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Port multiplier

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A Serial ATA port multiplier is a unilateral splitting device. While it allows one equipped port to connect up to 15 disks, the bandwidth available is limited to the bandwidth of the link to the controller, as of 2012 1.5, 3, or 6 Gbit/s. While the controller is aware that there are multiple
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FIS-based switching is similar to a USB hub. In this method of switching the host controller can issue commands to send and receive data from any drive at any time. A balancing algorithm ensures a fair allocation of available bandwidth to each drive. FIS-based switching allows the aggregated
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When using a port multiplier in a scenario where the availability of the connected drives is an issue, overall reliability can be severely impacted by a single failing drive locking up the host port, inhibiting or severely degrading access to all drives connected through that port.
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This system can be thought of as an automated mechanical A/B switch. The controller can issue commands to only one disk at a time and cannot issue commands to another disk until the command queue has been completed for the current transactions. This also hampers the use of
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drives connected, the service is transparent to the disks attached. Because they believe they are communicating directly with the controller, any drive that holds to the SATA standard can be connected to a port multiplier. There are two ways port multipliers can be driven:
47:) is a device that allows multiple SATA devices to be connected to a single SATA host port. Many common controllers do not support this feature, as it is not a requirement for a SATA controller. 85:(NCQ). This means that the full bandwidth of the link will most likely not be used. This kind of switching is therefore used when capacity is the major concern, and not performance. 102:
It is possible to connect up to 15 devices to a single SATA host port using a port multiplier. The total bandwidth is still limited to that of a single SATA port.
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Reduced cable count (e.g., when using backplanes with integrated port multipliers, or external multi-drive enclosures etc.).
28:×1 expansion card, having two built-in SATA port multipliers (square chips to the left and right of the middle of 82: 29: 213: 127: 172: 146: 207: 139: 25: 37: 158: 32:) that "splice" card chipset's two SATA ports into a total of eight ports. 21: 62:
Additional drives can be supported without additional SATA controllers.
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saturation of the host link and does not interfere with NCQ.
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Port multipliers have the following potential benefits:
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Peng Li; James Hughes; John Plocher; David J. Lilja.
161:, an article by Serial ATA International Organization 89:FIS-based (frame information structure) switching 8: 140:Serial ATA II: Port Multiplier specification 173:"SATA Port Multipliers Considered Harmful" 128:List of SATA controller hardware features 120: 199:Understanding SATA FIS-Based Switching 7: 14: 130:, a comparison in Linux ATA wiki 1: 230: 149:by Serial ATA II Workgroup 76:Command-based switching 83:Native Command Queuing 33: 19: 67:Port multiplication 145:2011-06-17 at the 34: 221: 186: 185: 183: 182: 177: 168: 162: 159:Port Multipliers 156: 150: 137: 131: 125: 24:(3 Gbit/s) 229: 228: 224: 223: 222: 220: 219: 218: 204: 203: 195: 190: 189: 180: 178: 175: 170: 169: 165: 157: 153: 147:Wayback Machine 138: 134: 126: 122: 117: 108: 100: 91: 78: 69: 53: 41:port multiplier 12: 11: 5: 227: 225: 217: 216: 206: 205: 202: 201: 194: 193:External links 191: 188: 187: 163: 151: 132: 119: 118: 116: 113: 107: 104: 99: 96: 90: 87: 77: 74: 68: 65: 64: 63: 60: 52: 49: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 226: 215: 212: 211: 209: 200: 197: 196: 192: 174: 167: 164: 160: 155: 152: 148: 144: 141: 136: 133: 129: 124: 121: 114: 112: 105: 103: 97: 95: 88: 86: 84: 75: 73: 66: 61: 58: 57: 56: 50: 48: 46: 42: 39: 31: 27: 23: 22:SATA 2.0 18: 179:. Retrieved 166: 154: 135: 123: 109: 101: 92: 79: 70: 54: 44: 40: 35: 106:Reliability 98:Performance 26:PCI Express 214:Serial ATA 181:2017-01-29 115:References 38:Serial ATA 208:Category 143:Archived 51:Benefits 45:SATA PM 176:(PDF) 30:PCB 210:: 36:A 20:A 184:. 43:(

Index


SATA 2.0
PCI Express
PCB
Serial ATA
Native Command Queuing
List of SATA controller hardware features
Serial ATA II: Port Multiplier specification
Archived
Wayback Machine
Port Multipliers
"SATA Port Multipliers Considered Harmful"
Understanding SATA FIS-Based Switching
Category
Serial ATA

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