Native Command Queueing

Native command queueing is a technology designed to increase performance of SATA hard disks by allowing the disk firmware to internally optimise the order in which read and write commands are executed. This can result in increased performance for workloads where multiple simultaneous read/write requests are outstanding, which occurs most often in server-type applications. Normal desktop applications will show less benefit from NCQ, or potentially a performance drop in some cases due to added overhead. For NCQ to be enabled, it must be supported and turned on in the SATA controller driver and in the hard drive itself. On some Intel chipset-based motherboards, this technology requires the enabling of the Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI) in the BIOS and for the installation of the Intel Application Accelerator software. NCQ differs from some other forms of command queueing previously available on IDE and SATA in that the command reordering is done on the drive itself. This is most effective since the drive has the most knowledge of its perfomance characteristics and is able to take rotational position into account.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
game on
all india forward bloc (subhasist)
shane atkinson
pruneyard shopping center
marvin santiago
thonon les bains
fiel a la vega (album)
cuban liberal movement
miss hong kong pageant
genome screen
real programmer
cho
cleft
hyperglossal canal
gunda niemann stirnemann
avraham tehomi
pico union, los angeles, california
narayan
dante balboa
false alarms
pdtv
felix programming language
nicholas wolterstorff
ruvuma
equal loudness contour
snow (album)
south dock
patapsychology
list of ministers of education of catalonia
susanna clarke
norsk sprkrd
elfriede jelinek
a.j. jacobs
partial linear squares
open university (netherlands)
sharpe (tv series)
biopoiesis
swarm robotics
jan tarnowski
speed 2: cruise control
asyndeton
polysyndeton
c 19 alpha
the red skelton show