Glossary

Logical Drive States

A logical (system) drive can be Online, Critical, or Offline. Notice that the term “online” is used for both physical and logical drives.

LVD

Low Voltage Differential, a form of SCSI signaling introduced with Ultra2 SCSI (Fast40 SCSI) uses data high and data low signal lines to increase transmission distances over those of single-ended (conventional SCSI signaling) lines. LVD allows for cable lengths of up to 12 meters (approximately 39 feet) with up to 15 devices. LVD also lowers noise, power usage, and amplitude.

LVD differs from conventional differential signaling in that only positive and negative values are distinguished, not voltage levels. Other advantages are that LVD devices consume less power and can sense single-ended devices on the bus and revert to single-ended signaling. Devices need to be Ultra2 SCSI LVD devices in order to take advantage of the LVD signaling. Mylex AcceleRAID, eXtremeRAID, and DAC FL controllers are LVD controllers.

Megabit

A million bits; used as a common unit of measure, relative to time in seconds, as an expression of a transmission technology's bandwidth or data transfer rates. Megabits per second (Mbps) is a frequent measure of bandwidth on a transmission medium.

Megabyte

220 (1,048,576) bytes. One megabyte can store more that one million characters. Abbreviated as M or MB.

Mirrored Cache

A cache memory that has duplicate data from another controller. In the event of failure of the original controller, the second controller can take the cached data and place it on the disk array.

Mirrored Hard Drive

Two hard drives the computer sees as one unit. Information is stored simultaneously on each drive. If one hard disk drive fails, the other contains all of the cached data and the system can continue operating.

Manual No. 775064

G-11