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Revision as of 14:07, 25 October 2010
Serial ATA | |
Year created | 2003 |
---|---|
Supersedes | Parallel ATA (PATA) |
Speed | 1.5, 3.0, 6.0 Gbit/s |
Style | Serial |
Hotplugging interface | Yes[1] |
External interface | Yes (eSATA) |
Website | sata-io |
Serial ATA (SATA or Serial Advanced Technology Attachment) is a computer bus interface for connecting host bus adapters to mass storage devices such as hard disk drives and optical drives. Serial ATA was designed to replace the older ATA (AT Attachment) standard (also known as EIDE). It is able to use the same low level commands, but serial ATA host-adapters and devices communicate via a high-speed serial cable over two pairs of conductors. In contrast, the parallel ATA (the redesignation for the legacy ATA specifications) used 16 data conductors each operating at a much lower speed.
SATA offers several advantages over the older parallel ATA (PATA) interface: reduced cable-bulk and cost (reduced from 80 wires to seven), faster and more efficient data transfer, and hot swapping.
The SATA host adapter is integrated into almost all modern consumer laptop computers and desktop motherboards. As of 2009[update], SATA has replaced parallel ATA in most shipping consumer PCs. PATA remains in industrial and embedded applications dependent on CompactFlash storage although the new CFast storage standard will be based on SATA.[2][3]
SATA specification bodies
Serial ATA industry compatibility specifications originate from The Serial ATA International Organization (aka. SATA-IO, serialata.org). The SATA-IO group collaboratively creates, reviews, ratifies, and publishes the interoperability specifications, the test cases, and plug-fests. As with many other industry compatibility standards, the SATA content ownership is transferred to other industry bodies: primarily the INCITS T13subcommittee ATA, the INCITS T10 subcommittee (SCSI); a subgroup of T10 responsible for SAS. The complete specification from SATA-IO.[4] The remainder of this article will try to use the terminology and specifications of SATA-IO.
The SATA-IO succeeded in its mission of improving PATA. More than 1.1 billion SATA disk drives have been shipped from 2001 through 2008.[clarification needed] SATA’s market share in the desktop PC market is 99% in 2008. http://www.serialata.org/documents/SATA-Rev-30-Presentation.pdf
Features
Hotplug
The Serial ATA Spec, includes logic for SATA device hotplugging. Devices and motherboards that meet the interoperability spec are capable of hot plugging.
Advanced Host Controller Interface
As their standard interface, SATA controllers use the AHCI (Advanced Host Controller Interface), allowing advanced features of SATA such as hotplug and native command queuing (NCQ). If AHCI is not enabled by the motherboard and chipset, SATA controllers typically operate in "IDE emulation" mode, which does not allow features of devices to be accessed if the ATA/IDE standard does not support them.
Windows device drivers that are labeled as SATA are often running in IDE emulation mode unless they explicitly state that they are AHCI mode, in RAID mode, or a mode provided by a proprietary driver and command set that was designed to allow access to SATA's advanced features before AHCI became popular. Modern versions of Microsoft Windows, FreeBSD, Linux with version 2.6.19 onward,[5] as well as Solaris and OpenSolaris include support for AHCI, but older OSes such as Windows XP do not. Even in those instances a proprietary driver may have been created for a specific chipset, such as Intel's.[6]
Revisions
SATA Revision 1.0 (SATA 1.5 Gbit/s)
First-generation SATA interfaces, now known as SATA 1.5 Gbit/s, communicate at a rate of 1.5 Gbit/s. Taking 8b/10b encoding overhead into account, they have an actual uncoded transfer rate of 1.2 Gbit/s (150 MB/s). The theoretical burst throughput of SATA 1.5 Gbit/s is similar to that of PATA/133, but newer SATA devices offer enhancements such as NCQ, which improve performance in a multitasking environment.
