| Product Manual   Cheetah 15K.7 FC   Standard models   ST3600057FC   ST3450857FC   ST3300657FC   Self-Encrypting Drive models   ST3600957FC   ST3450757FC   ST3300557FC   SED FIPS 140-2 models   ST3600857FC   ST3450657FC   ST3300457FC   100516225   Rev. C   September 2010   Contents   Seagate Technology support services. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1   Scope. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2   Applicable standards and reference documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3   Standards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3   Electromagnetic compatibility. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3   Electromagnetic compliance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4   European Union Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4   Reference documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5   General description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6   Standard features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7   Media description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8   Performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8   Reliability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8   Formatted capacities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8   Programmable drive capacity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9   Factory-installed options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9   User-installed accessories. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9   Performance characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10   Internal drive characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10   Seek performance characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10   Access time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10   General performance characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11   Start/stop time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11   Prefetch/multi-segmented cache control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12   Cache operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12   Caching write data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13   Prefetch operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13   Reliability specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14   Error rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14   Recoverable Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14   Unrecoverable Errors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14   Seek errors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15   Interface errors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15   Reliability and service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15   Preventive maintenance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15   Hot plugging the drive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15   S.M.A.R.T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16   Thermal monitor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17   Drive Self Test (DST). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18   Product warranty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20   Physical/electrical specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21   AC power requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21   DC power requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21   Conducted noise immunity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24   Power sequencing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24   Current profiles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24   7.4   Power dissipation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27   Environmental limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   i Temperature. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29   Relative humidity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30   Acoustics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33   Air cleanliness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33   Electromagnetic susceptibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34   Mechanical specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35   Power requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39   Drive internal defects/errors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40   Drive error recovery procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40   Drive ID/option selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45   Drive orientation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45   Cooling. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46   Drive mounting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47   Grounding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47   Fibre Channel link service frames . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48   Fibre Channel fabric accept login. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53   12.1.10 Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop options. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54   12.3   ii   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Inquiry data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59   Mode Sense data. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59   Miscellaneous operating features and conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64   FC-AL physical interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65   Physical characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65   Connector requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66   Electrical description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66   Pin descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66   FC-AL transmitters and receivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67   Power. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68   Fault LED Out . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68   Active LED Out. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69   Enable port bypass signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69   12.5.10 Motor start controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69   12.5.11 SEL_6 through SEL_0 ID lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70   12.5.12 Device control codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72   Signal characteristics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72   12.6.4   TTL input characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72   LED driver signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73   FC Differential output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73   FC Differential input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   iii   iv   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   1.0   Seagate Technology support services   SEAGATE ONLINE SUPPORT and SERVICES   For information regarding products and services, visit http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/about/contact_us/   Available services include:   Presales & Technical support   Global Support Services telephone numbers & business hours   Authorized Service Centers   For information regarding Warranty Support, visit   http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/support/warranty_&_returns_assistance   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   1 2.0   Scope   This manual describes Seagate Technology® LLC, Cheetah® 15K.7 FC (Fibre Channel) disc drives.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives support the Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop and SCSI Fibre Channel Protocol specifi-   cations to the extent described in this manual. The Fibre Channel Interface Manual (part number 100293070)   describes the general Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop characteristics of this and other Seagate Fibre Channel   drives. The Self-Encrypting Drive (SED) Users Guide, part number 100515636 describes the interface, general   operation and security features available on SED drives.   From this point on in this product manual, the reference to Cheetah 15K.7 FC models is referred to as “the   drive” unless references to individuals models are necessary.   Note. Previous generations of Seagate Self-Encrypting Drive models were called Full Disk Encryption   (FDE) models before a differentiation between drive-based encryption and other forms of encryp-   tion was necessary.   Unless otherwise stated, the information in this manual applies to standard and Self-Encrypting Drive models.   Model Number   ST3600057FC   ST3450857FC   ST3300657FC   ST3600957FC   ST3600857FC   ST3450757FC   ST3450657FC   ST3300557FC   ST3300457FC   Capacity   600 GB   450 GB   300 GB   600 GB   600 GB   450 GB   450 GB   300 GB   300 GB   Self-Encrypting Drive (SED)   FIPS 140-2 Level 2 certified   No   No   No   No   No   Yes   No   Yes   No   Yes   No   No   Yes   Yes   Yes   Yes   Yes   Yes   2 Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   3.0   Applicable standards and reference documentation   The drive has been developed as a system peripheral to the highest standards of design and construction. The   drive depends upon its host equipment to provide adequate power and environment in order to achieve opti-   mum performance and compliance with applicable industry and governmental regulations. Special attention   must be given in the areas of safety, power distribution, shielding, audible noise control, and temperature regu-   lation. In particular, the drive must be securely mounted in order to guarantee the specified performance char-   3.1   Standards   The Cheetah 15K.7 FC family complies with Seagate standards as noted in the appropriate sections of this   manual and the Seagate Fibre Channel Interface Manual, part number 100293070.   The drives are recognized in accordance with UL 60950-1 and CSA 60950-1 as tested by UL and EN60950-1   as tested by TUV.   The security features of Cheetah 15K.7 FC SED models are based on the “TCG Storage Architecture Core   Specification” and the “TCG Storage Workgroup Security Subsystem Classs: Enterprise_A” specification with   additional vendor-unique features as noted in this product manual.   3.1.1   Electromagnetic compatibility   The drive, as delivered, is designed for system integration and installation into a suitable enclosure prior to   use. As such the drive is supplied as a subassembly and is not subject to Subpart B of Part 15 of the FCC   Rules and Regulations nor the Radio Interference Regulations of the Canadian Department of Communica-   tions.   The design characteristics of the drive serve to minimize radiation when installed in an enclosure that provides   reasonable shielding. As such, the drive is capable of meeting the Class B limits of the FCC Rules and Regula-   tions of the Canadian Department of Communications when properly packaged. However, it is the user’s   responsibility to assure that the drive meets the appropriate EMI requirements in their system. Shielded I/O   cables may be required if the enclosure does not provide adequate shielding. If the I/O cables are external to   the enclosure, shielded cables should be used, with the shields grounded to the enclosure and to the host con-   troller.   3.1.1.1   Electromagnetic susceptibility   As a component assembly, the drive is not required to meet any susceptibility performance requirements. It is   the responsibility of those integrating the drive within their systems to perform those tests required and design   their system to ensure that equipment operating in the same system as the drive or external to the system   does not adversely affect the performance of the drive. See Table 2, DC power requirements.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   3 3.1.2   Electromagnetic compliance   Seagate uses an independent laboratory to confirm compliance with the directives/standards for CE Marking   and C-Tick Marking. The drive was tested in a representative system for typical applications. The selected sys-   tem represents the most popular characteristics for test platforms. The system configurations include:   • Typical current use microprocessor   • Keyboard   • Monitor/display   • Printer   • Mouse   Although the test system with this Seagate model complies with the directives/standards, we cannot guarantee   that all systems will comply. The computer manufacturer or system integrator shall confirm EMC compliance   and provide the appropriate marking for their product.   Electromagnetic compliance for the European Union   If this model has the CE Marking it complies with the European Union requirements of the Electromagnetic   Compatibility Directive 89/336/EEC of 03 May 1989 as amended by Directive 92/31/EEC of 28 April 1992 and   Directive 93/68/EEC of 22 July 1993.   Australian C-Tick   If this model has the C-Tick Marking it complies with the Australia/New Zealand Standard AS/NZS3548 1995   and meets the Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Framework requirements of Australia’s Spectrum Man-   agement Agency (SMA).   Korean KCC   If this model has the Korean Communications Commission (KCC) logo, it complies with paragraph 1 of Article   11 of the Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Control Regulation and meets the Electromagnetic Compatibil-   ity Framework requirements of the Radio Research Laboratory (RRL) Ministry of Information and Communica-   tion Republic of Korea.   Taiwanese BSMI   If this model has two Chinese words meaning “EMC certification” followed by an eight digit identification num-   ber, as a Marking, it complies with Chinese National Standard (CNS) 13438 and meets the Electromagnetic   Compatibility (EMC) Framework requirements of the Taiwanese Bureau of Standards, Metrology, and Inspec-   tion (BSMI).   3.2   European Union Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS)   The European Union Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive restricts the presence of chemical   substances, including Lead (Pb), in electronic products effective July 2006.   A number of parts and materials in Seagate products are procured from external suppliers. We rely on the rep-   resentations of our suppliers regarding the presence of RoHS substances in these parts and materials. Our   supplier contracts require compliance with our chemical substance restrictions, and our suppliers document   their compliance with our requirements by providing material content declarations for all parts and materials for   the disc drives documented in this publication. Current supplier declarations include disclosure of the inclusion   of any RoHS-regulated substance in such parts or materials.   Seagate also has internal systems in place to ensure ongoing compliance with the RoHS Directive and all laws   and regulations which restrict chemical content in electronic products. These systems include standard operat-   ing procedures that ensure that restricted substances are not utilized in our manufacturing operations, labora-   tory analytical validation testing, and an internal auditing process to ensure that all standard operating   procedures are complied with.   4 Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   3.3   Reference documents   ANSI Fibre Channel Documents   X3.230-1994   X3.297.1997   X3.303.1998   X3.272-1996   FC Physical and Signaling Interface (FC-PH)   FC-PH-2 Fibre Channel Physical and Signaling Interface-2   FC-PH-3 Fibre Channel Physical and Signaling Interface-3   FC Arbitrated Loop (FC-AL)   X3.269-1996   Fibre Channel Protocol for SCSI (FCP)   NCITS TR-19   NCITS TR-20   SFF-8045   Private Loop SCSI Direct Attach (PLDA)   Fabric Loop Attachment (FC-FLA)   Specification for 40-pin SCA-2 Connector with Parallel Selection   Specification for 40-pin SCA-2 Connector with Bidirectional   Enclosure Services Interface   SFF-8067   ANSI Small Computer System Interface (SCSI) Documents   X3.131-1994   (SCSI-2)   X3.270-1996   NCITS 305-199X   (SCSI-3) Architecture Model   (SCSI-3) Enclosure Services   Trusted Computing Group (TCG) Documents (apply to SED models only)   TCG Storage Architechture Core Specification, Rev. 1.0   TCG Storage Security Class Enterprise Specification, Rev. 1.0   Self-Encrypting Drives Users Guide   Seagate part number: 100515636   Specification for Acoustic Test Requirement and Procedures   Seagate part number: 30553-001   Package Test Specification   Package Test Specification   Seagate P/N 30190-001 (under 100 lb.)   Seagate P/N 30191-001 (over 100 lb.)   In case of conflict between this document and any referenced document, this document takes precedence.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   5 4.0   General description   Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives provide high performance, high capacity data storage for a variety of systems includ-   ing engineering workstations, network servers, mainframes, and supercomputers. Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives   support 4-Gbit Fibre Channel.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives support the Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop (FC-AL) and SCSI Fibre Channel Proto-   col as described in the ANSI specifications, this document, and the Fibre Channel Interface Manual which   describes the general interface characteristics of this drive. Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives are classified as intelli-   gent peripherals and provide level 2 conformance (highest level) with the ANSI SCSI-1 standard.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC SED models have provisions for “Security of Data at Rest” based on the standards defined   by the Trusted Computing Group (see www.trustedcomputinggroup.org).   Note. Never disassemble the HDA and do not attempt to service items in the sealed enclosure (heads,   media, actuator, etc.) as this requires special facilities. The drive does not contain user-replaceable   parts. Opening the HDA for any reason voids your warranty.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives use a dedicated landing zone at the innermost radius of the media to eliminate the   possibility of destroying or degrading data by landing in the data zone. The heads automatically go to the land-   ing zone when power is removed from the drive.   An automatic shipping lock prevents potential damage to the heads and discs that results from movement dur-   ing shipping and handling. The shipping lock disengages and the head load process begins when power is   applied to the drive.   The drives also use a high-performance actuator assembly with a low-inertia, balanced, patented, straight arm   design that provides excellent performance with minimal power dissipation.   