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- From: pcg@aber.ac.uk (Piercarlo Grandi)
- Newsgroups: comp.periphs.scsi
- Subject: Re: Noise like a seek coming from new scsi hard drive.
- Message-ID: <PCG.93Jan27184538@csthor.aber.ac.uk>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 18:45:38 GMT
- References: <1330@alsys1.aecom.yu.edu>
- Sender: news@aber.ac.uk (USENET news service)
- Followup-To: comp.periphs.scsi
- Organization: University College of Wales, Aberystwyth
- Lines: 22
- In-Reply-To: manaster@yu1.yu.edu's message of 24 Jan 93 23: 38:36 GMT
- Nntp-Posting-Host: thor.dcs.aber.ac.uk
-
- >>> On 24 Jan 93 23:38:36 GMT, manaster@yu1.yu.edu (Chaim Manaster) said:
-
- Manaster> Every so often on intervals on the order of 20 to 30 minutes
- Manaster> apart, (not too regular) there is a momentary sound from the
- Manaster> hard drive that lasts for about one second (by my reckoning)
- Manaster> and sound like the drive has been given a seek command.
-
- This is more or less a FAQ. There is nothing to worry about; the drive
- is simply recalibrating, to check, for example, for possible variations
- in temperature, which alter the shape of tracks, and so on.
-
- Modern disk drives are really largish minicomputers, to which an hard
- disk is attached, and that provide SCSI service over a parallel bus,
- just like a workstation may offer NFS service over a serial bus like
- Ethernet (and NFS is a much simpler protocol than SCSI).
-
- These largish minicomputers have several hundred KB of memory, a 16 bit
- CPU capable of some MIPS, and a sophisticated multitasking realtime OS,
- which runs the various SCSI modules; indeed often the code to handle the
- SCSI protocol is so large (well over 100,000 lines of C) that it cannot
- be burned entirely into ROM, and there is a filesystem in some reserved
- partition on the drive that contains the less used modules.
-