During the initial period after SATA 1.5 Gbit/s finalization, adapter and drive manufacturers used a "bridge chip" to convert existing PATA designs for use with the SATA interface.[citation needed] Bridged drives have a SATA connector, may include either or both kinds of power connectors, and, in general, perform identically to their PATA equivalents. Most lack support for some SATA-specific features such as NCQ. Native SATA products quickly eclipsed bridged products with the introduction of the second generation of SATA drives.[citation needed]
As of April 2010 mechanical hard disk drives can transfer data at up to 157 MB/s,[7] which is beyond the capabilities of the older PATA/133 specification and also exceeds a SATA 1.5 Gbit/s link. High-performance flash drives can transfer data at up to 308 MB/s which exceeds a SATA 3 Gbit/s link.[8]
SATA Revision 2.0 (SATA 3 Gbit/s)
Second generation SATA interfaces running at 3.0 Gbit/s are shipping in high volume as of 2010[update], and prevalent in all[citation needed] SATA disk drives and the majority of PC and server chipsets. With a native transfer rate of 3.0 Gbit/s, and taking 8b/10b encoding into account, the maximum uncoded transfer rate is 2.4 Gbit/s (300 MB/s). The theoretical burst throughput of SATA 3.0 Gbit/s is roughly double that of PATA/133. In addition, SATA devices offer enhancements such as NCQ that improve performance in a multitasking environment.
All SATA data cables meeting the SATA spec are rated for 3.0 Gbit/s and will handle current mechanical drives without any loss of sustained and burst data transfer performance. However, high-performance flash drives are approaching SATA 3 Gbit/s transfer rate, and this is being addressed with the SATA 6 Gbit/s interoperability standard.
SATA Revision 3.0 (SATA 6 Gbit/s)
Serial ATA International Organization presented the draft specification of SATA 6 Gbit/s physical layer in July 2008,[9] and ratified its physical layer specification on August 18, 2008.[10] The full 3.0 standard (peak throughput about 600 MB/s (10b/8b coding plus 8 bit to one byte, without the protocol, or encoding overhead) was released on May 27, 2009.[11] While even the fastest conventional hard disk drives can barely saturate the original SATA 1.5 Gbit/s bandwidth, Solid-State Drives have already saturated the SATA 3 Gbit/s limit at 250 MB/s net read speed. Ten channels of fast flash can reach well over 500 MB/s with new ONFI drives, so a move from SATA 3 Gbit/s to SATA 6 Gbit/s would benefit the flash read speeds. As for the standard hard disks, the reads from their built-in DRAM cache will end up faster across the new interface.[12] SATA 6 Gbit/s hard drives and motherboards are now shipping from several suppliers.
The new specification contains the following changes:
- 6 Gbit/s for scalable performance when used with SSDs
- Continued compatibility with SAS, including SAS 6 Gbit/s. "A SAS domain may support attachment to and control of unmodified SATA devices connected directly into the SAS domain using the Serial ATA Tunneled Protocol (STP)" from the SATA_Revision_3_0_Gold specification.
- Isochronous Streaming command Native Command Queuing (NCQ) streaming command to enable isochronous quality of service data transfers for streaming digital content applications.
- An NCQ Management feature that helps optimize performance by enabling host processing and management of outstanding NCQ commands.
- Improved power management capabilities.
- A small low insertion force (LIF) connector for more compact 1.8-inch storage devices.
- A connector designed to accommodate 7 mm optical disk drives for thinner and lighter notebooks.
- Alignment with the INCITS ATA8-ACS standard.
In general, the enhancements are aimed at improving quality of service for video streaming and high-priority interrupts. In addition, the standard continues to support distances up to a meter. The new speeds may require higher power consumption for supporting chips, factors that new process technologies and power management techniques are expected to mitigate. The new specification can use existing SATA cables and connectors, although some OEMs are expected to upgrade host connectors for the higher speeds.[13] Also, the new standard is backwards compatible with SATA 3 Gbit/s.[14]
eSATA
Standardized in 2004, eSATA (e=external) provides a variant of SATA meant for external connectivity. It has revised electrical requirements in addition to incompatible cables and connectors:
- Minimum transmit potential increased: Range is 500–600 mV instead of 400–600 mV.
- Minimum receive potential decreased: Range is 240–600 mV instead of 325–600 mV.