6 Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   4.1   Standard features   Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives have the following standard features:   • 4-Gbit Fibre Channel interface   • Integrated dual port FC-AL controller   • Concurrent dual port transfers   • Support for FC arbitrated loop, private and public attachment   • Differential copper FC drivers and receivers   • Downloadable firmware using the FC-AL interface   • Supports SCSI enclosure services via interface connector   • 128-deep task set (queue)   • Supports up to 32 initiators   • Drive selection ID and configuration options are set on the FC-AL backpanel or through interface com-   mands. Jumpers are not used on the drive.   • Supports SCSI Enclosure Services through the interface connector   • Fibre Channel worldwide name uniquely identifies the drive and each port   • User-selectable logical block size (512, 520, 524, or 528 bytes per logical block)   • Selectable frame sizes from 256 to 2,112 bytes   • Industry standard 3.5-inch low profile form factor dimensions   • Programmable logical block reallocation scheme   • Flawed logical block reallocation at format time   • Programmable auto write and read reallocation   • Reed-Solomon error correction code   • Sealed head and disc assembly (HDA)   • No preventive maintenance or adjustments required   • Dedicated head landing zone   • Automatic shipping lock   • Embedded Grey Code track address to eliminate seek errors   • Self-diagnostics performed at power on   • Zone bit recording (ZBR)   • Vertical, horizontal, or top down mounting   • Dynamic spindle brake   • Embedded servo design   • Reallocation of defects on command (Post Format)   • Fibre Channel interface transports SCSI protocol   Cheetah 15K.7 FC SED models have the following additional features :   • Automatic data encryption/decryption   • Controlled access   • Random number generator   • Drive locking   • 16 independent data bands   • Cryptographic erase of user data for a drive that will be repurposed or scrapped   • Authenticated firmware download   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   7 4.2   Media description   The media used on the drive has an aluminum substrate coated with a thin film magnetic material, overcoated   with a proprietary protective layer for improved durability and environmental protection.   4.3   Performance   • Programmable multi-segmentable cache buffer   • 400 Mbytes/sec maximum instantaneous data transfers per port   • 15k RPM spindle; average latency = 2.0 msec   • Command queuing of up to 128 commands   • Background processing of queue   • Supports start and stop commands (spindle stops spinning)   • Adaptive seek velocity; improved seek performance   Note. There is no significant performance difference between Self-Encrypting Drive and standard (non-   Self-Encrypting Drive) models   4.4   Reliability   • Annualized Failure Rate (AFR) of 0.55%   • Increased LSI circuitry integration   • Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology (S.M.A.R.T.)   • Dithering   • 5-year warranty   4.5   Formatted capacities   Standard OEM models are formatted to 512 bytes per block. The block size is selectable at format time and   must be one of the supported sizes listed in the table below.   Seagate designs specify capacity points at certain block sizes that Seagate guarantees current and future   products will meet. We recommend customers use this capacity in their project planning, as it ensures a stable   operating point with backward and forward compatibility from generation to generation. The current guaranteed   operating points for this product are:   ST3600057FC   ST3600957FC   ST3600857FC   ST3450857FC   ST3450757FC   ST3450657FC   ST3300657FC   ST3300557FC   ST3300457FC   Sector Size   512   Decimal   Hex   Decimal   Hex   Decimal   Hex   1,172,123,568   1,147,307,694   1,132,015,600   1,115,749,560   45DD2FB0   446286AE   43792FF0   4280FCB8   879,097,968   860,480,771   849,011,700   836,812,167   3465F870   3349E503   329AE3F4   31E0BD87   585,937,500   573,653,848   566,007,800   557,874,778   22ECB25C   22314358   21BC97F8   21407E5A   520   524   528   Seagate drives also may be used at the maximum available capacity at a given block size, but the excess   capacity above the guaranteed level will vary between other drive families and from generation to generation,   depending on how each block size actually formats out for zone frequencies and splits over servo bursts. This   added capacity potential may range from 0.1 to 1.3 percent above the guaranteed capacities listed above.   Using the drives in this manner gives the absolute maximum capacity potential, but the user must determine if   the extra capacity potential is useful, or whether their assurance of backward and forward compatibility takes   precedence.   8 Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   4.5.1   Programmable drive capacity   Using the Mode Select command, the drive can change its capacity to something less than maximum. See the   Mode Select Parameter List table in the SCSI Commands Reference Manual. Refer to the Parameter list block   descriptor number of blocks field. A value of zero in the number of blocks field indicates that the drive shall not   change the capacity it is currently formatted to have. A number in the number of blocks field that is less than   the maximum number of LBAs changes the total drive capacity to the value in the block descriptor number of   blocks field. A value greater than the maximum number of LBAs is rounded down to the maximum capacity.   4.6   Factory-installed options   You may order the following items which are incorporated at the manufacturing facility during production or   packaged before shipping. Some of the options available are (not an exhaustive list of possible options):   • Other capacities can be ordered depending on sparing scheme and sector size requested.   • Single-unit shipping pack. The drive is normally shipped in bulk packaging to provide maximum protection   against transit damage. Units shipped individually require additional protection as provided by the single unit   shipping pack. Users planning single unit distribution should specify this option.   • The Safety and Regulatory Agency Specifications, part number 75789512, is usually included with each   standard OEM drive shipped, but extra copies may be ordered.   4.7   User-installed accessories   The following accessories are available. All kits may be installed in the field.   • Evaluation kit, part number 73473641.   This kit provides an adapter card (“T-card”) to allow cable connections for two FC ports and DC power.   • Single-unit shipping pack.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   9 5.0   Performance characteristics   This section provides detailed information concerning performance-related characteristics and features of   Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives.   5.1   Internal drive characteristics   ST3600057FC   ST3600957FC   ST3600857FC   600   ST3450857FC   ST3450757FC   ST3450657FC   450   ST3300657FC   ST3300557FC   ST3300457FC   300   * Drive capacity   Gbytes (formatted, rounded off value)   Read/write data heads   Tracks per inch   Peak bits per inch   Areal Density   8 6 4 165,000   1,361   225   165,000   1,361   225   165,000   1,361   225   TPI   KBPI   Gbits/inch   2 Internal data rate   disk rotation speed   Avg rotational latency   1.49 - 2.37   15k   2.0   1.49 - 2.37   15k   2.0   1.49 - 2.37   15k   2.0   Gbits/sec (max)   RPM   msec   *One Gbyte equals one billion bytes when referring to hard drive capacity. Accessible capacity may vary depending on operating environment   and formatting.   5.2   Seek performance characteristics   See Section 12.5, "FC-AL physical interface" on page 65 and the Fibre Channel Interface Manual (part number   77767496) for additional timing details.   5.2.1   Access time   1 2   , Not including controller overhead (msec)   Read   3.4   Write   3.9   Average   Typical   Typical   Typical   Single track   Full stroke   0.2   0.44   7.4   6.6   1.   2.   Typical access times are measured under nominal conditions of temperature, voltage,   and horizontal orientation as measured on a representative sample of drives.   Access to data = access time + latency time.   10   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   5.2.2   Format command execution time (minutes)   When changing sector sizes, the format times shown below may need to be increased by 30 minutes.   ST3600057FC   ST3450857FC   ST3300657FC   119   60   88   44   58   29   Maximum (with verify)   Maximum (without verify)   Note. There is approximately a 1.5 increase in time to format a SED drive versus a non-SED drive of the same capacity.   5.2.3 General performance characteristics   Sustainable disc transfer rate*:   Minimum   122 Mbytes/sec (typical)   204 Mbytes/sec (typical)   Maximum   Fibre Channel Interface maximum instantaneous transfer rate   400 Mbytes/sec* per port   Logical block sizes   Default is 512-byte data blocks   Sector sizes variable to 512, 520, 524 and 528 bytes.   Read/write consecutive sectors on a track   Yes   Flaw reallocation performance impact (for flaws reallocated at format time Negligible   using the spare sectors per sparing zone reallocation scheme.)   Average rotational latency   2.0 msec   *Assumes no errors and no relocated logical blocks.   Rate measured from the start of the first logical block transfer to or from the host.   1MB/sec = 1,000,000 bytes/sec   5.3   Start/stop time   If the Motor Start option is disabled, the drive becomes ready within 20 seconds after DC power is applied. If a   recoverable error condition is detected during the start sequence, the drive executes a recovery procedure and   the time to become ready may exceed 20 seconds. During spin up to ready time, the drive responds to some   commands over the FC interface in less than 3 seconds after application of power. Stop time is 30 seconds   (maximum) from removal of DC power.   If the Motor Start option is enabled, the internal controller accepts the commands listed in the Fibre Channel   Interface Manual less than 3 seconds after DC power has been applied. After the Motor Start command has   been received, the drive becomes ready for normal operations within 20 seconds (excluding the error recovery   procedure). The Motor Start command can also be used to command the drive to stop the spindle.   There is no power control switch on the drive.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   11   5.4   Prefetch/multi-segmented cache control   The drive provides a prefetch (read look-ahead) and multi-segmented cache control algorithms that in many   cases can enhance system performance. Cache refers to the drive buffer storage space when it is used in   cache operations. To select this feature, the host sends the Mode Select command with the proper values in   the applicable bytes in page 08h. Prefetch and cache operations are independent features from the standpoint   that each is enabled and disabled independently using the Mode Select command; however, in actual opera-   tion, the prefetch feature overlaps cache operation somewhat as described in sections 5.5.1 and 5.5.2.   All default cache and prefetch mode parameter values (Mode Page 08h) for standard OEM versions of this   5.5   Cache operation   Note. Refer to the Fibre Channel Interface Manual for more detail concerning the cache bits.   Of the 16 Mbytes physical buffer space in the drive, approximately 13,000 kbytes can be used as a cache. The   buffer is divided into logical segments from which data is read and to which data is written.   The drive keeps track of the logical block addresses of the data stored in each segment of the buffer. If the   cache is enabled (see RCD bit in the FC Interface Manual), data requested by the host with a read command   is retrieved from the buffer, if possible, before any disc access is initiated. If cache operation is not enabled, the   buffer is still used, but only as circular buffer segments during disc medium read operations (disregarding   Prefetch operation for the moment). That is, the drive does not check in the buffer segments for the requested   read data, but goes directly to the medium to retrieve it. The retrieved data merely passes through some buffer   segment on the way to the host. All data transfers to the host are in accordance with buffer-full ratio rules. See   the explanation provided with the information about Mode Page 02h (disconnect/reconnect control) in the Fibre   Channel Interface Manual.   The following is a simplified description of the prefetch/cache operation:   Case A—read command is received and all of the requested logical blocks are already in the cache:   1. Drive transfers the requested logical blocks to the initiator.   Case B—A Read command requests data, and at least one requested logical block is not in any segment of   the cache:   1. The drive fetches the requested logical blocks from the disc and transfers them into a segment, and then   from there to the host in accordance with the Mode Select Disconnect/Reconnect parameters, page 02h.   Each cache segment is actually a self-contained circular buffer whose length is an integer number of logical   blocks. The drive dynamically creates and removes segments based on the workload. The wrap-around capa-   bility of the individual segments greatly enhances the cache’s overall performance.   Note. The size of each segment is not reported by Mode Sense command page 08h, bytes 14 and 15.   The value 0XFFFF is always reported regardless of the actual size of the segment. Sending a size   specification using the Mode Select command (bytes 14 and 15) does not set up a new segment   size. If the STRICT bit in Mode page 00h (byte 2, bit 1) is set to one, the drive responds as it does   for any attempt to change an unchangeable parameter.   12   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   5.5.1   Caching write data   Write caching is a write operation by the drive that makes use of a drive buffer storage area where the data to   be written to the medium is stored while the drive performs the Write command.   If read caching is enabled (RCD=0), then data written to the medium is retained in the cache to be made avail-   able for future read cache hits. The same buffer space and segmentation is used as set up for read functions.   The buffer segmentation scheme is set up or changed independently, having nothing to do with the state of   RCD. When a write command is issued, if RCD=0, the cache is first checked to see if any logical blocks that   are to be written are already stored in the cache from a previous read or write command. If there are, the   respective cache segments are cleared. The new data is cached for subsequent Read commands.   If the number of write data logical blocks exceed the size of the segment being written into, when the end of the   segment is reached, the data is written into the beginning of the same cache segment, overwriting the data that   was written there at the beginning of the operation; however, the drive does not overwrite data that has not yet   been written to the medium.   If write caching is enabled (WCE=1), then the drive may return Good status on a write command after the data   has been transferred into the cache, but before the data has been written to the medium. If an error occurs   while writing the data to the medium, and Good status has already been returned, a deferred error will be gen-   erated.   The Synchronize Cache command may be used to force the drive to write all cached write data to the medium.   Upon completion of a Synchronize Cache command, all data received from previous write commands will have   been written to the medium.   5.5.2   Prefetch operation   If the Prefetch feature is enabled, data in contiguous logical blocks on the disc immediately beyond that which   was requested by a Read command are retrieved and stored in the buffer for immediate transfer from the buf-   fer to the host on subsequent Read commands that request those logical blocks (this is true even if cache   operation is disabled). Though the prefetch operation uses the buffer as a cache, finding the requested data in   the buffer is a prefetch hit, not a cache operation hit.   To enable Prefetch, use Mode Select page 08h, byte 12, bit 5 (Disable Read Ahead - DRA bit). DRA bit = 0   enables prefetch.   The drive does not use the Max Prefetch field (bytes 8 and 9) or the Prefetch Ceiling field (bytes 10 and 11).   When prefetch (read look-ahead) is enabled (enabled by DRA = 0), the drive enables prefetch of contiguous   blocks from the disc when it senses that a prefetch hit will likely occur. The drive disables prefetch when it   decides that a prefetch hit is not likely to occur.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   13   6.0   Reliability specifications   The following reliability specifications assume correct host and drive operational interface, including all inter-   face timings, power supply voltages, environmental requirements and drive mounting constraints.   Less than 10 errors in 108 seeks   Seek error rate:   Read Error Rates   Less than 10 errors in 1012 bits transferred (OEM default settings)   Less than 1 sector in 1016 bits transferred   Less than 1 sector in 1021 bits transferred   Recovered Data   Unrecovered Data   Miscorrected Data   Less than 1 error in 1012 bits transferred with minimum receive eye.   Less than 1 error in 1014 bits transferred with typical receive eye.   Interface error rate:   Annualized Failure Rate (AFR):   Preventive maintenance:   0.55%   None required   6.1   Error rates   The error rates stated in this manual assume the following:   • The drive is operated in accordance with this manual using DC power as defined in paragraph 7.2, "DC   • Errors caused by host system failures are excluded from error rate computations.   • Assume random data.   • Default OEM error recovery settings are applied. This includes AWRE, ARRE, full read retries, full write   retries and full retry time.   • Error rate specified with automatic retries and data correction with ECC enabled and all flaws reallocated.   6.1.1   Recoverable Errors   Recovereable errors are those detected and corrected by the drive, and do not require user intervention.   Recoverable Data errors use retries and correction. Application of ECC on-the-fly correction alone is not con-   sidered a Recovered Data error.   Recovered Data error rate is determined using read bits transferred for recoverable errors occurring during a   read, and using write bits transferred for recoverable errors occurring during a write.   6.1.2   Unrecoverable Errors   16   Unrecoverable Data Errors (Sense Key = 03h) are specified at less than 1 sector in error per 10 bits trans-   ferred. Unrecoverable Data Errors resulting from the same cause are treated as 1 error for that block.   14   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   6.1.3   Seek errors   A seek error is defined as a failure of the drive to position the heads to the addressed track. After detecting an   initial seek error, the drive automatically performs an error recovery process. If the error recovery process fails,   a seek positioning error (Error code = 15h or 02h) will be reported with a Hardware error (04h) in the Sense   8 Key. Recoverable seek errors are specified at Less than 10 errors in 10 seeks. Unrecoverable seek errors   (Sense Key = 04h) are classified as drive failures.   