Computer
Typographies
Computer heart
Memory
Memory cards
|
The SCSI standard (Small Computer System Interface) is an interface used to connect several different types of peripherals to a computer via a card, known as the SCSI adaptor or SCSI controller (generally connected using a PCI connector).
The number of peripherals that can be connected depends on the width of the SCSI bus. With an 8-bit bus, 8 physical units can be connected and 16 for a 16-bit bus. Since the SCSI controller represents a separate physical unit, the bus can therefore accommodate 7 (8-1) or 15 (16-1) peripherals.
Peripherals are addressed using identification numbers. The first number is the ID, which is a number designating the controller built into each peripheral (this is defined via the jumpers to be positioned on each SCSI peripheral or by the software). The peripheral may have up to 8 logical units (e.g. a CD-ROM drive with several drawers). The logical units are identified by a LUN (Logical Unit Number). Lastly, a computer may contain several SCSI cards and therefore a card number is assigned to each of them.
Thus, to communicate with a peripheral, the computer must give an address in the following form: "card number - ID - LUN".
There are two types of SCSI bus:
The SCSI standards define the electrical parameters of the input/output interfaces. The SCSI-1 standard of 1986 defined the standard commands for controlling the SCSI peripherals on a bus with a frequency of 4.77 MHz with width of 8 bits, meaning that speeds of 5 Mo/s can be achieved.
However, a large number of these commands were optional, thus in 1994 the SCSI-2 standard was adopted. It defines 18 commands known as CCS (Common Command Set). Various versions of the SCSI-2 standard have been defined:
The SCSI-3 standard includes new commands and allows chaining of 32 peripherals and a maximum speed of 320 Mo/s (in Ultra-320 mode).
The following table summarises the characteristics of the various SCSI standards:
| Standard | Bus width | Bus speed | Bandwidth | Connector |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCSI-1 (Fast-5 SCSI) | 8 bits | 4.77 MHz | 5 MB/sec | 50 pins (asymmetrical or differential bus) |
| SCSI-2 - Fast-10 SCSI | 8 bits | 10 MHz | 10 MB/sec | 50 pins (asymmetrical or differential bus) |
| SCSI-2 - Wide | 16 bits | 10 MHz | 20 MB/sec | 50 pins (asymmetrical or differential bus) |
| SCSI-2 - Fast Wide 32 bits | 32 bits | 10 MHz | 40 MB/sec | 68 pins (asymmetrical or differential bus) |
| SCSI-2 - Ultra SCSI-2 (Fast-20 SCSI) | 8 bits | 20 MHz | 20 MB/sec | 50 pins (asymmetrical or differential bus) |
| SCSI-2 - Ultra Wide SCSI-2 | 16 bits | 20 MHz | 40 MB/sec | |
| SCSI-3 - Ultra-2 SCSI (Fast-40 SCSI) | 8 bits | 40 MHz | 40 MB/sec | |
| SCSI-3 - Ultra-2 Wide SCSI | 16 bits | 40 MHz | 80 MB/sec | 68 pins (differential bus) |
| SCSI-3 - Ultra-160 (Ultra-3 SCSI or Fast-80 SCSI) | 16 bits | 80 MHz | 160 MB/sec | 68 pins (differential bus) |
| SCSI-3 - Ultra-320 (Ultra-4 SCSI or Fast-160 SCSI) | 16 bits | 80 MHz DDR | 320 MB/sec | 68 pins (differential bus) |
| SCSI-3 - Ultra-640 (Ultra-5 SCSI) | 16 | 80 MHz QDR | 640 MB/sec | 68 pins (differential bus) |