- Identical protocol and logical signaling (link/transport-layer and above), allowing native SATA devices to be deployed in external enclosures with minimal modification
- Maximum cable length of 2 metres (6.6 ft) (USB and FireWire allow longer distances.)
- The external cable connector equates to a shielded version of the connector specified in SATA 1.0a with these basic differences:
- The external connector has no "L"-shaped key, and the guide features are vertically offset and reduced in size. This prevents the use of unshielded internal cables in external applications and vice-versa.
- To prevent ESD damage, the design increased insertion depth from 5 mm to 6.6 mm and the contacts are mounted farther back in both the receptacle and plug.
- To provide EMI protection and meet FCC and CE emission requirements, the cable has an extra layer of shielding, and the connectors have metal contact-points.
- The connector shield has springs as retention features built in on both the top and bottom surfaces.
- The external connector and cable have a design-life of over five thousand insertions and removals, whereas the internal connector is specified to withstand only fifty.
Aimed at the consumer market, eSATA enters an external storage market already served by the USB and FireWire interfaces. Most external hard-disk-drive cases with FireWire or USB interfaces use either PATA or SATA drives and "bridges" to translate between the drives' interfaces and the enclosures' external ports, and this bridging incurs some inefficiency. Some single disks can transfer 157 MB/s during real use,[7] about four times the maximum transfer rate of USB 2.0 or FireWire 400 (IEEE 1394a) and almost twice as fast as the maximum transfer rate of FireWire 800, though the S3200 FireWire 1394b spec reaches ~400 MB/s (3.2 Gbit/s). Finally, some low-level drive features, such as S.M.A.R.T., may not operate through some USB [2] or FireWire or USB+FireWire bridges. eSATA does not suffer from these issues provided that the controller manufacturer (and its drivers) presents eSATA drives as ATA devices, rather than as "SCSI" devices (as has been common with Silicon Image, JMicron, and NVIDIA nForce drivers for Windows Vista); In those cases, even SATA drives will not have low-level features accessible. USB 3.0's 4.8 Gbit/s and Firewire's future 6.4 Gb/s (768 MB/s) will be faster than eSATA I, but the eSATA version of SATA 6G will operate at 6.0 Gb/s (the term SATA III is being eschewed by the SATA-IO to avoid confusion with SATA II 3.0 Gbit/s, which was colloquially referred to as "SATA 3G" [bps] or "SATA 300" [MB/s] since 1.5 Gbit/s SATA I and 1.5 Gbit/s SATA II were referred to as both "SATA 1.5G" [b/s] or "SATA 150" [MB/s]). Therefore, they will operate at negligible differences of each other.[15]
eSATA can be differentiated from USB 2.0 and FireWire external storage for several reasons. As of early 2008, the vast majority of mass-market computers have USB ports and many computers and consumer electronic appliances have FireWire ports, but few devices have external SATA connectors. For small form-factor devices (such as external 2.5-inch (64 mm) disks), a PC-hosted USB or FireWire link supplies sufficient power to operate the device. Where a PC-hosted port is concerned, eSATA connectors cannot supply power, and would therefore be more cumbersome to use. Note that this problem has been solved by the introduction of eSATAp.[16] Some e-sata ports double as eSATA/USB.
Owners of desktop computers that lack a built-in eSATA interface can upgrade them with the installation of an eSATA host bus adapter (HBA), while notebooks can be upgraded with Cardbus[17] or ExpressCard[18] versions of an eSATA HBA. With passive adapters, the maximum cable length is reduced to 1 metre (3.3 ft) due to the absence of compliant eSATA signal-levels. Full SATA speed for external disks (115 MB/s) have been measured with external RAID enclosures.[citation needed]
eSATAp
eSATAp is also known as Power over eSATA or eSATA/USB Combo. eSATAp port combines the strength of both eSATA (high speed) and USB (compatibility) into a single port. eSATAp devices are now capable of being self powered. On a desktop workstation, eSATAp port can supply 12 V to power up a 3.5" hard disk drive (HDD) or a 5.25" DVD-RW without needing separate power source as compared to eSATA and USB 2. On a notebook eSATAp port can supply 5 V to power up a 2.5" HDD/SSD as compared to eSATA. Many notebooks are now equipped with this combo port. A list of notebooks with this new port is available here [3]
eSATAp can be implemented in all machines with a spare SATA port. These machines include PC notebooks, desktops, Apple Mac Pro, and Linux or Unix servers. This makes eSATAp an easy, economical, cross platform solution for external storage.