6.1.4   Interface errors   An interface error is defined as a failure of the receiver on a port to recover the data as transmitted by the   device port connected to the receiver. The error may be detected as a running disparity error, illegal code, loss   of word sync, or CRC error. The total error rate for a loop of devices is the sum of the individual device error   rates.   6.2   Reliability and service   You can enhance the reliability of Cheetah 15K.6 disc drives by ensuring that the drive receives adequate cool-   ing. Section 7.0 provides temperature measurements and other information that may be used to enhance the   6.2.1   Annualized Failure Rate (AFR) and Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF)   These drives shall achieve an AFR of 0.55% (MTBF of 1,600,000 hours) when operated in an environment   that ensures the HDA case temperatures do not exceed the values specified in Section 7.4.1.   Operation at case temperatures outside the specifications in Section 7.4.1 may increase the AFR (decrease   the MTBF). AFR and MTBF statistics are poplulation statistics that are not relevant to individual units.   AFR and MTBF specifications are based on the following assumptions for Enterprise Storage System environ-   ments:   • 8,760 power-on hours per year   • 250 average on/off cycles per year   • Operating at nominal voltages   • System provides adequate cooling to ensure the case temperatures specified in Section 7.4.1 are not   exceeded.   6.2.2   Preventive maintenance   No routine scheduled preventive maintenance is required.   6.2.3   Hot plugging the drive   Inserting and removing the drive on the FC-AL will interrupt loop operation. The interruption occurs when the   receiver of the next device in the loop must synchronize to a different input signal. FC error detection mecha-   nisms, character sync, running disparity, word sync, and CRC are able to detect any error. Recovery is initiated   based on the type of error.   The disc drive defaults to the FC-AL Monitoring state, Pass-through state, when it is powered-on by switching   the power or hot plugged. The control line to an optional port bypass circuit (external to the drive), defaults to   the Enable Bypass state. If the bypass circuit is present, the next device in the loop will continue to receive the   output of the previous device to the newly inserted device. If the bypass circuit is not present, loop operation is   temporarily disrupted until the next device starts receiving the output from the newly inserted device and   regains synchronization to the new input.   The Pass-through state is disabled while the drive performs self test of the FC interface. The control line for an   external port bypass circuit remains in the Enable Bypass state while self test is running. If the bypass circuit is   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   15   present, loop operation may continue. If the bypass circuit is not present, loop operation will be halted while the   self test of the FC interface runs.   When the self test completes successfully, the control line to the bypass circuit is disabled and the drive enters   the FC-AL Initializing state. The receiver on the next device in the loop must synchronize to output of the newly   inserted drive.   If the self-test fails, the control line to the bypass circuit remains in the Enable Bypass state.   Note. It is the responsibility of the systems integrator to assure that no temperature, energy, voltage haz-   ard, or ESD potential hazard is presented during the hot connect/disconnect operation. Discharge   the static electricity from the drive carrier prior to inserting it into the system.   Caution. The drive motor must come to a complete stop prior to changing the plane of operation. This time is   required to insure data integrity.   6.2.4   S.M.A.R.T.   S.M.A.R.T. is an acronym for Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology. This technology is intended   to recognize conditions that indicate imminent drive failure and is designed to provide sufficient warning of a   failure to allow you to back up the data before an actual failure occurs.   Note. The drive’s firmware monitors specific attributes for degradation over time but can’t predict instanta-   neous drive failures.   Each monitored attribute has been selected to monitor a specific set of failure conditions in the operating per-   formance of the drive and the thresholds are optimized to minimize “false” and “failed” predictions.   Controlling S.M.A.R.T.   The operating mode of S.M.A.R.T. is controlled by the DEXCPT and PERF bits on the Informational Exceptions   Control mode page (1Ch). Use the DEXCPT bit to enable or disable the S.M.A.R.T. feature. Setting the DEX-   CPT bit disables all S.M.A.R.T. functions. When enabled, S.M.A.R.T. collects on-line data as the drive performs   normal read and write operations. When the PERF bit is set, the drive is considered to be in “On-line Mode   Only” and will not perform off-line functions.   You can measure off-line attributes and force the drive to save the data by using the Rezero Unit command.   Forcing S.M.A.R.T. resets the timer so that the next scheduled interrupt is in two hours.   You can interrogate the drive through the host to determine the time remaining before the next scheduled mea-   surement and data logging process occurs. To accomplish this, issue a Log Sense command to log page 0x3E.   This allows you to control when S.M.A.R.T. interruptions occur. Forcing S.M.A.R.T. with the RTZ command   resets the timer.   Performance impact   S.M.A.R.T. attribute data is saved to the disc so that the events that caused a predictive failure can be recre-   ated. The drive measures and saves parameters once every two hours subject to an idle period on the FC-AL   bus. The process of measuring off-line attribute data and saving data to the disc is uninterruptable. The maxi-   mum on-line only processing delay is summarized below:   Maximum processing delay   On-line only delay   Fully-enabled delay   DEXCPT = 0, PERF = 1   DEXCPT = 0, PERF = 0   42 milliseconds   S.M.A.R.T. delay times   163 milliseconds   Reporting control   Reporting is controlled by the MRIE bits in the Informational Exceptions Control mode page (1Ch). Subject to   the reporting method, the firmware will issue to the host an 01-5Dxx sense code. The error code is preserved   through bus resets and power cycles.   16   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Determining rate   S.M.A.R.T. monitors the rate at which errors occur and signals a predictive failure if the rate of degraded errors   increases to an unacceptable level. To determine rate, error events are logged and compared to the number of   total operations for a given attribute. The interval defines the number of operations over which to measure the   rate. The counter that keeps track of the current number of operations is referred to as the Interval Counter.   S.M.A.R.T. measures error rates. All errors for each monitored attribute are recorded. A counter keeps track of   the number of errors for the current interval. This counter is referred to as the Failure Counter.   Error rate is the number of errors per operation. The algorithm that S.M.A.R.T. uses to record rates of error is to   set thresholds for the number of errors and their interval. If the number of errors exceeds the threshold before   the interval expires, the error rate is considered to be unacceptable. If the number of errors does not exceed   the threshold before the interval expires, the error rate is considered to be acceptable. In either case, the inter-   val and failure counters are reset and the process starts over.   Predictive failures   S.M.A.R.T. signals predictive failures when the drive is performing unacceptably for a period of time. The firm-   ware keeps a running count of the number of times the error rate for each attribute is unacceptable. To accom-   plish this, a counter is incremented each time the error rate is unacceptable and decremented (not to exceed   zero) whenever the error rate is acceptable. If the counter continually increments such that it reaches the pre-   dictive threshold, a predictive failure is signaled. This counter is referred to as the Failure History Counter.   There is a separate Failure History Counter for each attribute.   6.2.5   Thermal monitor   Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives implement a temperature warning system which:   1. Signals the host if the temperature exceeds a value which would threaten the drive.   2. Signals the host if the temperature exceeds a user-specified value.   3. Saves a S.M.A.R.T. data frame on the drive which exceeds the threatening temperature value.   A temperature sensor monitors the drive temperature and issues a warning over the interface when the tem-   perature exceeds a set threshold. The temperature is measured at power-up and then at ten-minute intervals   after power-up.   The thermal monitor system generates a warning code of 01-0B01 when the temperature exceeds the speci-   fied limit in compliance with the SCSI standard. The drive temperature is reported in the FRU code field of   mode sense data. You can use this information to determine if the warning is due to the temperature exceeding   the drive threatening temperature or the user-specified temperature.   This feature is controlled by the Enable Warning (EWasc) bit, and the reporting mechanism is controlled by the   Method of Reporting Informational Exceptions field (MRIE) on the Informational Exceptions Control (IEC)   mode page (1Ch).   The current algorithm implements two temperature trip points. The first trip point is set at 68°C which is the   maximum temperature limit according to the drive specification. The second trip point is user-selectable using   the Log Select command. The reference temperature parameter in the temperature log page (see Table 1) can   be used to set this trip point. The default value for this drive is 68°C, however, you can set it to any value in the   range of 0 to 68°C. If you specify a temperature greater than 68°C in this field, the temperature is rounded   down to 68°C. A sense code is sent to the host to indicate the rounding of the parameter field.   Table 1:   Temperature Log Page (0Dh)   Parameter Code   Description   Primary Temperature   Reference Temperature   0000h   0001h   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   17   6.2.6   Drive Self Test (DST)   Drive Self Test (DST) is a technology designed to recognize drive fault conditions that qualify the drive as a   failed unit. DST validates the functionality of the drive at a system level.   There are two test coverage options implemented in DST:   1. Extended test   2. Short test   The most thorough option is the extended test that performs various tests on the drive and scans every logical   block address (LBA) of the drive. The short test is time-restricted and limited in length—it does not scan the   entire media surface, but does some fundamental tests and scans portions of the media.   If DST encounters an error during either of these tests, it reports a fault condition. If the drive fails the test,   remove it from service and return it to Seagate for service.   6.2.6.1   DST failure definition   The drive will present a “diagnostic failed” condition through the self-tests results value of the diagnostic log   page if a functional failure is encountered during DST. The channel and servo parameters are not modified to   test the drive more stringently, and the number of retries are not reduced. All retries and recovery processes   are enabled during the test. If data is recoverable, no failure condition will be reported regardless of the number   of retries required to recover the data.   The following conditions are considered DST failure conditions:   • Seek error after retries are exhausted   • Track-follow error after retries are exhausted   • Read error after retries are exhausted   • Write error after retries are exhausted   Recovered errors will not be reported as diagnostic failures.   6.2.6.2   Implementation   This section provides all of the information necessary to implement the DST function on this drive.   6.2.6.2.1   State of the drive prior to testing   The drive must be in a ready state before issuing the Send Diagnostic command. There are multiple reasons   why a drive may not be ready, some of which are valid conditions, and not errors. For example, a drive may be   in process of doing a format, or another DST. It is the responsibility of the host application to determine the “not   ready” cause.   While not technically part of DST, a Not Ready condition also qualifies the drive to be returned to Seagate as a   failed drive.   A Drive Not Ready condition is reported by the drive under the following conditions:   • Motor will not spin   • Motor will not lock to speed   • Servo will not lock on track   • Drive cannot read configuration tables from the disc   In these conditions, the drive responds to a Test Unit Ready command with an 02/04/00 or 02/04/03 code.   6.2.6.2.2   Invoking DST   To invoke DST, submit the Send Diagnostic command with the appropriate Function Code (001b for the short   test or 010b for the extended test) in bytes 1, bits 5, 6, and 7.   18   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   6.2.6.2.3   Short and extended tests   DST has two testing options:   1. short   2. extended   These testing options are described in the following two subsections.   Each test consists of three segments: an electrical test segment, a servo test segment, and a read/verify scan   segment.   Short test (Function Code: 001b)   The purpose of the short test is to provide a time-limited test that tests as much of the drive as possible within   120 seconds. The short test does not scan the entire media surface, but does some fundamental tests and   scans portions of the media. A complete read/verify scan is not performed and only factual failures will report a   fault condition. This option provides a quick confidence test of the drive.   Extended test (Function Code: 010b)   The objective of the extended test option is to empirically test critical drive components. For example, the seek   tests and on-track operations test the positioning mechanism. The read operation tests the read head element   and the media surface. The write element is tested through read/write/read operations. The integrity of the   media is checked through a read/verify scan of the media. Motor functionality is tested by default as a part of   these tests.   The anticipated length of the Extended test is reported through the Control Mode page.   6.2.6.2.4   Log page entries   When the drive begins DST, it creates a new entry in the Self-test Results Log page. The new entry is created   by inserting a new self-test parameter block at the beginning of the self-test results log parameter section of the   log page. Existing data will be moved to make room for the new parameter block. The drive reports 20 param-   eter blocks in the log page. If there are more than 20 parameter blocks, the least recent parameter block will be   deleted. The new parameter block will be initialized as follows:   1. The Function Code field is set to the same value as sent in the DST command   2. The Self-Test Results Value field is set to Fh   3. The drive will store the log page to non-volatile memory   After a self-test is complete or has been aborted, the drive updates the Self-Test Results Value field in its Self-   Test Results Log page in non-volatile memory. The host may use Log Sense to read the results from up to the   last 20 self-tests performed by the drive. The self-test results value is a 4-bit field that reports the results of the   test. If the field is set to zero, the drive passed with no errors detected by the DST. If the field is not set to zero,   the test failed for the reason reported in the field.   The drive will report the failure condition and LBA (if applicable) in the Self-test Results Log parameter. The   Sense key, ASC, ASCQ, and FRU are used to report the failure condition.   6.2.6.2.5   Abort   There are several ways to abort a diagnostic. You can use a SCSI Bus Reset or a Bus Device Reset message   to abort the diagnostic.   You can abort a DST executing in background mode by using the abort code in the DST Function Code field.   This will cause a 01 (self-test aborted by the application client) code to appear in the self-test results values   log. All other abort mechanisms will be reported as a 02 (self-test routine was interrupted by a reset condition).   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   19   6.2.7   Product warranty   Beginning on the date of shipment to the customer and continuing for the period specified in your purchase   contract, Seagate warrants that each product (including components and subassemblies) that fails to function   properly under normal use due to defect in materials or workmanship or due to nonconformance to the applica-   ble specifications will be repaired or replaced, at Seagate’s option and at no charge to the customer, if returned   by customer at customer’s expense to Seagate’s designated facility in accordance with Seagate’s warranty   procedure. Seagate will pay for transporting the repair or replacement item to the customer. For more detailed   warranty information, refer to the standard terms and conditions of purchase for Seagate products on your pur-   chase documentation.   The remaining warranty for a particular drive can be determined by calling Seagate Customer Service at   1-800-468-3472. You can also determine remaining warranty using the Seagate web site (www.seagate.com).   The drive serial number is required to determine remaining warranty information.   Shipping   When transporting or shipping a drive, use only a Seagate-approved container. Keep your original box. Sea-   gate approved containers are easily identified by the Seagate Approved Package label. Shipping a drive in a   non-approved container voids the drive warranty.   Seagate repair centers may refuse receipt of components improperly packaged or obviously damaged in tran-   sit. Contact your authorized Seagate distributor to purchase additional boxes. Seagate recommends shipping   by an air-ride carrier experienced in handling computer equipment.   Product repair and return information   Seagate customer service centers are the only facilities authorized to service Seagate drives. Seagate does   not sanction any third-party repair facilities. Any unauthorized repair or tampering with the factory seal voids   the warranty.   20   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   7.0   Physical/electrical specifications   This section provides information relating to the physical and electrical characteristics of the drive.   7.1   AC power requirements   None.   7.2   DC power requirements   The voltage and current requirements for a single drive are shown below. Values indicated apply at the drive   connector. Notes are shown following the last power requirements table.   