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What is SCSI? / which is now called "parallel SCSI"

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The "Small Computer System Interface", or "SCSI", is a standard parallel interface between computers and peripheral devices. Although it has been an official ANSI standard since 1986, its concept dates back to mainframe computers of the 1960's. The following is a brief description of SCSI and its capabilities.

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The primary objective of the SCSI interface is to provide host computers with independence from proprietary devices. With that as the case, different speed and vendor disk drives, tape drives, printers, communications devices, optical media drives, and other devices can be added to the host computers without requiring modifications to generic system hardware or software.

This is achieved by having a SCSI compliant controller within the host computer, and a SCSI compliant peripheral attached to it. Unique is the fact that each of those pieces of hardware has the ability to behave with intelligence as either/both a target, or initiator of information. The behavior is based on the SCSI standard and therefore consistent from machine to machine, and device to device.

Its name, however, is misleading. The term "Small" creates a misnomer in that SCSI peripherals can operate in both high end SPARC and other workstations running Solaris, Sun OS, or Windows NT as easily as in low end personal computers, or even mainframes.

With SCSI, the computer uses a standard set of commands to move data back and forth between host and peripheral. For the peripheral vendors, this means writing one driver for each operating system environment, as opposed to one driver for each computer vendor.

More importantly, what does this mean to the network administrator, system integrator, or end user? Workstations or personal computers can be configured, and reconfigured to have a certain set of SCSI peripherals working with any given machine, regardless of peripheral vendor. Any additional hardware device added to the machine does not require a laborious development cycle to provide software support - most software drivers are made available from the hardware vendors and can be obtained with the product.

As with any evolved standard, the newer capabilities and inclusions are performance based. Therefore, you can understand the evolution of SCSI through its three versions, (SCSI-I, SCSI-II, and SCSI-III progressively), with several categories within those versions - each category representing a different level of throughput performance, as well as different mechanisms of multi-vendor hardware peripheral connections, (i.e. serial, fibre, etc.).

Perhaps the most dramatic distinction in performance is the distinction between the Narrow (an 8 bit bus) versus Wide (a 16 bit bus) bus widths. Wide was incorporated in the SCSI-II specification and doubles the amount of data transferred in the same period of time as the Narrow.

The following briefly outlines some of the categories you will be exposed to when evaluating and attempting to choose SCSI devices:


FAST

SCSI FAST refers to transfer rates of 10 MB/Sec with a narrow device, and 20 MB/Sec transfer rate for a Wide/FAST device.


FAST-20 (Ultra)

SCSI FAST-20 refers to transfer rates of 20 MB/Sec with a narrow device, and 40 MB/Sec transfer rate for a ULTRA/Wide/FAST device.


FAST-40

SCSI Fast-40 refers to transfer rates of 40 MB/Sec with a narrow device, and 80 MB/Sec transfer rate for a wide device.


FAST-80

SCSI Fast-80 refers to transfer rates of 80 MB/Sec with a narrow device, and 160 MB/Sec transfer rate for a wide device.


Ultra320 Ultra320 provides burst R/W rates upto 320 MB/sec - and marks the top end of the parallel SCSI standard. The next part of the SCSI roadmap in performance terms is Serial Attached SCSI.

Having defined the above categories, it is clear to see that another advantage of SCSI is its speed. Depending on the SCSI controller and peripheral device, it potentially can provide extremely fast I/O between the host system and peripheral device, depending on the category mode of the SCSI devices, (FAST vs. FAST-20).

SCSI also allows multi-threaded I/O to occur at one time, enabling the handling of multiple outstanding I/O. This form of multitasking is referred to as Command Tagged Queuing. With the use of FAST Wide SCSI host adapters, multi-disk and RAID (redundant array of inexpensive disks) configurations can be arranged while maintaining high system performance and saving precious system bus slots. Disks can be connected to a single port using a daisy chain configuration, (controller connected to the first disk, first disk connected to the second, and so on). In some cases, depending on system configuration, a SCSI controller can support up to 15 devices. Systems can also be configured to boot from one of the SCSI disks if the controller is equipped with a bootable device PROM.

Expandability, flexibility, performance, ease of use, and maturity are several great reasons why the SCSI definition has longevity in the rapidly evolving computer industry. But for the end-user, it provides the ability to get the highest performance and compatibility out of existing and additional computer systems.


This article was first published in the 1997 edition of the SPARC Product Directory, and was last updated in December 2007.


...Later:- the popularity of the SCSI command set led to its being used in 2 spinoff standards called Internet SCSI (iSCSI) and Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) which were first conceived in 2001.

The direct attached connection - SAS has replaced parallel SCSI in new systems - although it is not as widely deployed as SATA.

Meanwhile iSCSI became a $1 billion / year market in 2007 - and is expected to replace other standards in the NAS market - due to its better performance, ease of use and scalability.

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SCSI - Small Computer System Interface:- is a high performance parallel interface for connected mass storage devices such as disk drives to a computer.

Originally specified using logic level (TTL) signals over ribbon cable to daisy chain upto 8 devices, this standard has been enhanced over the years to include newer voltage levels, higher speeds and more devices. The standard enables large amounts of data to be requested using a small number of intelligent commands. Dur to the popularity of this standard some manufacturers have developed extenders which enable connection over a long distance, converters such as IDE to SCSI, and routers which translate the SCSI interface and commands to fibre channel compatible signals.

Newer variations such as Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) and Internet SCSI (iSCSI) preserve compatibility at the SCSI driver and command set level, but offer different connection and routing methods. ...from Megabyte's Storage Dictionary
.
SAS disk duplicators for  server oems from ICS
Serial Attached SCSI - disk duplicators
from Intelligent Computer Solutions
.
read the serial scsi article by Adaptec
the Benefits of SAS (Serial Attached SCSI) for External Subsystems - article by Adaptec

This introduction to Serial Attached SCSI gives you an idea of the performance, compatibilities, applications and roadmap for this new directly attached disk connection standard. With throughput capability faster than 2Gbps Fibre-channel systems and faster than ultra320 SCSI - the new SAS products not only provide an upward migration path for parallel SCSI applications but also open the door to a new class of high performance high reliability enterprise systems. ...read the article, ...Adaptec profile, Serial Attached SCSI
.
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Serial Attached SCSI - Delivering Flexibility to the Data Center - article by LSI Logic and Maxtor

If you think you already know SAS because you know SATA and traditional SCSI then think again. Sometimes disruptive technologies wear an unassuming disguise. In fiction, Clark Kent, Frodo Baggins and Buffy Summers at first seem harmless, but we see them change into Superman, the Ring Bearer and the Slayer.

SAS too comes cloaked in plain garb - with a physical layer which looks a lot like SATA. But like the Incredible Hulk there are muscles rippling under that shirt - and you would be wrong to dismiss SAS so lightly. There's a lot more inside this interface than it says on the box as this informative article reveals. ...read the article, ...LSI Logic profile, ...Maxtor profile, Serial Attached SCSI

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TST
Serial Attached SCSI: New Interface, New Storage Rack? - article by Terabytes Server Storage Tech

Users will need more than just host bus adapters and disk drives to deploy the new Serial Attached SCSI technology. But the traditional way of designing the backplanes in storage racks could lead to high cost and not use the expansion and high availability aspects of SAS to best advantage. In this article one of the world's leading suppliers of computer chassis describes their award winning new backplane concept which gets the best out of the new SAS technology while reducing costs. . ...read the article, ...TST profile, Storage Boxes, Rackmount Storage
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