Pre-standard implementations
- Prior to the final eSATA 3 Gbit/s specification, a number of products existed designed for external connections of SATA drives. Some of these use the internal SATA connector or even connectors designed for other interface specifications, such as FireWire. These products are not eSATA compliant. The final eSATA specification features a specific connector designed for rough handling, similar to the regular SATA connector, but with reinforcements in both the male and female sides, inspired by the USB connector. eSATA resists inadvertent unplugging, and can withstand yanking or wiggling, which could break a male SATA connector (the hard-drive or host adapter, usually fitted inside the computer). With an eSATA connector, considerably more force is needed to damage the connector, and if it does break it is likely to be the female side, on the cable itself, which is relatively easy to replace.[citation needed]
- Prior to the final eSATA 6 Gbit/s specification many add-on cards and some motherboards advertise eSATA 6 Gbit/s support because they have 6 Gbit/s SATA 3.0 controllers for internal-only solutions. Those implementations are non standard and eSATA 6 Gbit/s requirements will be ratified in the upcoming SATA 3.1 specification.[19] These products might not be eSATA 6 Gbit/s compliant.
Terminology
The name SATA II has become synonymous with the 3 Gbit/s standard. In order to provide the industry with consistent terminology, the SATA-IO has compiled a set of marketing guidelines for the third revision of the specification.
- The SATA 6 Gbit/s specification should be called Serial ATA International Organization: Serial ATA Revision 3.0.
- The technology itself is to be referred to as SATA 6 Gb/s.
- A product using this standard should be called the SATA 6 Gb/s [product name].
Using the terms SATA III or SATA 3.0 to refer to a SATA 6 Gbit/s product, is unclear and not preferred. SATA-IO has provided a guideline to foster consistent marketing terminology across the industry.[20]
Cables, connectors, and ports
Connectors and cables present the most visible differences between SATA and parallel ATA drives. Unlike PATA, the same connectors are used on 3.5-inch (89 mm) SATA hard disks for desktop and server computers and 2.5-inch (64 mm) disks for portable or small computers; this allows 2.5-inch (64 mm) drives to be used in desktop computers with only a mounting bracket and no wiring adapter. Smaller disks may use the mini-SATA spec, suitable for small-form-factor Serial ATA drives and mini SSDs.[21]
There is a special connector (eSATA) specified for external devices, and an optionally implemented provision for clips to hold internal connectors firmly in place. SATA drives may be plugged into SAS controllers and communicate on the same physical cable as native SAS disks, but SATA controllers cannot handle SAS disks.
There are SATA ports (on motherboards of a PC) that can use SATA data cable with locks or clips, thus reducing the chance of accidentally unplugging while the PC is turned on. So does the same with SATA power connector and SATA data connector connected to a SATA HDD or SATA optical drive. Also, there is a right-angled connector on one end of some SATA data cables, which can be used when connecting to a SATA HDD or SATA optical drive.
Data
Pin # | Function |
---|---|
1 | Ground |
2 | A+ (transmit) |
3 | A− (transmit) |
4 | Ground |
5 | B− (receive) |
6 | B+ (receive) |
7 | Ground |
8 | Coding notch |
A 7-pin Serial ATA right-angle data cable. |
The SATA standard defines a data cable with seven conductors (3 grounds and 4 active data lines in two pairs) and 8 mm wide wafer connectors on each end. SATA cables can have lengths up to 1 metre (3.3 ft), and connect one motherboard socket to one hard drive. PATA ribbon cables, in comparison, connect one motherboard socket to one or two hard drives, carry either 40 or 80 wires, and are limited to 45 centimetres (18 in) in length by the PATA specification (however, cables up to 90 centimetres (35 in) are readily available). Thus, SATA connectors and cables are easier to fit in closed spaces, and reduce obstructions to air cooling. They are more susceptible to accidental unplugging and breakage than PATA, but cables can be purchased that have a locking feature, whereby a small (usually metal) spring holds the plug in the socket.