The standard drive models and the SED drive models have identical hardware, however the security and   encryption portion of the drive controller ASIC is enabled and functional in the SED models. This represents a   small additional drain on the 5V supply of about 30mA and a commensurate increase of about 150mW in   power consumption. There is no additional drain on the 12V supply.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   21   Table 2:   ST3600057FC DC power requirements   2 Gbit   4 Gbit   Notes   (Amps)   +5V   (Amps)   (Amps)   (Amps)   +12V [2]   ±5% [2]   0.81   Voltage   +12V [2] +5V   Regulation   [5]   ±5%   ±5% [2]   0.81   ±5%   0.42   Avg idle current DCX   Maximum starting current   (peak DC) DC   [1] [7]   0.39   3σ [3]   0.67   1.02   0.55   1.93   3.73   0.04   0.70   1.00   0.58   1.92   3.61   0.04   (peak AC) AC   3σ [3]   Delayed motor start (max) DC   Peak operating current:   Typical DCX   3σ [1] [4]   [1] [6]   3σ [1]   3σ   0.48   0.50   1.30   1.18   1.19   3.00   0.51   0.53   1.32   1.17   1.19   2.98   Maximum DC   Maximum (peak) DC   Table 3:   ST3450857FC DC power requirements   2 Gbit   4 Gbit   Notes   (Amps)   +5V   (Amps)   (Amps)   (Amps)   +12V [2]   ±5% [2]   0.69   Voltage   +12V [2] +5V   Regulation   [5]   ±5%   ±5% [2]   0.69   ±5%   0.42   Avg idle current DCX   Maximum starting current   (peak DC) DC   [1] [7]   0.40   3σ [3]   0.69   1.08   0.58   1.85   3.77   0.04   0.72   1.08   0.61   1.85   3.49   0.04   (peak AC) AC   3σ [3]   Delayed motor start (max) DC   Peak operating current:   Typical DCX   3σ [1] [4]   [1] [6]   3σ [1]   3σ   0.49   0.53   1.36   1.04   1.07   2.80   0.53   0.57   1.40   1.03   1.07   2.84   Maximum DC   Maximum (peak) DC   22   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Table 4:   ST3300657FC DC power requirements   2 Gbit   Notes (Amps)   +5V   4 Gbit   (Amps)   (Amps)   (Amps)   +12V [2]   ±5% [2]   0.59   Voltage   +12V [2] +5V   Regulation   [5]   ±5%   ±5% [2]   0.59   ±5%   0.39   Avg idle current DCX   Maximum starting current   (peak DC) DC   (peak AC) AC   [1] [7] 0.39   3σ [3]   3σ [3]   0.62   0.96   1.91   3.75   0.04   0.62   0.98   0.56   1.91   3.57   0.04   Delayed motor start (max) DC 3σ [1] [4] 0.56   Peak operating current:   Typical DCX   [1] [6] 0.48   0.92   1.00   2.80   0.48   0.53   1.32   0.91   0.95   2.72   Maximum DC   3σ [1]   3σ   0.53   1.32   Maximum (peak) DC   [1] Measured with average reading DC ammeter. Instantaneous +12V current peaks will exceed these val-   ues. Power supply at nominal voltage. N (number of drives tested) = 6, 35 Degrees C ambient.   [2] For +12 V, a –10% tolerance is allowed during initial spindle start but must return to ±5% before reaching   15000 RPM. The ±5% must be maintained after the drive signifies that its power-up sequence has been   completed and that the drive is able to accept selection by the host initiator.   [4] This condition occurs when the Motor Start option is enabled and the drive has not yet received a Start   Motor command.   [5] See paragraph 7.2.1, "Conducted noise immunity." Specified voltage tolerance includes ripple, noise, and   transient response.   [6] Operating condition is defined as random 8 block reads at 375 I/Os per second for 600GB models and   380 I/Os per second for 450GB and 300GB models. Current and power specified at nominal voltages.   [7] During idle, the drive heads are relocated every 60 seconds to a random location within the band from   three-quarters to maximum track.   General DC power requirement notes.   1. Minimum current loading for each supply voltage is not less than 1.2% of the maximum operating current   shown.   2. The +5V and +12V supplies should employ separate ground returns.   3. Where power is provided to multiple drives from a common supply, careful consideration for individual   drive power requirements should be noted. Where multiple units are powered on simultaneously, the peak   starting current must be available to each device.   4. Parameters, other than spindle start, are measured after a 10-minute warm up.   5. No terminator power.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   23   7.2.1   Conducted noise immunity   Noise is specified as a periodic and random distribution of frequencies covering a band from DC to 10 MHz.   Maximum allowed noise values given below are peak-to-peak measurements and apply at the drive power   connector.   +5 V = 250 mV pp from 0 to 20 MHz.   +12 V = 800 mV pp from 100 Hz to 8 KHz.   450 mV pp from 8 KHz to 20 KHz.   250 mV pp from 20 KHz to 5 MHz.   7.2.2   Power sequencing   The drive does not require power sequencing. The drive protects against inadvertent writing during power-up   and down.   7.2.3   Current profiles   The +12V and +5V current profiles are shown in the following figures.   Figure 1. Typical ST3600057FC current profiles   24   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Figure 2. Typical ST3450857FC current profiles   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   25   Figure 3. Typical ST3300657FC current profiles   26   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   7.3   Power dissipation   600GB model   Typical power dissipation under idle conditions in 4 Gbit operation is 11.58 watts (39.52 BTUs per hour).   To obtain operating power for typical random read operations, refer to the following I/O rate curve (see Figure   4). Locate the typical I/O rate for a drive in your system on the horizontal axis and read the corresponding +5   volt current, +12 volt current, and total watts on the vertical axis. To calculate BTUs per hour, multiply watts by   3.4123.   Figure 4. ST3600057FC DC current and power vs. input/output operations per second   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   27   450GB models   Typical power dissipation under idle conditions in 4 Gbit operation is 10.24 watts (34.94 BTUs per hour).   To obtain operating power for typical random read operations, refer to the following I/O rate curve (see Figure   4). Locate the typical I/O rate for a drive in your system on the horizontal axis and read the corresponding +5   volt current, +12 volt current, and total watts on the vertical axis. To calculate BTUs per hour, multiply watts by   3.4123.   Figure 5. ST3450857FC DC current and power vs. input/output operations per second   28   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   300GB models   Typical power dissipation under idle conditions in 4 Gbit operation is 9.06 watts (30.92 BTUs per hour).   To obtain operating power for typical random read operations, refer to the following I/O rate curve (see Figure   4). Locate the typical I/O rate for a drive in your system on the horizontal axis and read the corresponding +5   volt current, +12 volt current, and total watts on the vertical axis. To calculate BTUs per hour, multiply watts by   3.4123.   Figure 6. ST3300657FC DC current and power vs. input/output operations per second   7.4   Environmental limits   Temperature and humidity values experienced by the drive must be such that condensation does not occur on   any drive part. Altitude and atmospheric pressure specifications are referenced to a standard day at 58.7°F   (14.8°C). Maximum wet bulb temperature is 82°F (28°C).   7.4.1   Temperature   a. Operating   The maximum allowable continuous or sustained HDA case temperature for the rated Annualized Failure   Rate (AFR) is 122°F (50°C) The maximum allowable HDA case temperature is 60°C. Occasional excur-   sions of HDA case temperatures above 122°F (50°C) or below 41°F (5°C) may occur without impact to the   specified AFR. Continual or sustained operation at HDA case temperatures outside these limits may   degrade AFR.   Provided the HDA case temperatures limits are met, the drive meets all specifications over a 41°F to 131°F   (5°C to 55°C) drive ambient temperature range with a maximum temperature gradient of 86°F (30°C) per   hour. Air flow may be needed in the drive enclosure to keep within this range (see Section 8.3). Operation at   HDA case temperatures outside this range may adversely affect the drives ability to meet specifications. To   confirm that the required cooling for the electronics and HDA case is provided, place the drive in its final   mechanical configuration, perform random write/read operations and measure the HDA case temperature   after it has stabilized.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   29   b. Non-operating   –40° to 158°F (–40° to 70°C) package ambient with a maximum gradient of 86°F (30°C) per hour. This   specification assumes that the drive is packaged in the shipping container designed by Seagate for use with   drive.   HDA Temp.   Check Point   1 .0"   .5"   Figure 7. Locations of the HDA temperature check point   7.4.2 Relative humidity   The values below assume that no condensation on the drive occurs.   a. Operating   5% to 95% non-condensing relative humidity with a maximum gradient of 20% per hour.   b. Non-operating   5% to 95% non-condensing relative humidity.   7.4.3   Effective altitude (sea level)   a. Operating   –1,000 to +10,000 feet (–305 to +3,048 meters)   b. Non-operating   –1,000 to +40,000 feet (–305 to +12,210 meters)   30   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   7.4.4   Shock and vibration   Shock and vibration limits specified in this document are measured directly on the drive chassis. If the drive is   installed in an enclosure to which the stated shock and/or vibration criteria is applied, resonances may occur   internally to the enclosure resulting in drive movement in excess of the stated limits. If this situation is apparent,   it may be necessary to modify the enclosure to minimize drive movement.   The limits of shock and vibration defined within this document are specified with the drive mounted by any of   the four methods shown in Figure 8, and in accordance with the restrictions of Section 11.4. Orientation of the   side nearest the I/O connector may be up or down.   7.4.4.1   Shock   a. Operating—normal   The drive, as installed for normal operation, shall operate error free while subjected to intermittent shock not   exceeding:   • 15 Gs at a duration of 11 msec (half sinewave)   • 20 Gs at a duration of 2 msec (half sinewave)   • 60 Gs at a duration of 2 msec (half sinewave) when performing reads only   Shock may be applied in the X, Y, or Z axis. Shock is not to be repeated more than once every 2 seconds.   b. Operating—abnormal   Equipment, as installed for normal operation, does not incur physical damage while subjected to intermit-   tent shock not exceeding 40 Gs at a duration of 11 msec (half sinewave). Shock occurring at abnormal lev-   els may promote degraded operational performance during the abnormal shock period. Specified   operational performance will continue when normal operating shock levels resume. Shock may be applied   in the X, Y, or Z axis. Shock is not to be repeated more than once every 2 seconds.   c. Non-operating   The limits of non-operating shock shall apply to all conditions of handling and transportation. This includes   both isolated drives and integrated drives.   The drive subjected to nonrepetitive shock not exceeding the three values below, shall not exhibit device   damage or performance degradation.   • 80 Gs at a duration of 11 msec (half sinewave)   • 300 Gs at a duration of 2 msec (half sinewave)   • 150 Gs at a duration of 0.5 msec (half sinewave)   Shock may be applied in the X, Y, or Z axis.   d. Packaged   Disc drives shipped as loose load (not palletized) general freight will be packaged to withstand drops from   heights as defined in the table below. For additional details refer to Seagate specifications 30190-001   (under 100 lbs/45 kg) or 30191-001 (over 100 lbs/45 Kg).   Package size   Packaged/product weight   Any   Drop height   <600 cu in (<9,800 cu cm)   600-1800 cu in (9,800-19,700 cu cm)   >1800 cu in (>19,700 cu cm)   >600 cu in (>9,800 cu cm)   60 in (1524 mm)   48 in (1219 mm)   42 in (1067 mm)   36 in (914 mm)   0-20 lb (0 to 9.1 kg)   0-20 lb (0 to 9.1 kg)   20-40 lb (9.1 to 18.1 kg)   Drives packaged in single or multipacks with a gross weight of 20 pounds (8.95 kg) or less by Seagate for   general freight shipment shall withstand a drop test from 48 inches (1,070 mm) against a concrete floor or   equivalent.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   31   7.4.4.2   Vibration   a. Operating—normal   The drive as installed for normal operation, shall comply with the complete specified performance while   subjected to continuous vibration not exceeding   10 – 300 Hz   301– 500 Hz   1.0 G RMS (0 to peak)   0.5 G RMS (0 to peak)   Vibration may be applied in the X, Y, or Z axis.   b. Operating—abnormal   Equipment as installed for normal operation shall not incur physical damage while subjected to periodic   vibration not exceeding:   15 minutes of duration at major resonant frequency   Vibration occurring at these levels may degrade operational performance during the abnormal vibration   period. Specified operational performance will continue when normal operating vibration levels are   resumed. This assumes system recovery routines are available.   Operating abnormal translational random flat profile   5 – 500 Hz   10 - 300 Hz   0.75 G (0 to peak)   0.0029 G2/Hz   c. Non-operating   The limits of non-operating vibration shall apply to all conditions of handling and transportation. This   includes both isolated drives and integrated drives.   The drive shall not incur physical damage or degraded performance as a result of continuous vibration not   exceeding   5 – 22 Hz   22 - 350 Hz   350 - 500 Hz   0.25 G (0 to peak, linear, swept sine, 0.5 octive/min)   3 G (0 to peak, linear, swept sine, 0.5 octive/min)   1 G (0 to peak, linear, swept sine, 0.5 octive/min)   Vibration may be applied in the X, Y, or Z axis.   7.4.5   Acoustics   Sound power during idle mode shall be 3.4 bels typical when measured to ISO 7779 specification. Sound   power while operating shall be 3.8 bels typical when measured to ISO 7779 specification.   There will not be any discrete tones more than 10 dB above the masking noise on typical drives when mea-   sured according to Seagate specification 30553-001. There will not be any tones more than 24 dB above the   masking noise on any drive.   7.4.6   Air cleanliness   The drive is designed to operate in a typical office environment with minimal environmental control.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   33   7.4.7   Corrosive environment   Seagate electronic drive components pass accelerated corrosion testing equivalent to 10 years exposure to   light industrial environments containing sulfurous gases, chlorine and nitric oxide, classes G and H per ASTM   B845. However, this accelerated testing cannot duplicate every potential application environment.   Users should use caution exposing any electronic components to uncontrolled chemical pollutants and corro-   sive chemicals as electronic drive component reliability can be affected by the installation environment. The sil-   ver, copper, nickel and gold films used in Seagate products are especially sensitive to the presence of sulfide,   chloride, and nitrate contaminants. Sulfur is found to be the most damaging. In addition, electronic components   should never be exposed to condensing water on the surface of the printed circuit board assembly (PCBA) or   exposed to an ambient relative humidity greater than 95%. Materials used in cabinet fabrication, such as vulca-   nized rubber, that can outgas corrosive compounds should be minimized or eliminated. The useful life of any   electronic equipment may be extended by replacing materials near circuitry with sulfide-free alternatives.   7.4.8   RoHS compliance statement   The European Union Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive restricts the presence of chemical   substances, including Lead (Pb), in electronic products effective July 2006.   A number of parts and materials in Seagate products are procured from external suppliers. We rely on the   representations of our suppliers regarding the presence of RoHS substances in these parts and materials. Our   supplier contracts require compliance with our chemical substance restrictions, and our suppliers document   their compliance with our requirements by providing material content declarations for all parts and materials for   the disc drives documented in this publication. Current supplier declarations include disclosure of the inclusion   of any RoHS-regulated substance in such parts or materials.   Seagate also has internal systems in place to ensure ongoing compliance with the RoHS Directive and all laws   and regulations which restrict chemical content in electronic products. These systems include standard operat-   ing procedures that ensure that restricted substances are not utilized in our manufacturing operations, labora-   tory analytical validation testing, and an internal auditing process to ensure that we comply with all standard   operating procedures.   7.4.9   Electromagnetic susceptibility   See Section 3.1.1.1.   34   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   7.5   Mechanical specifications   Height: 1.03 in   Width: 4.00 in   26.10 mm   101.60 mm   147 mm   Depth: 5.79 in   Weight (max): 1.76 pounds   0.80 kilograms   B J H L K // T -Z-   REF   S -Z-   [1]   R REF   Notes:   [1]   N -X-   Mounting holes are 6-32 UNC 2B, three on   each side and four on the bottom. Max   screw penetration into side of drive is 0.15   in. (3.81 mm). Max screw tightening torque   is 6.0 in-lb (0.6779 nm) with minimum full   thread engagement of 0.12 in. (3.05 mm).   A -Z-   C M -X-   U -X-   P Dimension Table   Inches   Millimeters   A B C D E F 1.028 max   5.787 max   4.000 .010   3.750 .010   0.125 .010   1.750 .010   1.122 .020   4.000 .010   0.250 .010   1.638 .010   0.181   26.10 max   147.00 max   101.60 .25   95.25 .25   3.18 .25   44.45 .25   28.50 .50   101.60 .25   6.35 .25   41.60 .25   4.60   H J F [1]   K L M N P R S T .040   1.02   1.625 .020   1.618   41.28 .50   41.10   0.276 .040   .015 max   7.00 1.02   0.38 max   0.38 max   U .015 max   E D Figure 9. Mounting configuration dimensions   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   35   8.0   About FIPS   The Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 140-2, FIPS PUB 140-2, is a U.S. govern-   ment computer security standard used to accredit cryptographic modules. It is titled “Security Requirements for   Cryptographic Modules”. The initial publication was on May 25, 2001 and was last updated December 3, 2002.   Purpose   The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) issued the FIPS 140 Publication Series to coordi-   nate the requirements and standards for cryptography modules that include both hardware and software com-   ponents.   Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 140-2 Level 2 Certification requires drives to go through gov-   ernment agencies certifications to add requirements for physical tamper-evidence and role-based authentica-   tion.   