Hdd Interface Technologies; Key Hdd Design Parameters For Enterprise Environments - HP 418371-B21 - Dual Port 72 GB Hard Drive Technology Brief

Performance factors for hp proliant serial attached storage (sas)
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HDD interface technologies

Since the days of Advanced Technology Attachment (ATA, also known as Integrated Drive Electronics
or IDE), the server industry has transitioned through several HDD interface technologies:
• Small computer system interconnect (SCSI)
• Serial Attached ATA (SATA)
• Serial Attached SCSI (SAS)
Table 1 lists the key characteristics of these HDD interface technologies.
Table 1. Comparison of HDD interface technologies
Transfer/connection type
Current bandwidth [1]
Future
bandwidth growth?
# of devices supported per
interface per connection
HDD type supported
Relative reliability
Best suited for
NOTES:
[1] Actual data rates are slightly lower due to protocol overhead.
[2] Through the use of a SATA port multiplier
[3] Through the use of SAS port expanders
As Table 1 suggests, the SAS interface offers the best solution for the enterprise environment and has
emerged as the preferred choice for high input/out applications.

Key HDD design parameters for enterprise environments

Enterprise-class HDDs must provide maximum performance under a 100 percent duty cycle and
continuous I/O workload in a high-vibration environment. While Mean Time Before Failure (MTBF) is
used to express the length of HDD life in general, a more meaningful benchmark, the Annual Failure
Rate (AFR), better defines the estimated life of an HDD in the enterprise environment.
The AFR is the relation (in percent) between the MTBF and the number of hours that the device is
expected to run per year (100 percent duty cycle = 8760 hours per year). For example, for an
enterprise HDD with an MTBF of 1,200,000 hours, the AFR is calculated as follows:
1,200,000 hours/8760 hours = 136.9863 years, then (1 failure/136.9863 years) x 100% = AFR of 0.73%
An AFR of 0.73 percent means that 0.73 percent of the population of HDDs can be expected to fail
in the average year. In other words, in a system of 100,000 drives, 730 could be expected to fail.
The AFR is less applicable for smaller systems but is meaningful for high-density infrastructures with
thousands or hundreds of thousands of drives. SAS drives, particularly small form factor (SFF) SAS
drives, typically have lowest AFR
3
The AFR calculations given are for illustration purposes only. The actual failure rate experienced could vary
depending on manufacturing deviations, material quality, and the actual application environment, among other
factors.
SCSI
Parallel/shared bus
Serial/point-to-point
320 MB/s
3.0 Gb/s (300 MB/s)
No
16
SCSI
Good
Enterprise servers
Entry level servers
(replaced by SAS)
3
.
SATA
Serial/point-to-point
3 GB/s (300 MB/s)
Yes, to 6 Gb/s
Yes, to 6 Gb/s and 12 Gb/s
15 [2]
SATA
Adequate
SAS
16, 256 [3]
SAS and SATA
Very good
Enterprise servers
3

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