One of the problems associated with the transmission of data at high speed over electrical connections is described as noise, which is due to electrical coupling between data circuits and other circuits. As a result, the data circuits can both affect other circuits, and be affected by them. Designers use a number of techniques to reduce the undesirable effects of such unintentional coupling. One such technique used in SATA links is differential signaling. This is an enhancement over PATA, which uses single-ended signaling. Some PATA cables use 80 wires, where only 40 wires carry signals.
Power supply
Standard connector
Pin # | Mating | Function | |
---|---|---|---|
— | Coding notch | ||
1 | 3rd | 3.3 V | |
2 | 3rd | ||
3 | 2nd | ||
4 | 1st | Ground | |
5 | 2nd | ||
6 | 2nd | ||
7 | 2nd | 5 V | |
8 | 3rd | ||
9 | 3rd | ||
10 | 2nd | Ground | |
11 | 3rd | Staggered spinup/activity (in supporting drives) | |
12 | 1st | Ground | |
13 | 2nd | 12 V | |
14 | 3rd | ||
15 | 3rd | ||
A 15-pin Serial ATA power receptacle. This connector does not provide the extended pins 4 and 12 needed for hot-plugging.[22] |
The SATA standard specifies a different power connector than the decades-old four-pin Molex connector found on pre-SATA devices. Like the data cable, it is wafer-based, but its wider 15-pin shape prevents accidental mis-identification and forced insertion of the wrong connector type. Native SATA devices favor the SATA power-connector, although some early SATA drives retained older 4-pin Molex in addition to the SATA power connector.
SATA features more pins than the traditional connector for several reasons:
- A third voltage is supplied, 3.3 V, in addition to the traditional 5 V and 12 V.
- Each voltage transmits through three pins ganged together, because the small contacts by themselves cannot supply sufficient current for some devices. (Each pin should be able to carry 1.5 A.)
- Five pins ganged together provide ground.
- For each of the three voltages, one of the three pins serves for hotplugging. The ground pins and power pins 3, 7, and 13 are longer on the plug (located on the SATA device) so they will connect first. A special hot-plug receptacle (on the cable or a backplane) can connect ground pins 4 and 12 first.
- Pin 11 can function for staggered spinup, activity indication, or nothing. Staggered spinup is used to prevent many drives from spinning up simultaneously, as this may draw too much power. Activity is an indication of whether the drive is busy, and is intended to give feedback to the user through an LED.
Adapters that can convert a 4-pin Molex connector to a SATA power connector exist. However, because the 4-pin Molex connectors do not provide 3.3 V power, these adapters provide only 5 V and 12 V power and leave the 3.3 V lines unconnected. This precludes the use of such adapters with drives that require 3.3 V power. Some 4-pin Molex to SATA power connectors have electronics included in the connector to also provide the 3.3 V power. Understanding this, drive manufacturers have largely left the 3.3 V power lines unused.
Slimline connector
SATA 2.6 first defined the slimline connector, intended for smaller form-factors; e.g., notebook optical drives.
Pin # | Function | |
---|---|---|
1 | Device presence | |
2 | 5 V | |
3 | ||
4 | Manufacturing diagnostic | |
5 | Ground | |
6 |
Micro connector
The micro connector originated with SATA 2.6. It is intended for 1.8-inch (46 mm) hard drives. There is also a micro data connector, which is similar to the standard data connector, but is slightly thinner.
Pin # | Function | |
---|---|---|
1 | 3.3 V | |
2 | ||
3 | Ground | |
4 | ||
5 | 5 V | |
6 | ||
7 | Reserved | |
8 | Vendor specific | |
9 |
Protocol
Topology
SATA uses a point-to-point architecture. The connection between the controller and the storage device is direct.
