IBM MegaRAID 8480 Network Card User Manual


 
A-3
Copyright © 2006-2007 by LSI Corporation. All rights reserved.
peripheral
devices
A piece of hardware (such as a video monitor, disk drive, printer, or
CD-ROM) used with a computer and under the control of the computer.
SCSI peripherals are controlled through a MegaRAID 8480 Storage
Adapter (host adapter).
PHY The interface required to transmit and receive data packets transferred
across the serial bus.
Each PHY can form one side of the physical link in a connection with a
PHY on a different SATA device. The physical link contains four wires that
form two differential signal pairs. One differential pair transmits signals,
while the other differential pair receives signals. Both differential pairs
operate simultaneously and allow concurrent data transmission in both
the receive and the transmit directions.
RAID Acronym for Redundant Array of Independent Disks (originally
Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks). An array of multiple independent
physical disks managed together to yield higher reliability and/or
performance exceeding that of a single physical disk. The RAID array
appears to the controller as a single storage unit. I/O is expedited
because several disks can be accessed simultaneously. Redundant
RAID levels (RAID levels 1, 5, 10, and 50) provide data protection.
RAID levels A set of techniques applied to disk groups to deliver higher data
availability, and/or performance characteristics to host environments.
Each virtual disk must have a RAID level assigned to it.
SAS Acronym for Serial Attached SCSI. A serial, point-to-point,
enterprise-level device interface that leverages the proven SCSI protocol
set. The SAS interface provides improved performance, simplified
cabling, smaller connections, lower pin count, and lower power
requirements when compared to parallel SCSI. The SAS controller
leverages a common electrical and physical connection interface that is
compatible with Serial ATA. The SAS controller supports the ANSI
Serial
Attached SCSI standard, version 1.0
. In addition, the controller supports
the Serial ATA II (SATA II) protocol defined by the
Serial ATA
specification, version 1.0a
. Supporting both the SAS and SATA II
interfaces, the SAS controller is a versatile controller that provides the
backbone of both server and high-end workstation environments. Each
port on the RAID controller supports SAS and/or SATA II devices.