On Oct 5, 2009, at 3:39 PM, Geoffrey Reed wrote:
What am I not
understanding about the need for this product? I
have about
a half-dozen 8-bit ISA IDE controllers, mostly Seagate branded.
Didn't
think they were particularly rare.
From what this sounds like it is able to talk to large capacity IDE
drives,
presumedly 16-bit IDE drives. The older XT ide controllers by
seagate (that
I had) were limited to a handful of drives that could do 8-bit wide
data
transfers and were very limited capacity wise.
The big difference here is LBA vs. C/H/S addressing. Recall that
the IDE interface is a clone of the register-level programming
interface of the ancient WD1010 MFM hard disk controller chip family,
whose registers are 8 bits wide. There's a register for the starting
sector number (256 sectors), a register for the low byte of the
cylinder address and two bits of another register for the high part
of the cylinder address (meaning it tops out at 1024 cylinders), and
half of a register for the head number (meaning 16 heads).
1024 cylinders * 16 heads * 256 sectors * 512 bytes/sector = 2GB
I don't know where any supposed 520MB limit comes from; if someone
can enlighten me there, I'd appreciate it.
LBA (Logical Block Addressing) mode takes a large, flat linear
address space of blocks with no notion of cylinders, heads, or
sectors. It's 28 bits wide, topping out at about 137GB. IDE
interfaces take that word of bits, break it up into little pieces,
and sprinkle them across the former cylinder/head/sector registers
(and pieces of registers) in a very kludgy and inefficient way. They
take the LBA address and put the first 8 bits into the sector
register, the middle 16 bits into the cylinder number register (yes,
using it as a 16-bit register!), and the high four bits go into the
head and device select register.
Ugly, ugly, ugly.
New kludges were devised to exceed this ~137GB plateau
(obviously), but I don't know how they work offhand because I've
never designed with them.
Anyway, early BIOSs don't know how to deal with this, which is one
of the things that makes this XTIDE controller special.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
Port Charlotte, FL