Modern[update] PC systems usually have a SATA controller on the motherboard, or installed in a PCI or PCI Express slot. Most SATA controllers have multiple SATA ports and can be connected to multiple storage devices. There are also port expanders or multipliers that allow multiple storage devices to be connected to a single SATA controller port.
Encoding
Physical transmission uses a logic encoding known as 8b/10b encoding. This scheme eliminates the need to send a separate clock signal with the data stream. The stream itself contains necessary synchronization information that allows for SATA host/drive to extract clocking. Use of 8b/10b encoding means the stream is also DC-balanced, which allows the signals to be AC-coupled.
Separate point-to-point AC-coupled LVDS links are used for physical transmission between host and drive.
Backward and forward compatibility
SATA and PATA
At the device level, SATA and PATA (Parallel AT Attachment) devices remain completely incompatible—they cannot be interconnected. At the application level, SATA devices can be specified to look and act like PATA devices.[23] Many motherboards offer a "legacy mode" option, which makes SATA drives appear to the OS, like PATA drives on a standard controller. This eases OS installation by not requiring a specific driver to be loaded during setup but sacrifices support for some features of SATA and, in general, disables some of the boards' PATA or SATA ports, since the standard PATA controller interface supports only 4 drives. (Often which ports are disabled is configurable.)
The common heritage of the ATA command set has enabled the proliferation of low-cost PATA to SATA bridge-chips. Bridge-chips were widely used on PATA drives (before the completion of native SATA drives) as well as standalone "dongles." When attached to a PATA drive, a device-side dongle allows the PATA drive to function as a SATA drive. Host-side dongles allow a motherboard PATA port to function as a SATA host port.
The market has produced powered enclosures for both PATA and SATA drives that interface to the PC through USB, Firewire or eSATA, with the restrictions noted above. PCI cards with a SATA connector exist that allow SATA drives to connect to legacy systems without SATA connectors.
SATA 1.5 Gbit/s, SATA 3 Gbit/s and SATA 6 Gbit/s
The designers of SATA aimed for backward and forward compatibility with future revisions of the SATA standard.[24][valid reference needed, this one is not valid any more]
According to the hard drive manufacturer Maxtor, motherboard host controllers using the VIA and SIS chipsets VT8237, VT8237R, VT6420, VT6421L, SIS760, SIS964 found on the ECS 755-A2 manufactured in 2003, do not support SATA 3 Gbit/s drives. Additionally, these host controllers do not support SATA 3 Gbit/s optical disc drives. To address interoperability problems, the largest hard drive manufacturer, Seagate/Maxtor, has added a user-accessible jumper-switch known as the Force 150, to switch between 150 MB/s and 300 MB/s operation.[21] Users with a SATA 1.5 Gbit/s motherboard with one of the listed chipsets should either buy an ordinary SATA 1.5 Gbit/s hard disk, buy a SATA 3 Gbit/s hard disk with the user-accessible jumper, or buy a PCI or PCI-E card to add full SATA 3 Gbit/s capability and compatibility. Western Digital uses a jumper setting called OPT1 Enabled to force 150 MB/s data transfer speed. OPT1 is used by putting the jumper on pins 5 & 6.
Comparisons with other interfaces
SATA and SCSI
SCSI uses a more complex bus, usually resulting in higher manufacturing costs. SCSI buses also allow connection of several drives on one shared channel, whereas SATA allows one drive per channel, unless using a port multiplier.
SATA 3 Gbit/s offers a maximum bandwidth of 300 MB/s per device compared to SCSI with a maximum of 640 MB/s. Also, SCSI drives provide greater sustained throughput than SATA drives because of disconnect-reconnect and aggregating performance. In general, SATA devices link compatibly to SAS enclosures and adapters, whereas SCSI devices cannot be directly connected to a SATA bus.
