movable arm
  • Requires mechanical movement that is very fast and very precise Removable Disk
  • Can be removed from drive and replaced with another disk
  • Provides drive with unlimited storage capacity
  • Easy data transfer between systems
  • Examples: "floppy disk" or Zip disks
  • rarely used today Non removable Disk
  • Permanently mounted in the drive
  • Typical hard disk in majority of computing systems Multiple or Single Platters
  • One or two heads per platter (one or two sided)
  • Heads are joined and aligned
  • Aligned tracks on each platter form a cylinder
  • Data is striped by cylinder Winchester Hard Disk
  • Developed by IBM in Winchester (USA)
  • Sealed unit
  • One or more platters (disks)
  • Heads fly on boundary layer of air as disk spins
  • Very small head to disk gap Flying Read/Write Head
  • Head is aerodynamic and floats on a thin layer of moving air caused by rotation of disk
  • Requires sealed unit to remove particles from air that could cause head to "crash" Winchester Hard Disk, cont'd
  • Term used today for sealed hard disk units that have flying heads
  • Fastest external storage with large capacity
  • Getting larger capacity all the time Speed
  • Seek time
  • Moving head to correct track
  • (Rotational) latency
  • Waiting for data to rotate under head
  • Access time = Seek + Latency
  • Transfer time
  • time to read desired sectors containing data RAID Redundant Array of Independent Disks
  • Set of physical disks viewed as single logical drive by O/S Data Striping the way that logically sequential data is mapped to multiple storage units RAID 0
  • No redundancy
  • Data striped across all disks
  • Round Robin striping
  • Used to increase access speed
  • One disk failure will cause loss of data RAID 1
  • Mirrored Disks
  • Data is striped across disks
  • 2 copies of each stripe on separate disks
  • Speed increase for read operations
  • Speed of write same as one disk
  • Recovery is simple
  • Expensive - need twice the disks for desired capacity RAID 2

SSD Organization Has on board controller interface to USB/PCIe/SATA etc. SSD Practical Issues 1

  • Flash memory organized in blocks
  • Storage can be erased only at the block level
  • Empty SSD can write to new areas without erasing (faster)
  • Full SSD must rewrite to same block (slow) SSD Practical Issues 2
  • Can increase write performance
  • Flash memory blocks becomes unusable after a number of write operations Optical Memory Rotating disk made of materials with light reflective properties Optical Storage CD-ROM
  • Originally for audio
  • Read by rotating disk reflecting laser back to sensor CD-ROM Drive Speeds
  • Constant linear velocity
  • Other speeds for digital use are quoted as multiples (e.g. x24) Random Access on CD-ROM
  • Difficult
  • Move head to rough position
  • Set correct speed
  • Read address
  • Adjust to required location
  • May take up to 0.5 seconds CD-ROM Pros
  • Large capacity (for its time)
  • Easy to mass produce
  • Removable
  • Robust CD-ROM Cons
  • Expensive for small runs
  • Slow
  • Read only Other Optical Storage
  • CD-Recordable (CD-R)
  • CD-RW DVD Optical Storage
  • Digital Video Disk - Movies
  • Digital Versatile Disk - PC DVD - technology
  • 8 cm or 12 cm diameter
  • 12 km track length
  • Multi-layer
  • Very high capacity (4.7G per layer)
  • Finally standardized DVD - Writable
  • Loads of trouble with standards
  • Three formats:

- DVD-R/RW

- DVD+R/RW

- DVD-RAM

HD-DVD (Loser)

  • Much higher capacity than DVD
  • 15GB single side single layer -Lost to Blu-Ray Magnetic Tape
  • Serial access
  • Slow
  • Very cheap •Used for backup & archive
  • First tapes had parallel tracks in one direction only Contemporary Magnetic Tape
  • Linear Tape-Open (LTO) Tape Drives 1990s Magnetic Tape Serpentine Reading and Writing -Has forward and reverse written tracks
  • Tape is first written from start to end of tape
  • Next set of tracks are written sequentially from end to start of tape