Computer Drive User Manual
Table Of Contents
- 1.0 Scope 1
- 2.0 Standards, compliance and reference documents 3
- 3.0 General description 7
- 4.0 Performance characteristics 11
- 5.0 Reliability specifications 15
- 6.0 Physical/electrical specifications 23
- 6.1 AC power requirements 23
- 6.2 DC power requirements 23
- 6.3 Power dissipation 29
- 6.4 Environmental limits 32
- 6.4.1 Temperature 32
- 6.4.2 Relative humidity 32
- 6.4.3 Effective altitude (sea level) 33
- 6.4.4 Shock and vibration 33
- 6.4.5 Acoustics 35
- 6.4.6 Air cleanliness 35
- 6.4.7 Corrosive environment 35
- 6.4.8 European Union Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive 36
- 6.4.9 China Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive 36
- 6.4.10 Electromagnetic susceptibility 36
- 6.5 Mechanical specifications 37
- 7.0 Defect and error management 39
- 8.0 Installation 43
- 9.0 Interface requirements 47
- 9.1 FC-AL features 47
- 9.1.1 Fibre Channel link service frames 47
- 9.1.2 Fibre Channel task management functions 48
- 9.1.3 Fibre Channel task management responses 48
- 9.1.4 Fibre Channel port login 49
- 9.1.5 Fibre Channel port login accept 50
- 9.1.6 Fibre Channel Process Login 50
- 9.1.7 Fibre Channel Process Login Accept 51
- 9.1.8 Fibre Channel fabric login 51
- 9.1.9 Fibre Channel fabric accept login 52
- 9.1.10 Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop options 53
- 9.2 Dual port support 53
- 9.3 SCSI commands supported 54
- 9.4 Miscellaneous operating features and conditions 63
- 9.5 FC-AL physical interface 64
- 9.5.1 Physical characteristics 64
- 9.5.2 Connector requirements 65
- 9.5.3 Electrical description 65
- 9.5.4 Pin descriptions 65
- 9.5.5 FC-AL transmitters and receivers 66
- 9.5.6 Power 67
- 9.5.7 Fault LED Out 67
- 9.5.8 Active LED Out 68
- 9.5.9 Enable port bypass signals 68
- 9.5.10 Motor start controls 68
- 9.5.11 SEL_6 through SEL_0 ID lines 69
- 9.5.12 Device control codes 71
- 9.6 Signal characteristics 71
- 9.1 FC-AL features 47
- 10.0 Seagate Technology support services 75
- 1.0 Scope
- 2.0 Standards, compliance and reference documents
- 3.0 General description
- 4.0 Performance characteristics
- 5.0 Reliability specifications
- 6.0 Physical/electrical specifications
- 6.1 AC power requirements
- 6.2 DC power requirements
- 6.3 Power dissipation
- 6.4 Environmental limits
- 6.4.1 Temperature
- 6.4.2 Relative humidity
- 6.4.3 Effective altitude (sea level)
- 6.4.4 Shock and vibration
- 6.4.5 Acoustics
- 6.4.6 Air cleanliness
- 6.4.7 Corrosive environment
- 6.4.8 European Union Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive
- 6.4.9 China Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive
- 6.4.10 Electromagnetic susceptibility
- 6.5 Mechanical specifications
- 7.0 Defect and error management
- 8.0 Installation
- 9.0 Interface requirements
- 9.1 FC-AL features
- 9.1.1 Fibre Channel link service frames
- 9.1.2 Fibre Channel task management functions
- 9.1.3 Fibre Channel task management responses
- 9.1.4 Fibre Channel port login
- 9.1.5 Fibre Channel port login accept
- 9.1.6 Fibre Channel Process Login
- 9.1.7 Fibre Channel Process Login Accept
- 9.1.8 Fibre Channel fabric login
- 9.1.9 Fibre Channel fabric accept login
- 9.1.10 Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop options
- 9.2 Dual port support
- 9.3 SCSI commands supported
- 9.4 Miscellaneous operating features and conditions
- 9.5 FC-AL physical interface
- 9.5.1 Physical characteristics
- 9.5.2 Connector requirements
- 9.5.3 Electrical description
- 9.5.4 Pin descriptions
- 9.5.5 FC-AL transmitters and receivers
- 9.5.6 Power
- 9.5.7 Fault LED Out
- 9.5.8 Active LED Out
- 9.5.9 Enable port bypass signals
- 9.5.10 Motor start controls
- 9.5.11 SEL_6 through SEL_0 ID lines
- 9.5.12 Device control codes
- 9.6 Signal characteristics
- 9.1 FC-AL features
- 10.0 Seagate Technology support services

14 Cheetah NS 10K.2 FC Product Manual, Rev. B
4.5.1 Caching write data
Write caching is a write operation by the drive that makes use of a drive buffer storage area where the data to
be written to the medium is stored while the drive performs the Write command.
If read caching is enabled (RCD=0), then data written to the medium is retained in the cache to be made avail-
able for future read cache hits. The same buffer space and segmentation is used as set up for read functions.
The buffer segmentation scheme is set up or changed independently, having nothing to do with the state of
RCD. When a write command is issued, if RCD=0, the cache is first checked to see if any logical blocks that
are to be written are already stored in the cache from a previous read or write command. If there are, the
respective cache segments are cleared. The new data is cached for subsequent Read commands.
If the number of write data logical blocks exceed the size of the segment being written into, when the end of the
segment is reached, the data is written into the beginning of the same cache segment, overwriting the data that
was written there at the beginning of the operation; however, the drive does not overwrite data that has not yet
been written to the medium.
If write caching is enabled (WCE=1), then the drive may return Good status on a write command after the data
has been transferred into the cache, but before the data has been written to the medium. If an error occurs
while writing the data to the medium, and Good status has already been returned, a deferred error will be gen-
erated.
The Synchronize Cache command may be used to force the drive to write all cached write data to the medium.
Upon completion of a Synchronize Cache command, all data received from previous write commands will have
been written to the medium.
Tables 18 and 19 show the mode default settings for these drives.
4.5.2 Prefetch operation
If the Prefetch feature is enabled, data in contiguous logical blocks on the disk immediately beyond that which
was requested by a Read command are retrieved and stored in the buffer for immediate transfer from the buf-
fer to the host on subsequent Read commands that request those logical blocks (this is true even if cache
operation is disabled). Though the prefetch operation uses the buffer as a cache, finding the requested data in
the buffer is a prefetch hit, not a cache operation hit.
To enable Prefetch, use Mode Select page 08h, byte 12, bit 5 (Disable Read Ahead - DRA bit). DRA bit = 0
enables prefetch.
The drive does not use the Max Prefetch field (bytes 8 and 9) or the Prefetch Ceiling field (bytes 10 and 11).
When prefetch (read look-ahead) is enabled (enabled by DRA = 0), the drive enables prefetch of contiguous
blocks from the disk when it senses that a prefetch hit will likely occur. The drive disables prefetch when it
decides that a prefetch hit is not likely to occur.