Level 2 security   Level 2 improves upon the physical security mechanisms of a Level 1 (lowest level of security) cryptographic   module by requiring features that show evidence of tampering, including tamper-evident coatings or seals that   must be broken to attain physical access to the plaintext cryptographic keys and critical security parameters   (CSPs) within the module, or pick-resistant locks on covers or doors to protect against unauthorized physical   access.   Figure 10. Example of FIPS tamper evidence labels. Does not represent actual drive.   36   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   9.0   About self-encrypting drives   Self-encrypting drives (SEDs) offer encryption and security services for the protection of stored data, com-   monly known as “protection of data at rest.” These drives are compliant with the Trusted Computing Group   (TCG) Enterprise Storage Specifications as detailed in Section 3.3.   The Trusted Computing Group (TCG) is an organization sponsored and operated by companies in the com-   puter, storage and digital communications industry. Seagate’s SED models comply with the standards pub-   lished by the TCG.   To use the security features in the drive, the host must be capable of constructing and issuing the following two   SCSI commands:   • Security Protocol Out   • Security Protocol In   These commands are used to convey the TCG protocol to and from the drive in their command payloads.   9.1   Data encryption   Encrypting drives use one inline encryption engine for each port, employing AES-128 data encryption in Cipher   Block Chaining (CBC) mode to encrypt all data prior to being written on the media and to decrypt all data as it   is read from the media. The encryption engines are always in operation, cannot be disabled, and do not detract   in any way from the performance of the drive.   The 32-byte Data Encryption Key (DEK) is a random number which is generated by the drive, never leaves the   drive, and is inaccessible to the host system. The DEK is itself encrypted when it is stored on the media and   when it is in volatile temporary storage (DRAM) external to the encryption engine. A unique data encryption   9.2   Controlled access   The drive has two security partitions (SPs) called the "Admin SP" and the "Locking SP." These act as gate-   keepers to the drive security services. Security-related commands will not be accepted unless they also supply   the correct credentials to prove the requester is authorized to perform the command.   9.2.1   Admin SP   The Admin SP allows the drive's owner to enable or disable firmware download operations (see Section 9.4).   Access to the Admin SP is available using the SID (Secure ID) password or the MSID (Makers Secure ID)   password.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   37   9.2.2   Locking SP   The Locking SP controls read/write access to the media and the cryptographic erase feature. Access to the   Locking SP is available using the BandMasterX or EraseMaster passwords. Since the drive owner can define   up to 16 data bands on the drive, each data band has its own password called BandMasterX where X is the   number of the data band (0 through 15).   9.2.3   Default password   When the drive is shipped from the factory, all passwords are set to the value of MSID. This 32-byte random   value is printed on the drive label and it can be read by the host electronically over the I/O. After receipt of the   drive, it is the responsibility of the owner to use the default MSID password as the authority to change all other   passwords to unique owner-specified values.   9.3   Random number generator (RNG)   The drive has a 32-byte hardware RNG that it is uses to derive encryption keys or, if requested to do so, to pro-   vide random numbers to the host for system use, including using these numbers as Authentication Keys (pass-   words) for the drive’s Admin and Locking SPs.   9.4   Drive locking   In addition to changing the passwords, as described in Section 9.2.3, the owner should also set the data   access controls for the individual bands.   The variable "LockOnReset" should be set to "PowerCycle" to ensure that the data bands will be locked if   power is lost. This scenario occurs if the drive is removed from its cabinet. The drive will not honor any data   read or write requests until the bands have been unlocked. This prevents the user data from being accessed   without the appropriate credentials when the drive has been removed from its cabinet and installed in another   system.   When the drive is shipped from the factory, the firmware download port is locked and the drive will reject any   attempt to download new firmware. The drive owner must use the SID credential to unlock the firmware down-   load port before firmware updates will be accepted.   9.5   Data bands   When shipped from the factory, the drive is configured with a single data band called Band 0 (also known as   the Global Data Band) which comprises LBA 0 through LBA max. The host may allocate Band1 by specifying a   start LBA and an LBA range. The real estate for this band is taken from the Global Band. An additional 14 Data   Bands may be defined in a similar way (Band2 through Band15) but before these bands can be allocated LBA   space, they must first be individually enabled using the EraseMaster password.   Data bands cannot overlap but they can be sequential with one band ending at LBA (x) and the next beginning   at LBA (x+1).   Each data band has its own drive-generated encryption key and its own user-supplied password. The host may   change the Encryption Key (see Section 9.6) or the password when required. The bands should be aligned to   4K LBA boundaries.   38   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   9.6   Cryptographic erase   A significant feature of SEDs is the ability to perform a cryptographic erase. This involves the host telling the   drive to change the data encryption key for a particular band. Once changed, the data is no longer recoverable   since it was written with one key and will be read using a different key. Since the drive overwrites the old key   with the new one, and keeps no history of key changes, the user data can never be recovered. This is tanta-   mount to an instantaneous data erase and is very useful if the drive is to be scrapped or redispositioned.   9.7   Authenticated firmware download   In addition to providing a locking mechanism to prevent unwanted firmware download attempts, the drive also   only accepts download files which have been cryptographically signed by the appropriate Seagate Design   Center.   Three conditions must be met before the drive will allow the download operation:   1. The download must be an SED file. A standard (base) drive (non-SED) file will be rejected.   2. The download file must be signed and authenticated.   3. As with a non-SED drive, the download file must pass the acceptance criteria for the drive. For example it   must be applicable to the correct drive model, and have compatible revision and customer status.   9.8   Power requirements   The standard drive models and the SED drive models have identical hardware, however the security and   encryption portion of the drive controller ASIC is enabled and functional in the SED models. This represents a   small additional drain on the 5V supply of about 30mA and a commensurate increase of about 150mW in   power consumption. There is no additional drain on the 12V supply. See the tables in Section 7.2 for power   requirements on the standard (non-SED) drive models.   9.9   Supported commands   The SED models support the following two commands in addition to the commands supported by the standard   (non-SED) models as listed in Table 16:   • Security Protocol Out (B5h)   • Security Protocol In (A2h)   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   39   10.0   Defect and error management   Seagate continues to use innovative technologies to manage defects and errors. These technologies are   designed to increase data integrity, perform drive self-maintenance, and validate proper drive operation.   SCSI defect and error management involves drive internal defect/error management and FC system error con-   siderations (errors in communications between the initiator and the drive). In addition, Seagate provides the   following technologies used to increase data integrity and drive reliability:   The read error rates and specified storage capacities are not dependent on host (initiator) defect management   routines.   10.1   Drive internal defects/errors   During the initial drive format operation at the factory, media defects are identified, tagged as being unusable,   and their locations recorded on the drive primary defects list (referred to as the “P’ list and also as the ETF   defect list). At factory format time, these known defects are also reallocated, that is, reassigned to a new place   on the medium and the location listed in the defects reallocation table. The “P” list is not altered after factory   formatting. Locations of defects found and reallocated during error recovery procedures after drive shipment   are listed in the “G” list (defects growth list). The “P” and “G” lists may be referenced by the initiator using the   Read Defect Data command.   Details of the SCSI commands supported by the drive are described in the Fibre Channel Interface Manual.   Also, more information on the drive Error Recovery philosophy is presented in the Fibre Channel Interface   Manual.   10.2   Drive error recovery procedures   When an error occurs during drive operation, the drive, if programmed to do so, performs error recovery proce-   dures to attempt to recover the data. The error recovery procedures used depend on the options previously set   in the Error Recovery Parameters mode page. Error recovery and defect management may involve using sev-   eral SCSI commands described in the Fibre Channel Interface Manual. The drive implements selectable error   recovery time limits required in video applications.   The error recovery scheme supported by the drive provides a way to control the total error recovery time for the   entire command in addition to controlling the recovery level for a single LBA. The total amount of time spent in   error recovery for a command can be limited using the Recovery Time Limit bytes in the Error Recovery mode   page. The total amount of time spent in error recovery for a single LBA can be limited using the Read Retry   Count or Write Retry Count bytes in the Error Recovery mode page.   The drive firmware error recovery algorithms consists of 13 levels for read recoveries and five levels for write.   Each level may consist of multiple steps, where a step is defined as a recovery function involving a single re-   40   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   read or re-write attempt. The maximum level used by the drive in LBA recovery is determined by the read and   write retry counts.   Table 5 equates the read and write retry count with the maximum possible recovery time for read and write   recovery of individual LBAs. The times given do not include time taken to perform reallocations. Reallocations   are performed when the ARRE bit (for reads) or AWRE bit (for writes) is one, the RC bit is zero, and the recov-   ery time limit for the command has not yet been met. Time needed to perform reallocation is not counted   against the recovery time limit.   When the RC bit is one, reallocations are disabled even if the ARRE or AWRE bits are one. The drive will still   perform data recovery actions within the limits defined by the Read Retry Count, Write Retry Count, and   Recovery Time Limit parameters. However, the drive does not report any unrecovered errors.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   41   Table 5:   Read and write retry count maximum recovery times [1]   Read retry   count   Maximum recovery time per LBA   (cumulative, msec)   Write retry Maximum recovery time per LBA   count   (cumulative, msec)   0 51.87   0 23.94   35.91   39.9   1 59.85   1 2 203.49   231.42   295.26   327.18   359.10   446.88   538.65   570.57   598.50   1,534.97   2 3 3 51.87   79.8   4 4 5 5 (default)   107.73   6 7 8 9 10   11 (default)   [1] These values are subject to change.   Setting these retry counts to a value below the default setting could result in an increased unrecovered   error rate which may exceed the value given in this product manual. A setting of zero (0) will result in the   drive not performing error recovery.   For example, suppose the Read/Write Recovery page has the RC bit set to 0, read retry count set to 4,   and the recovery time limit field (Mode Sense page 01, bytes 10 and 11) set to FF FF hex (maximum). A   four LBA Read command is allowed to take up to 253.11 msec recovery time for each of the four LBAs in   the command. If the recovery time limit is set to 00 C8 hex (200 msec decimal) a four LBA read command   is allowed to take up to 200 msec for all error recovery within that command. The use of the Recovery   Time Limit field allows finer granularity on control of the time spent in error recovery. The recovery time   limit only starts counting when the drive is executing error recovery and it restarts on each command.   Therefore, each command’s total recovery time is subject to the recovery time limit. Note: A recovery time   limit of 0 will use the drive’s default value of FF FF. Minimum recovery time limit is achieved by setting the   Recovery Time Limit field to 00 01.   10.3   FC-AL system errors   Information on the reporting of operational errors or faults across the interface is given in the Fibre Channel   Interface Manual. The FCP Response returns information to the host about numerous kinds of errors or faults.   The Receive Diagnostic Results reports the results of diagnostic operations performed by the drive.   Status returned by the drive to the initiator is described in the Fibre Channel Interface Manual. Status reporting   plays a role in systems error management and its use in that respect is described in sections where the various   commands are discussed.   42   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   10.4   Background Media Scan   Background Media Scan (BMS) is a self-initiated media scan. BMS is defined in the T10 document SPC-4   available from the T10 committee. BMS performs sequential reads across the entire pack of the media while   the drive is idle. In RAID arrays, BMS allows hot spare drives to be scanned for defects prior to being put into   service by the host system. On regular duty drives, if the host system makes use of the BMS Log Page, it can   avoid placing data in suspect locations on the media. Unreadable and recovered error sites will be logged or   reallocated per ARRE/AWRE settings.   With BMS, the host system can consume less power and system overhead by only checking BMS status and   results rather than tying up the bus and consuming power in the process of host-initiated media scanning activ-   ity.   Since the background scan functions are only done during idle periods, BMS causes a negligible impact to sys-   tem performance. The first BMS scan for a newly manufactured drive is performed as quickly as possible to   verify the media and protect data by setting the “Start time after idle” to 5ms, all subsequent scans begin after   500ms of idle time. Other features that normally use idle time to function will function normally because BMS   functions for bursts of 800ms and then suspends activity for 100ms to allow other background functions to   operate.   BMS interrupts immediately to service host commands from the interface bus while performing reads. BMS will   complete any BMS-initiated error recovery prior to returning to service host-initiated commands. Overhead   associated with a return to host-servicing activity from BMS only impacts the first command that interrupted   BMS, this results in a typical delay of about 1 ms.   10.5   Media Pre-Scan   Media Pre-Scan is a feature that allows the drive to repair media errors that would otherwise have been found   by the host system during critical data accesses early in the drive’s life. The default setting for Media Pre-Scan   is enabled on standard products. Media Pre-Scan checks each write command to determine if the destination   LBAs have been scanned by BMS. If the LBAs have been verified, the drive proceeds with the normal write   command. If the LBAs have not been verified by BMS, Pre-Scan will convert the write to a write verify to certify   that the data was properly written to the disc.   Note. During Pre-Scan write verify commands, write performance may decrease by 50% until Pre-Scan   completes. Write performance testing should be performed after Pre-Scan is complete. This may   be checked by reading the BMS status.   To expedite the scan of the full pack and subsequently exit from the Pre-Scan period, BMS will begin scanning   immediately when the drive goes to idle during the Pre-Scan period. In the event that the drive is in a high   transaction traffic environment and is unable to complete a BMS scan within 24 power on hours BMS will dis-   able Pre-Scan to restore full performance to the system.   10.6   Deferred Auto-Reallocation   Deferred Auto-Reallocation (DAR) simplifies reallocation algorithms at the system level by allowing the drive to   reallocate unreadable locations on a subsequent write command. Sites are marked for DAR during read oper-   ations performed by the drive. When a write command is received for an LBA marked for DAR, the auto-reallo-   cation process is invoked and attempts to rewrite the data to the original location. If a verification of this rewrite   fails, the sector is re-mapped to a spare location.   This is in contrast to the system having to use the Reassign Command to reassign a location that was unread-   able and then generate a write command to rewrite the data. DAR is most effective when AWRE and ARRE   are enabled—this is the default setting from the Seagate factory. With AWRE and ARRE disabled DAR is   unable to reallocate the failing location and will report an error sense code indicating that a write command is   being attempted to a previously failing location.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   43   10.7   Idle Read After Write   Idle Read After Write (IRAW) utilizes idle time to verify the integrity of recently written data. During idle periods,   no active system requests, the drive reads recently written data from the media and compares it to valid write   command data resident in the drives data buffer. Any sectors that fail the comparison result in the invocation of   a rewrite and auto-reallocation process. The process attempts to rewrite the data to the original location. If a   verification of this rewrite fails, the sector is re-mapped to a spare location.   44   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   11.0   Installation   Cheetah 15K.7 FC disc drive installation is a plug-and-play process. There are no jumpers, switches, or termi-   nators on the drive. Simply plug the drive into the host’s 40-pin Fibre Channel backpanel connector (FC-   Use the FC-AL interface to select drive ID and all option configurations for devices on the loop.   