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SCSI Positioning PaperSCSI (Small Computer System Interface) has dominated the storage I/O market for more than 15 years. Its technology roots go back to 1981 when work began on an I/O technology later named SCSI. Since that time it has evolved to keep pace with an exploding computer industry that demands more bandwidth, performance, features, manageability and flexibility each year. SCSI data rates track those of hard disk drives, doubling every two years and reaching 160 MBps in the current generation Ultra160 SCSI. There have been six generations of SCSI technology to date, with more over the horizon, including Ultra320 and Ultra640. Unlike other I/O interfaces, SCSI product generations are always backward and forward compatible, preserving the user's investment and allowing legacy devices to be connected to newer systems. There are now more than 100 qualified SCSI vendors in the industry providing hardware, software, cables and plug terminators, all of which are interoperable. SCSI is ideally suited for many applications across the industry, beginning with RAID storage, Internet and enterprise servers, workstations and application-specific computing. Desktop connectivity is vitally important in today's Internet economy and SCSI is meeting the challenge. It is the most cost-effective high-end disk drive controller interface on the market today.
SCSI is Growing In another GartnerGroup/Dataquest study, Adam Couture, Senior Analyst, IT Services, evaluated the storage utility market. He projects that the storage utility market will grow from $10 million in 2000 to $8 billion in 2003, 75% of which ($6 billion) will be generated by Internet data centers. Storage utilities deliver capacity for servers on a usage basis, capacity that may be delivered via user networks or the Internet. Dataquest's projection that $6 billion will be Internet related suggests to STA that a significant proportion of the $6 billion could contain SCSI technology. SCSI technology would most likely be inside the servers, which are connected to the storage utilities via SCSI or Fibre channel protocols. Currently, SCSI is used in a high percentage of RAID controllers and that will likely continue for some time. By STA estimates, close to 95% of all servers supporting the Internet rely on SCSI I/O technology. By 2003, STA projects that the hard disk drive media rate will be 90 MBps and the required bus bandwidth will be 360 MBps. In 2003, the Ultra640 SCSI generation will be entering the market. The future of SCSI, as a widely-used storage controller technology, is secure due to the extensive worldwide installed base and the ongoing performance improvements in each generation of the specification.
SCSI is High-Performance Ultra160 (also known as Ultra3), the current generation of SCSI technology, provides speeds up to 160 MBps. In addition, low voltage differential (LVD) drivers, double transition clocks, domain validation, cyclic redundancy check (CRC), quick arbitrate and select (QAS) and packetized protocol, have all markedly improved performance, as has high-speed host-to-host connection.
Enterprise Computing Currently, SCSI cables can reach up to 25 meters for point-to-point applications and up to 12 meters for multi-point applications. For more sophisticated implementations, cables with expanders can reach up to 75 meters and will support up to 1000 devices with the near-term introduction of LUN (Logical Unit Number) bridges. A multi-drop parallel bus has the ability to support devices at different speeds on the same bus.
Connected on the Desktop
Why Does the Market Need SCSI?
What Does the Future Hold? Important future SCSI developments will be the increased performance defined by Ultra320 and Ultra640, with additional generations to follow. Planned features for Ultra320 include double edge clocking, packetized protocol, domain validation with margining, skew management and inter-symbol interference correction. The Ultra640 specification will include additional enhancements to increase performance and reliability. When the market is ready for new features or performance enhancements, SCSI will provide the total solution, maintaining its position as the I/O technology of choice for future enterprise computing, Internet computing and desktop applications.
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