Intelligent Peripheral Interface

Intelligent Peripheral Interface was a server-centric storage interface used in the 1980s and early 1990s with an ISO-9318 standard. The general idea behind IPI was that the disk drives themselves are as simple as possible, containing only the lowest level control circuitry, while the IPI interface card encapsulated most of the disk control complexity. The IPI interface card, as a central point of control, was thus theoretically able to best coordinate accesses to the connected disks, as it "knew" more about the states of the connected disks than would, say, a SCSI interface. An IPI-2 bus could provide a data transfer rate in the vicinity of 6 MB/s. In practice, the theoretical advantages of IPI over SCSI were often not realized, as they only materialized when several disks were connected to the interface, which could then easily become a bandwidth bottleneck. IPI systems were often shipped by Sun Microsystems on original sun4 architechture servers, but the above limitation and reliability problems made them unpopular with customers, and the technology basically disappeared by the second half of the 1990s.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
julia davis
crystallization processes
west coast customs
united world college of the adriatic
list of christmas characters
dusty finish (professional wrestling)
st. lawrence and atlantic railroad
sender bielstein
jo ann robinson
anti bias curriculum
st. lawrence and atlantic railroad (qubec)
monty norman
sender scharteberg
forvie
proletcult theatre
kenneth montgomery keillor
english national cricket captains
tahir mirza
sands of forvie
jahrom
cayley's formula
transmitter thurnau
rania siam
giorgio abetti
meikle
mark wilkinson
yajnavalkya smriti
ipi
daskalogiannis
bodenseesender
david c. geary
the exorcist iii
thomas sanchez
meikle loch
amana colonies
amahl and the night visitors
paramotor
national organic program
lebanese national movement
aliens of the deep
julian peterson
uss smith (dd 17)
bryant young
garston, merseyside