SCSI, SAS, and fibre-channel (FC) drives are typically more expensive so they are traditionally used in servers and disk arrays where the added cost is justifiable. Inexpensive ATA and SATA drives evolved in the home-computer market, hence there is a view that they are less reliable. As those two worlds overlapped, the subject of reliability became somewhat controversial. Note that, in general, the failure rate of a disk drive is related to the quality of its heads, platters and supporting manufacturing processes, not to its interface.
Serial ATA in the Enterprise has increased from 21.6% in 2006 to 27.6% in 2008. http://www.serialata.org/documents/SATA-Rev-30-Presentation.pdf
SATA in comparison to other buses
Name | Raw bandwidth (Mbit/s) | Transfer speed (MByte/s) | Max. cable length (m) | Power provided | Devices per Channel |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
eSATA | 3,000 | 300[25] | 2 with eSATA HBA (1 with passive adapter) | No | 1 (15 with port multiplier) |
eSATAp | 5 V/12 V[26] | ||||
SATA 600 | 6,000 | 600[25] | 1 | No | |
SATA 300 | 3,000 | 300[25] | |||
SATA 150 | 1,500 | 150[25] | 1 per line | ||
PATA 133 | 1,064 | 133.5 | 0.46 (18 in) | No | 2 |
SAS 600 | 6,000 | 600[25] | 10 | No | 1 (>65k with expanders) |
SAS 300 | 3,000 | 300[25] | |||
SAS 150 | 1,500 | 150[25] | |||
FireWire 3200 | 3,144 | 393 | 100 (more with special cables) | 15 W, 12–25 V | 63 (with hub) |
FireWire 800 | 786 | 98.25 | 100[27] | ||
FireWire 400 | 393 | 49.13 | 4.5[27][28] | ||
USB 3.0* | 4,000 | 400[25] | 3[29] | 4.5 W, 5 V | 127 (with hub)[29] |
USB 2.0 | 480 | 60 | 5[30] | 2.5 W, 5 V | |
USB 1.0 | 12 | 1.5 | 3 | Yes | |
SCSI Ultra-320 | 2,560 | 320 | 12 | No | 15 (plus the HBA) |
Fibre Channel over optic fiber |
10,520 | 2,000 | 2–50,000 | No | 126 (16,777,216 with switches) |
Fibre Channel over copper cable |
4,000 | 400 | 12 | ||
InfiniBand Quad Rate |
10,000 | 1,000 | 5 (copper)[31][32]
<10,000 (fiber) |
No | 1 with point to point Many with switched fabric |
Light Peak | 10,000 | 1,250 | 100 | No | Many |
- * USB 3.0 specification released to hardware vendors 17 November 2008.
Unlike PATA, both SATA and eSATA support hot-swapping by design. However, this feature requires proper support at the host, device (drive), and operating-system level. In general, all SATA devices (drives) support hot-swapping (due to the requirements on the device-side), also most SATA host adapters support this command.[1]
SCSI-3 devices with SCA-2 connectors are designed for hot-swapping. Many server and RAID systems provide hardware support for transparent hot-swapping. The designers of the SCSI standard prior to SCA-2 connectors did not target hot-swapping, but, in practice, most RAID implementations support hot-swapping of hard disks.
Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) is designed for hot-swapping.
Development tools
When developing and/or troubleshooting the Serial ATA bus, examination of hardware signals can be very important to find problems. Logic analyzers and bus analyzers are tools which collect, analyze, decode, store signals so people can view the high-speed waveforms at their leisure.
See also
- libATA
- Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI)
- AT Attachment (ATA)
- FATA
- Native Command Queuing (NCQ)
- TRIM (SSD command)
- List of device bandwidths
Notes and references
- ^ a b "Software status - ata Wiki". Ata.wiki.kernel.org. 2008-08-17. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ Donald Melanson (25 February 2008). "CFast CompactFlash cards now said to be coming in "18 to 24 months"". Engadget. Retrieved 19 March 2009.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (help) - ^ "Pretec release CFast card with SATA interface". DPReview. 8 January 2009. Retrieved 19 March 2009.
- ^ "ATA-ATAPI.COM Serial ATA (SATA)". Retrieved 29 January 2009.
