Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!neat.cs.toronto.edu!rayan From: rayan@cs.toronto.edu (Rayan Zachariassen) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sgi Subject: Re: SMD controllers on 4D/240 Keywords: SMD disks 4D/240 Message-ID: <89Dec18.220521est.2588@neat.cs.toronto.edu> Date: 19 Dec 89 03:06:18 GMT References: <1989Dec18.113838.27875@hellgate.utah.edu> <46570@sgi.sgi.com> Lines: 43 markb@denali.sgi.com (Mark Bradley) writes: >As for buying and integrating your own, I don't recommend it, as you may or >may not get the right rev. levels of f/w, h/w or whatever. And cable impedance >is critical for these disk drives, as is the right grounding scheme, etc. It really isn't that bad... it is hard to go wrong in hooking up an SMD drive (although when you get 220V out of 110V sockets...). The more serious problem is getting disks that work with your controller that work with your vendor-supplied or home-grown driver. We are not enamored by the default controller on SGIs, nor the preferred disks, and this combination is indeed sensitive to rev. levels just now being fielded. I would recommend using SGI's supported configuration (from SGI if you value your grey hairs, I gather) unless you have very specific needs or experiences that make you feel it is worth the hassle of listening to SGI people saying "told ya'". I do know for a fact it is possible to do everything homegrown, both an SGI-subsystem-clone configuration [which is what you're probably interested in] and a specific controller/disk combo we like to use around here on heavy timesharing Sun configurations (Ciprico Rimfire/Fujis). >I recently also heard that one of our customers mistakenly plugged a drive >into the wrong voltage (easy to do) and blew up the power supply for the >drive. >But, that's my opinion (and in this case, maybe that of my employer...) I hope so (or if its SGI speaking, hope not). Our machine was inches from the machine referred to here, and the mildest retort to that statement would label it "revisionist history". The victims may comment themselves. However, after the event we were all wondering what the point of having fool-proof socketing standards -- incompatible sockets for different voltages -- is, if they aren't applied (no, the customer didn't supply the metaphoric fool). ps: frankly, at this point, all SMD subsystems are bad relative to the speed of the rest of the system, its just that some are worse than others for various kinds of activities. If we can afford IPI subsystems or some other faster I/O technology, we'll be buying that for our machines asap when the money can be found. rayan