If multiple devices are on the same FC-AL and physical addresses are used, set the device selection IDs (SEL   IDs) on the backpanel so that no two devices have the same selection ID. This is called the hard assigned arbi-   trated loop physical address (AL_PA). There are 125 AL_PAs available (see Table 27). If you set the AL_PA on   the backpanel to any value other than 0, the device plugged into the backpanel’s SCA connector inherits this   AL_PA. In the event you don’t successfully assign unique hard addresses (and therefore have duplicate selec-   tion IDs assigned to two or more devices), the FC-AL generates a message indicating this condition. If you set   the AL_PA on the backpanel to a value of 0, the system issues a unique soft-assigned physical address auto-   matically.   Loop initialization is the process used to verify or obtain an address. The loop initialization process is per-   formed when power is applied to the drive, when a device is added or removed from the Fibre Channel loop, or   when a device times out attempting to win arbitration.   • Set all option selections in the connector prior to applying power to the drive. If you change options after   applying power to the drive, recycle the drive power to activate the new settings.   • It is not necessary to low-level format this drive. The drive is shipped from the factory low-level formatted in   512-byte logical blocks. You need to reformat the drive only if you want to select a different logical block size.   11.1   Drive ID/option selection   All drive options are made through the interface connector (J1). Table 24 provides the pin descriptions for the   40-pin Fibre Channel single connector (J1).   11.2   Drive orientation   The drive may be mounted in any orientation. All drive performance characterizations, however, have been   done with the drive in horizontal (discs level) and vertical (drive on its side) orientations, which are the two pre-   ferred mounting orientations.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   45   11.3   Cooling   The host enclosure must dissipate heat from the drive. You should confirm that the host enclosure is designed   to ensure that the drive operates within the temperature measurement guidelines described in Section 7.4.1. In   some cases, forced airflow may be required to keep temperatures at or below the temperatures specified in   Section 7.4.1.   If forced air is necessary, possible air-flow patterns are shown in Figure 11. The air-flow patterns are created by   fans either forcing or drawing air as shown in the illustrations. Conduction, convection, or other forced air-flow   Above unit   Under unit   Note. Air flows in the direction shown (back to front)   or in reverse direction (front to back)   Above unit   Under unit   Note. Air flows in the direction shown or   in reverse direction (side to side)   Figure 11. Air flow   46   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   11.4   Drive mounting   Mount the drive using the bottom or side mounting holes. If you mount the drive using the bottom holes, ensure   that you do not physically distort the drive by attempting to mount it on a stiff, non-flat surface.   The allowable mounting surface stiffness is 80 lb/in (14.0 N/mm). The following equation and paragraph define   the allowable mounting surface stiffness:   K x X = F < 15lb = 67N   where K is the mounting surface stiffness (units in lb/in or N/mm) and X is the out-of-plane surface distortion   (units in inches or millimeters). The out-of-plane distortion (X) is determined by defining a plane with three of   the four mounting points fixed and evaluating the out-of-plane deflection of the fourth mounting point when a   known force (F) is applied to the fourth point.   Note. Before mounting the drive in any kind of 3.5-inch to 5.25-inch adapter frame, verify with Seagate   Technology that the drive can meet the shock and vibration specifications given herein while   mounted in such an adapter frame. Adapter frames that are available may not have a mechanical   structure capable of mounting the drive so that it can meet the shock and vibration specifications   listed in this manual.   11.5   Grounding   Signal ground (PCBA) and HDA ground are connected together in the drive and cannot be separated by the   user. The equipment in which the drive is mounted is connected directly to the HDA and PCBA with no electri-   cally isolating shock mounts. If it is desired for the system chassis to not be connected to the HDA/PCBA   ground, the systems integrator or user must provide a nonconductive (electrically isolating) method of mount-   ing the drive in the host equipment.   Increased radiated emissions may result if you do not provide the maximum surface area ground connection   between system ground and drive ground. This is the system designer’s and integrator’s responsibility.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   47   12.0   Interface requirements   This section partially describes the interface requirements as implemented on Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives. Addi-   tional information is provided in the Fibre Channel Interface Manual (part number 100293070).   12.1   FC-AL features   This section lists the Fibre Channel-specific features supported by Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives.   12.1.1   Table 6 lists the link services supported by Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives.   Table 6: Link services supported   Fibre Channel link service frames   Type of frame   Link service   Basic link service frames   Basic link service reply frames   Abort Sequence (ABTS)   Basic_Accept (BA_ACC)   Basic_Reject (BA_RJT)   Extended link service frames   N_Port Login (PLOGI)   Fabric Login (FLOGI)   Logout (LOGO)   Process Login (PRLI)   Process Logout (PRLO)   Read Link Status (RLS)   Fabric Address Notification (FAN)   Port Discovery (PDISC)   Address Discovery (ADISC)   Third-party Process Logout (TRPLO)   Extended link service reply frames   Fibre Channel Services   Accept (ACC)   Link Service Reject (LS_RJT)   Register FC-4 Types (RFT_ID)   48   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   12.1.2   Fibre Channel task management functions   Table 7 lists the Fibre Channel SCSI Fibre Channel Protocol (FC SCSI FCP) task management functions sup-   ported.   Table 7:   Fibre Channel SCSI FCP task management functions   Task name   Supported   Terminate task   Clear ACA   No   Yes   Yes   Yes   Yes   Target reset   Clear task set   Abort task set   12.1.3   Table 8 lists the FC SCSI FCP response codes returned for task management functions supported.   Table 8: FC SCSI FCP response codes   Fibre Channel task management responses   Function name   Response code   Function complete   Function not supported   Function reject   00   04   05   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   49   12.1.4   Fibre Channel port login   Table 9 identifies the required content of the N_Port Login (PLOGI) payload from an initiator.   Table 9:   Bytes   N_Port login (PLOGI) payload   0-15   03   00   00   00   09   09   BB   PN   BB   PN   CF   PN   XX   PN   FS   PN   FS   PN   XX   NN   XX   NN   XX   NN   XX   NN   Common   16-31   32-35   36-47   48-51   52-63   64-67   68-79   80-83   84-95   96-99   100-111   112-115   XX   NN   XX   NN   XX   NN   XX   NN   PN   PN   XX   XX   SO   XX   XX   XX   XX   SO   XX   XX   XX   XX   IC   XX   XX   IC   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   FS   XX   XX   XX   XX   FS   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   CS   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   Class 1   Class 2   Class 3   Reserved   XX   XX   OS   XX   XX   XX   XX   OS   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   Vendor   Version   X Indicates a four-bit (hex) field is not checked.   Indicates a single bit is not checked.   x BB   CF   BB-Credit. This field is not checked. The FC-AL drive uses BB-Credit of zero (0).   Common features. This binary field selects the common features requested by the initiator login.   MSB   Continuously increasing offset   Random relative offset   Valid version level   Must = 1   Not checked. Port Login Accept will return a 0—not supported.   x N_Port/F_Port   Must = 0, N_Port   Must = 1   Alternate credit model   Other bits reserved   xxx XX   FS   PN   Receive buffer field size. The FS field in the common and Class 3 parameters is checked for the range 128 < FS < 2,112 and a   multiple of four bytes. For multiple frame sequences, all frames but the last frame of the sequence must be this size. Only the   receive buffer field size in the Class 3 parameters is used.   Port name (initiator’s)—saved with the login parameters. If a change of the port name/AL_PA address association is detected   during a Port DISCovery, and implicit logout occurs and the initiator returns a LS_RJT.   NN   SO   Node name. The node name is not checked or saved by the drive.   Service options Class 3 only.   MSB   Class valid   Must = 1   Intermix   x Stacked connection req.   Sequential delivery   Other bits reserved   xx   x xxx XX   IC   Initiator control   MSB XID reassign   xx   Proc Assc   Other bits   10 or 11 causes the login to be rejected. Other values are accepted.   XXX   CS   OS   Concurrent sequences   Must be a value greater than 0.   Must be a value greater than 0.   Open sequences per exchange   50   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   12.1.5   Fibre Channel port login accept   Table 10 identifies the N_Port Login access payload values.   Table 10:   Bytes   N_Port Login Accept (ACC) payload   0-15   02   00   00   00   UI   00   01   UI   00   F4   UI   09   2P   09   00   00   00   88   00   UI   FS   UI   FS   UI   00   20   FF   00   00   01   Common   16-31   32-35   36-47   48-51   52-63   64-67   68-79   80-83   84-95   96-99   100-111   112-115   CC   CC   CC   CC   CC   CC   00   00   80   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   FS   00   00   00   00   FS   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   FF   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   Class 1   Class 2   Class 3   Reserved   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   01   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   Vendor -   Version   CC   FS   UI   Bytes (22, 23 and 24) and (30, 31 and 32) are currently factory set to 00 04 CF respectively (subject to change).   Receive buffer field size. The drive returns and uses the receive buffer size from the N_Port Login Class 3 receive buffer.   Unique identifier. This 24-bit field is uniquely assigned to the drive. This same UI appears in the Port Name and Node Name   fields.   P Byte port identifier field.   0 1 2 P_LOGI received on Node.   P_LOGI received on Port A.   P_LOGI received on Port B.   12.1.6   Fibre Channel Process Login   Table 11 lists the process login payload data.   Table 11:   Process Login (PLRI) payload   Bytes   0-15   20   00   10   00   00   00   14   22   08   00   20   00   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   XX   16-19   XX   Indicates fields that are not used.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   51   12.1.7   Fibre Channel Process Login Accept   Table 12 lists Cheetah 15K.7 FC process login accept payload data.   Table 12:   Process Login Accept (ACC) payload   Bytes   0-15   02   00   10   00   00   00   14   12   08   00   21   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   16-31   12.1.8   Fibre Channel fabric login   Table 13 lists the fabric login payload from the drive.   Table 13:   Fabric Login (FLOGI) payload   Bytes   0-15   04   00   00   00   00   02   UI   00   F4   UI   09   09   00   00   00   08   00   08   40   00   00   00   00   00   Common   16-31   32-35   36-47   48-51   52-63   64-67   68-79   80-83   84-95   96-99   100-111   2P   CC CC CC UI   UI   00   00   08   00   00   UI   00   00   40   00   00   02   00   00   00   00   00   CC CC   CC UI   00   00   80   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   Class 1   Class 2   Class 3   Reserved   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   00   Vendor -   Version   112-115 00   CC   UI   Bytes (22, 23 and 24) and (30, 31 and 32) are currently factory set to 00 04 CF respectively (subject to change).   Unique identifier. This 24-bit field is uniquely assigned to the drive. This same UI appears in the Port Name and Node Name   fields.   P Port identifier field.   1 2 FLOGI originated on Port A.   FLOGI originated on Port B.   52   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   12.1.9   Fibre Channel fabric accept login   Table 14:   Fabric Login Accept (ACC) payload   Bytes   0-15   02   E_   00   00   00   V_   09   09   BB BB CF XX FS FS R_ A_   T0   V_   Common   16-31   32-35   36-47   48-51   52-63   64-67   68-79   80-83   84-95   96-99   100-111   D_ T0   PN PN PN PN PN PN PN PN NN NN NN NN   NN NN NN NN   XX XX XX XX   XX XX XX XX   OS OS XX XX   XX XX XX XX   XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX Class 1   XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX Class 2   SO SO xx   xx   XX XX FS FS XX xx   XX XX Class 3   XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX Reserved   XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX Vendor -   Version   112-115 XX XX XX XX   X Indicates a four-bit (hex) field is not checked.   x Indicates a single bit is not checked.   BB   CF   BB-Credit. This field is not checked. The FC-AL drive uses BB-Credit of zero (0).   Common features. This binary field selects the common features requested by the fabric login.   MSB   Continuously increasing offset   Random relative offset   Valid version level   x x x N_Port/F_Port   Must = 1, F_Port   Must = 1   Alternate credit model   Other bits reserved   xxx XX   FS   PN   Receive buffer field size. The FS field in the common and Class 3 parameters is checked for the range 128 < FS < 2,112 and a   multiple of four bytes. The receive buffer field size in the Class 3 parameters is used. The drive uses the lower FS of Fabric   Login Accept or N_Port Login when sending frames to an initiator.   Port Name. The fabric port name is saved with the login parameters. If a change of the port name is detected during a FAN, an   implicit logout occurs and a LS_RJT is returned to the fabric.   NN   SO   Node Name. The drive does not check or save the node name.   Service Options—Class 3 only.   MSB   Class valid   Must = 1   x Intermix   Stacked connection req.   Sequential delivery   Other bits reserved   xx   Must = 1   xxx XX   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   53   12.1.10   Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop options   Table 15 lists the FC-AL options supported by Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives.   Table 15:   Option   FC-AL options supported   Supported   OPEN Half Duplex   OPEN Full Duplex   Private Loop   Accepted from another device.   Sent to open another device. Accepted from another device.   Yes   Yes   No   Public Loop   Old Port State   Loop Position   Yes   Yes   Loop Position Report   12.2   Dual port support   Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives have two independent FC-AL ports. These ports may be connected on independent   loops or on the same loop. Port A and Port B may be connected in any order or combination.   • If both ports are connected on independent loops and hard addressing is used, the drive interface address is   selected through the interface connector, both ports will seek the same loop address. If no conflict, both   ports will have the same loop address.   • If both ports are connected in the same loop and hard addressing is used, at least one port will attempt tak-   ing a soft address to prevent an address conflict.   Note. When a Cheetah 15K.7 FC drive is connected in loops with previous Seagate FC drive products:   Barracuda 4LP FC (ST32171FC, ST34371FC, and ST34571FC)   Barracuda 9FC (ST19171FC)   Cheetah 4LP FC (ST34501FC)   Cheetah 9FC (ST19101FC)   the connection of Port A and B for these products must follow the requirements in their product manu-   als.   Subject to buffer availability, the Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives support:   • Concurrent port transfers—The drive supports receiving transfers on both ports at the same time when the   ports are on independent loops.   • Full duplex—The drive supports sending FCP_Data, FCP_RSP, FCP_XFR_RDY and ELS transfers while   receiving frames on both ports.   