- ^ "Serial ATA (SATA) Linux hardware/driver status report". Linux-ata.org. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ http://www.intel.com/support/chipsets/imst/sb/CS-020825.htm
- ^ a b Patrick Schmid and Achim Roos (2010-04-06). "VelociRaptor Returns: 6Gb/s, 600GB, And 10,000 RPM". tomshardware.com. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
- ^ Patrick Schmid and Achim Roos (2010-04-13). "Spring 2010 Solid State Drive Roundup, Part 2". tomshardware.com. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
- ^ "New SATA Spec Will Double Data Transfer Rates to 6 Gbit/s" (PDF) (Press release). SATA-IO. 18 August 2008. Retrieved 13 July 2009.
- ^ "SATA Revision 3.0". SATA-IO. 27 May 2009. Retrieved 4 December 2009.
- ^ "SATA-IO Releases SATA Revision 3.0 Specification" (PDF) (Press release). Serial ATA International Organization. May 27, 2009. Retrieved 3 July 2009.
- ^ "IDF Fall 2008 coverage". The Inquirer. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ "EETimes news report". Eetimes.com. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ "SATA-IO Specifications and Naming Conventions". Sata-io.org. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ "Questions about the indicators of health/performance (in percent)". HDDlife. Retrieved 29 August 2007.
- ^ "External Serial ATA" (PDF). Silicon Image, Inc. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
- ^ "CardBus SATA adapter". Addonics.com. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ "ExpressCard SATA adapter". Addonics.com. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ [1]
- ^ http://www.serialata.org/developers/naming_guidelines.asp
- ^ "Get ready for mini-SATA". The Tech Report. 2009-09-21. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ https://raid.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Hardware_issues#Hotplug_support_by_SATA.2FSAS_cables
- ^ "A comparison with Ultra ATA Technology" (PDF). SATA-IO. Retrieved 12 July 2007.
- ^ Serial ATA - Next Generation Storage Interface Hitachi Global Storage Technologies.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Technologies That Use 8b/10b Encoding".
- ^ "eSATAp Application". Delock.de. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
- ^ a b "FireWire Developer Note: FireWire Concepts". Apple Developer Connection. Retrieved 13 July 2009.
- ^ 16 cables can be daisy chained up to 72 m
- ^ a b Frenzel, Louis E. (September 25, 2008). "USB 3.0 Protocol Analyzer Jumpstarts 4.8-Gbit/s I/O Projects". Electronic Design. Retrieved 3 July 2009.
- ^ USB hubs can be daisy chained up to 25 m
- ^ Minich, Makia (25 June 2007). "Infiniband Based Cable Comparison" (PDF). Retrieved 11 February 2008.[dead link]
- ^ Feldman, Michael (17 July 2007). "Optical Cables Light Up InfiniBand". HPCwire. Tabor Publications & Events. p. 1. Retrieved 11 February 2008.
External links
- Serial ATA International Organization (SATA-IO)
- EETimes Serial ATA and the evolution in data storage technology, Mohamed A. Salem
- "SATA-1" specification, as a zipped pdf; Serial ATA: High Speed Serialized AT Attachment, Revision 1.0a, 7-January-2003.
- Errata and Engineering Change Notices to above "SATA-1" specification, as a zip of pdfs
- Dispelling the Confusion: SATA II does not mean 3 Gbit/s
- Template:PDFlink
- SATA motherboard connector pinout
- AHCI/RAID Intel Matrix Storage Technology: Unattended installation instructions under Windows XP
- Intel Matrix Storage Manager: How do I install an operating system on single serial ATA hard drive?
- Serial ATA Connector Schematic and Pinout
- Serial ATA server and storage use cases
- How to Install and Troubleshoot SATA Hard Drives
- Serial ATA and the 7 Deadly Sins of Parallel ATA
- Everything You Need to Know About Serial ATA
- Barracuda XT - the first SATA 6Gb/s HDD
- Mini-FAQ on SATA II (specifications/performance/compatibility)
mike knows everything about sata cables dont let any body tell you wrong oh yea he plays diablo