12.3   SCSI commands supported   Table 16 lists the SCSI commands supported by Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives.   54   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Table 16:   Supported commands   Executable state of standard SCSI commands in the presence of   LBA banding (applies to SED models only)   Affected LBA   User Data Unlocked   Affected LBA   Locked   Command Supported   Affectsentire Accessed ReadLock=Write ReadLock=Write   code   (Y/N) [4]   Command name   Test unit ready   Rezero unit   Drive (Y/N)   (Y/N)   Lock=False   Executable   Executable   Executable   Lock=True   Executable   Executable   Executable   00h   Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N 01h   N 03h   Request sense   Extended sense   Field pointer bytes   Actual retry count bytes   Format unit [1]   Reassign blocks   Read   N 04h   07h   08h   0Ah   0Bh   12h   Y N N N N Y Y Y Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   Check Condition   Check Condition   Check Condition   Check Condition   Executable   Write   Seek   Inquiry   Executable   Vital product data page (00h)   Unit serial number page (80h)   Implemented operating def. page   (81h)   Y Y Y Y Y Y Device Identification page (83h)   Firmware numbers page (C0h)   Date code page (C1h)   Jumper settings page (C2h)   Device Behavior page (C3h)   15h   16h   Mode select (same pages as Mode   Sense command shown below) [3]   Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   Y N N Y N Y Y Y Y Reserve   3rd party reserved   Extent reservation   Release   17h   18h   1Ah   Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   Copy   Mode sense   Unit attention page (00h)   Error recovery page (01h)   Disconnect/reconnect control (page   02h)   Y Y Format page (03h)   Rigid disc drive geometry page   (04h)   Y Y Y Y Verify error recovery page (07h)   Caching parameters page (08h)   Control mode page (0Ah)   Fibre Channel Interface Control   page (19h)   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   55   Table 16:   Supported commands (continued)   Executable state of standard SCSI commands in the presence of   LBA banding (applies to SED models only)   Affected LBA   User Data Unlocked   Affected LBA   Locked   Command Supported   Affectsentire Accessed ReadLock=Write ReadLock=Write   code   (Y/N) [4]   Command name   Drive (Y/N)   (Y/N)   Lock=False   Lock=True   Y Y Power control page (1Ah)   Information exceptions control page   (1Ch)   Y Background Scan mode subpage   (01h)   1Bh   1Ch   Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y N N N N N N Y N Y N Start unit/stop unit   Receive diagnostic results   Supported diagnostics pages   Translate page   Y Y Y N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   Enclosure services page   Send diagnostics page   Supported diagnostics pages   Translate page   1Dh   Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   25h   28h   Read capacity   Read extended   Disable page out   Force unit access   Relative address   Write extended   2Ah   Disable page out   Force unit access   Relative address   Seek extended   2Bh   2Eh   Write and verify   N Y Executable   Check Condition   Disable page out   Byte check   Relative address   Verify (10) (BYTCHK = 0)   Verify (10) (BYTCHK = 1)   Disable page out   Byte check   2Fh   N N Y Y Executable   Executable   Executable   Check Condition   Relative address   Search data high   Search data equal   Search data low   Set limits   30h   31h   32h   33h   34h   35h   36h   37h   39h   Prefetch   N N Y Y Executable   Executable   Check Condition   Executable   Synchronize cache   Lock-unlock-cache   Read defect data   Compare   Y N Executable   Executable   56   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Table 16:   Supported commands (continued)   Executable state of standard SCSI commands in the presence of   LBA banding (applies to SED models only)   Affected LBA   User Data Unlocked   Affected LBA   Locked   Command Supported   Affectsentire Accessed ReadLock=Write ReadLock=Write   code   (Y/N) [4]   Command name   Copy and verify   Write buffer   Drive (Y/N)   (Y/N)   Lock=False   Lock=True   3Ah   N Y 3Bh   N Y Check Condition   Check Condition   (all modes except modes 4h - 7h, 0Eh, and 0Fh)   Y N Executable   Executable   (modes 4h - 7h, 0Eh, and 0Fh)   Y Write combined header and data   mode (0)   Y N Y Write data mode (2)   Download microcode mode (4)   Download microcode and save   modes (5)   N Y Download microcode with offsets   mode (6)   Download microcode with offsets   and save mode (7)   Y Y Firmware download option [2]   3Ch   3Ch   Read buffer (Mode 1Ch -- Error   Retrieval Mode)   Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Y Y Read buffer   Check Condition   Check Condition   Read combined header and data   mode (0)   Y Y Y Y Read data mode (2)   Read descriptor mode (3)   Read long   3Eh   3Fh   N N N Y N Y Y Y N Y Check Condition   Check Condition   Executable   Check Condition   Check Condition   Check Condition   Check Condtion   Check Condition   Write long (10) (WR_UNCOR = 0)   Write long (10) (WR_UNCOR = 1)   Change definition   Write same (10)   40h   41h   N Y N N N Y Y Y Y Y N Executable   Executable   PBdata   LBdata   42-4Bh   4Ch   Not used   Log Select   Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   4Dh   Log Sense   Support Log page (00h)   Write Error Counter page (02h)   Read Error Counter page (03h)   Read Reverse Error Counter page   (04h)   Y Y Verify Error Counter page (05h)   Non-medium Error Counter page   (06h)   Y N Y Temperature page (0Dh)   Application Client page (0Fh)   Self Test Results page (10h)   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   57   Table 16:   Supported commands (continued)   Executable state of standard SCSI commands in the presence of   LBA banding (applies to SED models only)   Affected LBA   User Data Unlocked   Affected LBA   Locked   Command Supported   Affectsentire Accessed ReadLock=Write ReadLock=Write   code   (Y/N) [4]   Command name   Drive (Y/N)   (Y/N)   Lock=False   Lock=True   Y Background Medium Scan page   (15h)   Y Cache Statistics Counter page (37h)   Factory Log page (3Eh)   Not used   Y 4E-4Fh   50h   N N XD write   51h   N XP write   52h   N XD read   53-54h   55h   N Not used   Y Mode Select (10) [3]   Reserved (10)   56h   Y Y 3rd party reserve   Extent reservation   Released (10)   N 57h   Y 58-59h   5Ah   N Not used   Y Mode Sense (10) [3]   Not used   5B-5Dh   5E   N A Persistent reserve in   Persistent reserve out   Not used   Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   5F   A 60-7Eh   7Fh   N Y (PI only)   Write Same (32)   Verify (32) (BYTCHK = 0)   Verify (32) (BYTCHK = 1)   XD write extended   Rebuild   N N N Y Y Y Executable   Executable   Executable   Check Condition   Executable   7Fh   Y (PI only)   7Fh   Y (PI only)   Check Condition   80h   N 81h   N 82h   N Regenerate   83-8Eh   8Fh   N Not used   Y (PI only)   Y (PI only)   Y (PI only)   Y Verify (16) (BYTCHK = 0)   Verify (16) (BYTCHK = 1)   Write same (16)   Report LUNS   N N N Y Y Y Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   8Fh   Check Condition   Check Condition   Executable   93h   A0h   A2h   Y Security Protocol In   Executable   (SED only)   A3h   B5h   Y Report Device Identifier   Security Protocol Out   Y Y N N Executable   Executable   Executable   Executable   (SED only)   Y (SED only)   C0-DFh   EO-FFh   N N Not used   Not used   [1] Cheetah 15K.7 FC drives can format to 512, 520, 524 or 528 bytes per logical block.   [2] Warning. Power loss during flash programming can result in firmware corruption. This usually makes the   drive inoperable.   58   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   [3] Reference Mode Sense command 1Ah for mode pages supported.   [4] Y = Yes. Command is supported.   N = No. Command is not supported.   A = Support is available on special request.   12.3.1   Inquiry data   Table 17 lists the Inquiry command data that the drive should return to the initiator per the format given in the   Fibre Channel Interface Manual.   Table 17:   Bytes   Cheetah 15K.7 FC inquiry data   Data (hex)   0-15   00   [53   R#   00   00   00   00   00   54   R#   00   00   00   43   xx**   33   12   36   R#   00   00   00   70   20   68   8B   30   S#   00   00   00   79   53   74   00   30   S#   00   00   00   72   65   73   PP   30   S#   00   00   00   69   61   20   02   35   S#   00   00   00   67   67   72   53   37   S#   00   00   00   68   61   65   45   46   S#   00   00   00   74   74   73   41   43]1 20   47   41   20   00   00   00   00   63   41   76   54   20   00   00   00   00   29   6C   65   45   20   00   00   00   00   20   6C   64   20   20   00   00   00   00   Vendor ID   Product ID   16-31   32-47   48-63   64-79   80-95   96-111   112-127   128-143   R#   00   S#   00   00   00   20   65   65   S#   00   00   00   28   20   72   00   00   6F   32* *Copyright   30* 30* 39*   72 69 67   20   20   notice   * Copyright year (changes with actual year).   SCSI Revision support. Refer to the SPC release documentation for definitions.   **   PP 50 = Inquiry data for an Inquiry command received on Port A.   70 = Inquiry data for an Inquiry command received on Port B.   R# Four ASCII digits representing the last four digits of the product firmware release number.   S# Eight ASCII digits representing the eight digits of the product serial number.   [ ]   Bytes 18 through 26 reflect model of drive in hex format.   12.3.2   Mode Sense data   The Mode Sense command provides a way for the drive to report its operating parameters to the initiator. The   drive maintains four sets of mode parameters:   1. Default values   Default values are hard-coded in the drive firmware stored in flash E-PROM (nonvolatile memory) on the   drive’s PCB. These default values can be changed only by downloading a complete set of new firmware   into the flash E-PROM. An initiator can request and receive from the drive a list of default values and use   those in a Mode Select command to set up new current and saved values, where the values are change-   able.   2. Saved values   Saved values are stored on the drive’s media using a Mode Select command. Only parameter values that   are allowed to be changed can be changed by this method. Parameters in the saved values list that are not   changeable by the Mode Select command get their values from default values storage.   When power is applied to the drive, it takes saved values from the media and stores them as current val-   ues in volatile memory. It is not possible to change the current values (or the saved values) with a Mode   Select command before the drive achieves operating speed and is “ready.” An attempt to do so results in a   “Check Condition” status.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   59   On drives requiring unique saved values, the required unique saved values are stored into the saved val-   ues storage location on the media prior to shipping the drive. Some drives may have unique firmware with   unique default values also.   On standard OEM drives, the saved values are taken from the default values list and stored into the saved   values storage location on the media prior to shipping.   3. Current values   Current values are volatile values being used by the drive to control its operation. A Mode Select command   can be used to change the values identified as changeable values. Originally, current values are installed   from saved or default values after a power on reset, hard reset, or Bus Device Reset message.   4. Changeable values   Changeable values form a bit mask, stored in nonvolatile memory, that dictates which of the current values   and saved values can be changed by a Mode Select command. A one (1) indicates the value can be   changed. A zero (0) indicates the value is not changeable. For example, in Table 18, refer to Mode page   81, in the row entitled “CHG.” These are hex numbers representing the changeable values for Mode page   81. Note in columns 5 and 6 (bytes 04 and 05), there is 00h which indicates that in bytes 04 and 05 none of   the bits are changeable. Note also that bytes 06, 07, 09, 10, and 11 are not changeable, because those   fields are all zeros. In byte 02, hex value FF equates to the binary pattern 11111111. If there is a zero in any   bit position in the field, it means that bit is not changeable. Since all of the bits in byte 02 are ones, all of   these bits are changeable.   The changeable values list can only be changed by downloading new firmware into the flash E-PROM.   Note. Because there are often several different versions of drive control firmware in the total population of   drives in the field, the Mode Sense values given in the following tables may not exactly match those   of some drives.   The following tables list the values of the data bytes returned by the drive in response to the Mode Sense com-   mand pages for SCSI implementation (see the Fibre Channel Interface Manual).   Definitions:   SAV = Current saved value.   DEF = Default value. Standard OEM drives are shipped configured this way.   CHG = Changeable bits; indicates if default value is changeable.   60   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Table 18:   Mode Sense data saved, default and changeable values for ST3600057FC drives   MODE DATA HEADER:   00 be 00 10 00 00 00 08   MODE PAGES:   DEF 81 0a c0 0b ff 00 00 00 05 00 ff ff   CHG 81 0a ff ff 00 00 00 00 ff 00 ff ff   DEF 82 0e 80 80 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 3a 00 00 00 00   CHG 82 0e ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 83 16 bb d0 00 00 00 00 03 80 04 c4 02 00 00 01 00 c0 00 4c 40 00 00 00   CHG 83 16 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 84 16 01 8a 9a 08 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 3a a7 00 00   CHG 84 16 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 87 0a 00 0b ff 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff   CHG 87 0a 0f ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff   DEF 88 12 14 00 ff ff 00 00 ff ff ff ff 80 20 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG 88 12 a5 00 00 00 ff ff ff ff 00 00 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 8a 0a 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 19 00   CHG 8a 0a 03 f0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 99 06 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG 99 06 00 ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 9a 0a 00 02 00 00 00 05 00 00 8c a0   CHG 9a 0a 00 03 ff ff ff ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 9c 0a 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01   CHG 9c 0a 9d 0f ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff   DEF dc 01 00 0c 01 01 00 18 00 18 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG dc 01 00 0c 00 01 ff ff ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 80 06 00 80 0f 00 00 00   CHG 80 06 b7 c0 8f 00 00 00   READ CAPACITY DATA:   READ BUFFER   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F   ASCII   000000: 45 DD 2F AF 00 00 02 00 __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ E./....   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   61   Table 19:   Mode Sense data default and changeable values for ST3450857FC drives   MODE DATA HEADER:   00 be 00 10 00 00 00 08   BLOCK DESCRIPTOR:   34 65 f8 70 00 00 02 00   MODE PAGES:   DEF 81 0a c0 0b ff 00 00 00 05 00 ff ff   CHG 81 0a ff ff 00 00 00 00 ff 00 ff ff   DEF 82 0e 80 80 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 3a 00 00 00 00   CHG 82 0e ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 83 16 bb d0 00 00 00 00 03 80 04 c4 02 00 00 01 00 c0 00 4c 40 00 00 00   CHG 83 16 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 84 16 01 8a 9a 06 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 3a a7 00 00   CHG 84 16 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 87 0a 00 0b ff 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff   CHG 87 0a 0f ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff   DEF 88 12 14 00 ff ff 00 00 ff ff ff ff 80 20 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG 88 12 a5 00 00 00 ff ff ff ff 00 00 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 8a 0a 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 12 c0   CHG 8a 0a 03 f0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 99 06 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG 99 06 00 ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 9a 0a 00 02 00 00 00 05 00 00 8c a0   CHG 9a 0a 00 03 ff ff ff ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 9c 0a 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01   CHG 9c 0a 9d 0f ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff   DEF dc 01 00 0c 01 01 00 18 00 18 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG dc 01 00 0c 00 01 ff ff ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 80 06 00 80 0f 00 00 00   CHG 80 06 b7 c0 8f 00 00 00   READ CAPACITY DATA:   READ BUFFER   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F   ASCII   000000: 34 65 F8 6F 00 00 02 00 __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __   62   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Table 20:   Mode Sense data default and changeable values for ST3300657FC drives   MODE DATA HEADER:   00 be 00 10 00 00 00 08   BLOCK DESCRIPTOR:   22 ec b2 5c 00 00 02 00   MODE PAGES:   DEF 81 0a c0 0b ff 00 00 00 05 00 ff ff   CHG 81 0a ff ff 00 00 00 00 ff 00 ff ff   DEF 82 0e 80 80 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 3a 00 00 00 00   CHG 82 0e ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 83 16 bb d0 00 00 00 00 03 80 04 c4 02 00 00 01 00 c0 00 4c 40 00 00 00   CHG 83 16 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 84 16 01 8a 9a 04 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 3a a7 00 00   CHG 84 16 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 87 0a 00 0b ff 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff   CHG 87 0a 0f ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff   DEF 88 12 14 00 ff ff 00 00 ff ff ff ff 80 20 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG 88 12 a5 00 00 00 ff ff ff ff 00 00 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 8a 0a 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0c 80   CHG 8a 0a 03 f0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 99 06 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG 99 06 00 ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 9a 0a 00 02 00 00 00 05 00 00 8c a0   CHG 9a 0a 00 03 ff ff ff ff 00 00 00 00   DEF 9c 0a 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01   CHG 9c 0a 9d 0f ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff   DEF dc 01 00 0c 01 01 00 18 00 18 00 00 00 00 00 00   CHG dc 01 00 0c 00 01 ff ff ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00   DEF 80 06 00 80 0f 00 00 00   CHG 80 06 b7 c0 8f 00 00 00   READ CAPACITY DATA:   READ BUFFER   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F   ASCII   000000: 22 EC B2 5B 00 00 02 00 __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   63   12.4   Miscellaneous operating features and conditions   Table 21 lists various features and conditions. A “Y” in the support column indicates the feature or condition is   supported. An “N” in the support column indicates the feature or condition is not supported.   Table 21:   Miscellaneous features   Supported   Feature or condition   Y N N N Y N Y Y Y Y N Y FC-AL selective reset (LIP Reset)   Automatic contingent allegiance   Asynchronous event notification   Synchronized (locked) spindle operation   Segmented caching   Zero latency read   Queue tagging (up to 128 queue tags supported)   Deferred error handling   Parameter rounding (controlled by Round bit in Mode Select page 0)   Reporting actual retry count in Extended Sense bytes 15, 16, and 17   Adaptive caching   SMP = 1 in Mode Select command needed to save RPL and rotational offset bytes   Table 22:   Miscellaneous status   Supported   Status   Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N N Good   Check condition   Condition met/good   Busy   Intermediate/good   Intermediate/condition met/good   Reservation conflict   Task set full   ACA active   ACA active, faulted initiator   64   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   12.5   FC-AL physical interface   Figure 12 shows the location of the J1 Fibre Channel single connection attachment (FC-SCA). Figure 14 pro-   vides the dimensions of the FC-SCA connector.   Details of the physical, electrical, and logical characteristics are provided within this section. The operational   aspects of Seagate’s Fibre Channel drives are provided in the Fibre Channel Interface Manual..   J1 interface connector   Figure 12. Physical interface   12.5.1   Physical characteristics   This section defines physical interface connector.   12.5.1.1   Physical description   FIbre Channel drives may be connected in a loop together or with other compatible FC-AL devices. A maxi-   mum of 127 devices may have addresses; however, one of the addresses is reserved for a fabric port switch   device. This means 126 addresses are available for FC-AL devices. More FC-AL compatible devices may   physically reside on the loop, but they will not be functional because they would not be able to obtain valid   addresses.   Port bypass circuits (PBCs) allow devices to be inserted into unpopulated locations or removed from the loop   with loop operation recovery after a brief interruption. These PBCs are located external to the FC-AL device.   Port Bypass   Circuit   From Previous   Drive   To Next   Drive   Port Bypass   Circuit N–1   Port Bypass   Circuit N+1   MUX   Select   Serial   In   Serial   Out   Drive N–1   Drive N+1   Drive N   Figure 13. Port bypass circuit physical interconnect   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   65   12.5.2   Connector requirements   Table 23:   Recommended mating SCA part numbers   Part description   Positions   Part number   787317-1   Features   With polarization   With polarization   With polarization   With polarization   AMP Vertical (SCA sequence)   40   40   40   40   Berg   71781   Methode   Molex   512-220-91-101N   717431040   The FC-AL SCA device connector is illustrated in Figure 14.   1.618 .003 in   (41.1 0.08 mm)   Pin 20   Pin 40   Pin 1   0.197 .003 in   (5.00 .08 mm)   2 places   Pin 21   .64 in   (16.24 mm)   1.28 in   (32.47 mm)   0.394 .004 in   (10.0 0.10 mm)   1.618 .003 in   (41.10 0.08 mm)   0.226 in   (6.50 mm)   0.039 in   min.   min.   (0.75 mm)   0.264+.007 in   –.010 in   1.492 .009 in   (37.90 0.24 mm)   0.024 in   (0.60 mm)   min.   (6.71+0.18 mm)   (–0.25 mm)   Mating end   Housing   0.079 .010 in   (2.00 .25 mm)   (initial point   of contact)   .05 in   (1.27 mm)   Contact (typ.)   .025 in (0.635 mm)   typ.   0.060 .010 in   (1.52 0.25 mm)   0.106 .010 in   (2.70 0.25 mm)   0.051 .006 in   (1.30 0.16 mm)   2 places   Figure 14. FC-AL SCA device connector dimensions   12.5.3 Electrical description   Fibre Channel drives use the FC-SCA connector for:   • DC power   • FC-AL interface   • Drive select (device identification)   • Option selection   • Enclosure Services interface   This 40-pin connector is designed to plug directly into a backpanel. External cables are not required.   12.5.4   Pin descriptions   This section provides a pin-out of the FC-SCA and a description of the functions provided by the pins.   66   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Table 24:   FC-SCA pin descriptions   Pin Signal name   Signal type   Pin   21   Signal name   12 Volts charge   Ground   Signal type   1*   2*   3*   4*   5*   6*   7*   8*   9*   -EN bypass port A   Low Voltage TTL output   12 Volts   22   12 Volts   23   Ground   12 Volts   24*   25*   26   +Port A_in   -Port A_in   Ground   FC Diff. input pair   FC Diff. input pair   FC Diff. output pair   FC Diff. output pair   -Parallel ESI   [1]   Ground   Active LED out   Reserved   Open collector out   27*   28*   29   +Port B_in   -Port B_in   Ground   [2]   Start_1   TTL input   [2]   10* Start_2   TTL input   30*   31*   32   +Port A_out   -Port A_out   Ground   11* -EN bypass port B   12* SEL_6   Low Voltage TTL output   TTL input/output   TTL input/output   TTL input   13* SEL_5   33*   34*   35   +Port B_out   -Port B_out   Ground   14* SEL_4   15* SEL_3   TTL input/output   Open collector out   TTL input   16* Fault LED out   17* DEV_CTRL_CODE_2   18* DEV_CTRL_CODE_1   19* 5 Volts   36   SEL_2   TTL input/output   TTL input/output   TTL input/output   TTL input   [2]   [2]   37   SEL_1   TTL input   38   SEL_0   [2   39   DEV_CTRL_CODE_0   5 Volts charge   20* 5 Volts   40   *Short pins in mating backpanel connector.   [1] This pin may be connected to external logic to detect the presence of the drive. The drive connects this   pin to the common ground.   [2] Pins 9, 10, 17, 18, and 39 are option select pins and are tied high by the drive circuitry. The preferred elec-   trical connection at the backplane is either open or grounded (open for the ‘1’ setting, grounded for the ‘0’   setting). Alternatively, these pins may be driven by a 3.3V logic device, pulled up to 3.3V through a pull-up   resistor (recommended size of 10k ohm), or grounded through some other means.   12.5.5   FC-AL transmitters and receivers   A typical FC-AL differential copper transmitter and receiver pair is shown in Figure 15. The receiver is required   to provide the AC coupling to eliminate ground shift noise.   .01   .01   TX   TY   RX   Differential   Transmitter   100   Receiver   100   RY   Transfer Medium   Figure 15. FC-AL transmitters and receivers   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   67   12.5.6   Power   Power is supplied through the FC-SCA with support for +5 volts and +12 volts. All of the voltage pins in the   drive connector are the same length.   Four 12 volt pins provide +12 volt power to the drive. The current return for the +12 volt power supply is   through the common ground pins. The supply current and return current must be distributed as evenly as pos-   sible among the pins. The maximum current typically occurs while the drive motor is starting.   Three 5 volt pins provide logic power to the drive. The current return for the +5 volt power supply is through the   common ground pins. Distribute supply and return current as evenly as possible among the voltage and   ground pins.   The mating connector pins use shorter contacts to achieve power surge reductions and to aid in “hot plugging”   the drives. There are longer voltage contacts in the connector to enable the drive filter capacitors to charge.   Current to the drive through the long charge pins is limited by the system in which the drive operates. Three of   the +12 volt pins are shorter to allow capacitive pre-charging through the longer +12 volt charge pin. Two of the   +5 volt pins are shorter to allow capacitive precharging through the longer +5 volt charge pin.   12.5.7   Fault LED Out   The Fault LED Out signal is driven by the drive when:   • the drive detects failure of both ports   • the drive detects an internal failure   • the drive receives the appropriate fault LED command from the host   The Fault LED Out signal is designed to pull down the cathode of an LED. The anode is attached to the proper   +5 volt supply through an appropriate current-limiting resistor. The LED and the current-limiting resistor are   external to the drive.   68   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   12.5.8   Active LED Out   The Active LED Out signal is driven by the drive as indicated in Table 25.   Table 25:   Active LED Out conditions   Normal command activity   LED status   Spun down and no activity   Slow blink (20% on and 80% off a 2 sec cycle)   Spun down and activity (command executing)   Spun up and no activity   On   On   Spun up and activity (command executing)   Spinning up or down   Off   Blinks steadily (50% on and 50% off)   Toggles on/off   Format in progress, each cylinder change   The Active LED Out signal is designed to pull down the cathode of an LED. The anode is attached to the   proper +5 volt supply through an appropriate current limiting resistor. The LED and the current limiting resistor   are external to the drive.   12.5.9   Enable port bypass signals   The – Enable Bypass Port A (– EN BYP Port A) and – Enable Bypass Port B (– EN BYP Port B) signals control   the port bypass circuits (PBC) located external to the disc drive. The PBC allows a loop to remain functional in   the event of a drive failure or removal. When these signals are active, low, the PBC bypasses the drive on the   associated port. When an Enable Bypass signal is active, the corresponding Port Bypass LED signal in con-   nector J1 is driven low by the disc drive. A pull down resistor, 1K, located with the PBC should be used to   insure the bypass is enabled if the disc drive is not installed.   The Enable Bypass signal is active under failing conditions within the drive, on detection of the Loop Port   Bypass primitive sequence, or on removal of the drive. In the bypass state the drive continues to receive on the   inbound fibre. Enable Bypass may be deactivated by detection of a Loop Port Enable primitive sequence if the   drive has completed self-test and a hardware failure is not present.   Failure modes detected by the disc drive that will enable bypass include:   • Transmitter/receiver wrap test failure   • Loss of receive clock   • Loss of transmission clock   • Drive interface hardware error   12.5.10   Motor start controls   The drive’s motor is started according to the Start_1 and Start_2 signals described in Table 26. The state of   these signals can be wired into the backplane socket or driven by logic on the backplane.   Table 26:   Motor start control signals   Case   Start_2   Low   Start_1   Low   Motor spin function   1 2 3 Motor spins up at DC power on.   High   Low   Motor spins up only when SCSI Start command is received.   Low   High   Motor spins up after a delay of 12 seconds times the modulo 8 value   of the numeric SEL ID of the drive from DC power on.   4 High   High   The drive will not spin up.   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   69   12.5.11   SEL_6 through SEL_0 ID lines   The SEL_6 through SEL_0 ID lines determine drive address, and, optionally, for an Enclosure Services Inter-   face. When the Parallel ESI line is high, the enclosure backpanel must provide address information on the SEL   line. Refer to table 27 for a mapping of SEL to FC-AL physical addresses (AL_PA). You can think of the SEL   lines as the equivalent of a backpanel logic plug. The drives does not provide pull up resistors on these lines.   The backpanel is required to provide high and low inputs to the SEL_ID lines per the specifications in table 29   on page 72.   Note. Table 27 gives AL_PA values for each SEL value. The first entry in the table is SEL_ID 00. The last   entry is SEL_ID 7D. SEL_ID 7E is AL_PA 00 which is not valid for an NL_Port, so is not included in   the table. Also, SEL_ID 7Fh does map to a valid AL_PA; however, this value signals the drive that   physical addresses are not being assigned using the SEL lines and that a “soft” address will be   determined by FC-AL loop initialization.   When the Parallel ESI line is low, the enclosure backpanel logic switches to ESI mode if supported. There are   two modes of ESI, seven bits of enclosure status and a bidirectional mode. ESI support and the mode are   determined by the drive using a discovery process. Refer to the Fibre Channel Interface Manual for a descrip-   tion of ESI operation.   12.5.11.1 Parallel Enclosure Services Interface (ESI)   The parallel ESI line is an output from the drive. This line provides the enclosure with an indication of the pres-   ent function of the SEL lines. A high level, the default state, indicates the drive requires address information on   the SEL lines. A low level indicates the drive is attempting an ESI transfer. The enclosure may not support ESI   on any or all drive locations. It may only support the address function. Support of ESI is discovered by the   drive. Refer to the Fibre Channel Interface Manual for a description of ESI operations.   70   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Table 27:   Arbitrated loop physical address (AL_PA) values   AL_PA   (hex)   SEL ID   (hex)   Setting   (dec)   AL_PA   (hex)   SEL ID   (hex)   Setting   (dec)   AL_PA   (hex)   SEL ID   (hex)   Setting   (dec)   EF   E8   E4   E2   E1   E0   DC   DA   D9   D6   D5   D4   D3   D2   D1   CE   CD   CC   CB   CA   C9   C7   C6   C5   C3   BC   BA   B9   B6   B5   B4   B3   B2   B1   AE   AD   AC   AB   AA   A9   A7   A6   A5   00   01   02   03   04   05   06   07   08   09   0A   0B   0C   0D   0E   0F   10   11   00   01   02   03   04   05   06   07   08   09   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   A3   9F   9E   9D   9B   98   97   90   8F   88   84   82   81   80   7C   7A   79   76   75   74   73   72   71   6E   6D   6C   6B   6A   69   67   66   65   63   5C   5A   59   56   55   54   53   52   51   4E   2B   2C   2D   2E   2F   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   3A   3B   3C   3D   3E   3F   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   4A   4B   4C   4D   4E   4F   50   51   52   53   54   55   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   4D   4C   4B   4A   49   47   46   45   43   3c   3A   39   36   35   34   33   32   31   2E   2D   2C   2B   2A   29   27   26   25   23   1F   1E   1D   1B   18   17   10   0F   08   04   02   01   56   57   58   59   5A   5B   5C   5D   5E   5F   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   6A   6B   6C   6D   6E   6F   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   7A   7B   7C   7D   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   1A   1B   1C   1D   1E   1F   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   2A   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   71   12.5.12   Device control codes   The drive inputs a Device Control Code on the DEV_CTRL_CODE lines at power up to determine the link rate   on the Fibre Channel ports. Both ports run at the same rate. If the backpanel does not connect to these lines,   the drive has 10K ohm pull up resistors that default the device control code to 7 (1.0625 GHz). Table lists the   supported codes.   Table 28:   Device control code values   1 (pin 18) 0 (pin 39)   2 (pin 17)   Definition   0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 Reserved for power failure warning.   Reserved for auto negotiation of link rate.   Reserved.   0 1 1 0 0 1 1 Reserved.   Reserved.   4.250 GHz operation on both ports.   2.125 GHz operation on both ports.   1.0625 GHz operation on both ports.   12.6   Signal characteristics   This section describes the electrical signal characteristics of the drive’s input and output signals. See Table 24   on page 67 for signal type and signal name information.   12.6.1   TTL input characteristics   Table 29 provides the TTL characteristics.   Table 29:   TTL characteristics   State   Voltage   Current   Input high   Input low   1.9 < VIH < 5.5V   -0.5V < VIL < 0.9V   2.4 < VOH < 5.25V   VOL < 0.5V   IIH = ±500nA max.   IOL = ±500nA max.   IOH < -3mA   Output high (-EN Bypass A, B)   Output low (-EN Bypass A, B)   Output high (-Parallel ESI)   IOL < 3mA   2.4 < VOH < 0.9 VCC   VOH > 0.9VCC   IOH < -2.4mA   IOH < -500µA   Output low (-Parallel ESI)   0 < VOL < .45V   IOL < 2.4mA   Output high (all other outputs)   2.4 < VOH < 0.9 VCC   VOH > 0.9VCC   IOH < -1.6mA   IOH < -500µA   Output low (all other outputs)   0 < VOL < .45V   IOL < 1.6mA   72   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   12.6.2   LED driver signals   Fault and Active LED signals are located in the FC-SCA connector (J1). See Table 30 for the output character-   istics of the LED drive signals.   Table 30:   LED drive signal   State   Current drive available   0 < IOH < 100µA   Output voltage   LED off, high   LED on, low   IOL < -30 mA   0 < VOL < 0.8V   12.6.3   FC Differential output   The serial output signal voltage characteristics are provided in Table 31. The outputs are not AC coupled in   order to deliver maximum signal without rise and fall time degradation. You must AC couple the receiver to iso-   late potentially different DC characteristics of the outputs and the receiver.   Table 31:   FC Differential output characteristics   Parameter   Description   Notes   Serial output voltage swing   600 < Vout < 1300 mV   Centered at 1.32V   Bit Time   XMIT Eye   Figure 16. Transmit eye diagram   12.6.4   FC Differential input   The serial input signal voltage characteristics are provided in Table 32.   Table 32:   FC Differential input characteristics   Description   Parameter   Notes   Serial input voltage swing   200 < Vin < 1.300 mV   AC coupled   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   73   Figure 17 provides the data valid eye diagram for typical and minimum requirements to recover data at the   specified interface error rate. The inputs are AC coupled on the drive.   941 ps   659 ps   376 ps   Typical   Minimum   Figure 17. Receive eye diagram   Table 33:   Eye diagram data values   Link rate   1 GHz   2 GHz   4 GHz   Bit time   941 ps   470 ps   235 ps   1 2 XMIT eye   725 ps min.   315 ps min.   305 ps   158 /113   Typical   659 ps   395 ps   145 ps   113 ps   RCV eye   Minimum   226 ps   1.   2.   Short Ideal load.   End of compliance channel.   74   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   BandMasterX 38   Index   Numerics   12 volt   BMS 43   pins 68   buffer   data 7   space 12   A C capacity   acoustics 33   actuator   unformatted 10   CBC 37   addresses 65   AFR 14   illustrated 46   altitude 30   ambient 30   ANSI documents   SCSI 5   arbitration 45   auto write and read reallocation   programmable 7   condensation 30   connector   illustrated 66   requirements 66   cooling 46   B backpanel 66   CRC 15   backplane 69   error 15   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   75   CS 50   E electrical   D specifications 21   DAR 43   enable bypass   data heads   read/write 10   data rate   internal 10   signal 69   requirements 21   decrypt 37   state 15   environmental   defects 40   DEK 37   limits 29   requirements 14   EraseMaster 38   error   management 40   description 6   DEV_CTRL_CODE 72   devices 45   rates 14   error correction code   errors 40   extended link service   frames 48   dimensions 35   F fabric 53   Download microcode with offsets and save mode (7)   FAN 53   drive 33   drive capacity   programmable 9   FC-AL   document 5   76   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   FCP   I IC 50   Information exceptions control page (1Ch) command   features 7   interface 48   FIPS 36   installation 45   interface 45   description 65   errors 15   illustrated 65   firmware 7   corruption 58   FLOGI   physical 65   requirements 48   IRAW 44   format 45   J jumpers 45   function   L latency   G LBdata 57   gradient 30   grounding 47   LockOnReset 38   H hard assigned arbitrated loop physical address   (AL_PA) 45   HDA 47   heads   humidity 30   disruption 15   initialization 45   loop position   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   77   loop position report   MTBF 15   N payload 50   M maintenance 14   noise   audible 3   temperature 30   miscellaneous feature support   miscellaneous status support   O old port state   OPEN Full Duplex   OPEN half duplex   Busy 64   Good 64   orientation 31   OS 50   Intermediate/good 64   P P_LOGI   Mode select   command 55   packaged 31   Mode sense   passwords 38   PBdata 57   command 55   motor start   controls 69   PCBA 47   option 11   mounting 47   holes 47   orientations 45   performance characteristics   detailed 10   general 11   78   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   description 65   receive eye   accept 51   diagram 74   receivers 67   power 68   reference   dissipation 27   sequencing 24   documents 5   reliability 8   PowerCycle 38   private loop   specifications 14   resonance 31   public loop   Rigid disc drive geometry page   command 55   RNG 38   Q S safety 3   SCSI interface   Search data   R Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   79   seek error   T defined 15   rate 14   seek time   TCG 37   lines 70   Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology   shielding 3   shipping 20   shock 31   limits 29   non-operating 30   regulation 3   See also cooling   terminators 45   transmitters 67   SID 37   signal   U characteristics 72   unformatted 8   standards 3   surface stiffness   V switches 45   synchronized spindle   operation 64   W warranty 20   80   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   X Z Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   81   82   Cheetah 15K.7 FC Product Manual, Rev. C   Seagate Technology LLC   920 Disc Drive, Scotts Valley, California 95066-4544, USA   Publication Number: 100516225, Rev. C   |