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Getting beyond the 8.4 GB limit

Introduction

When the personal computer (PC) was first developed, designers had to decide how many bytes would be designated for addressing particular memory locations within the system, including hard drive memory. It was also necessary to specify how the address bytes would be structured to access that memory. Originally, these bytes were divided into cylinder, head, and sector (CHS) address locations that related directly to the physical layout of the hard drives. Unfortunately, the designers of the system BIOS (Basic Input/Output System) and the ATA (Advanced Technology Attachment) interface did not set up the total bytes used for addressing in the same manner, nor did they define the same number of bytes for the cylinder, head, and sector addressing. The differences in the CHS configurations required that there be a translation of the address when data was sent from the system (using the system BIOS) and the ATA interface. This is what caused the problems that were found at 528 MB and 4.2 GB, which limited systems to smaller capacity drives.

The limitation involves the total addressing space that was defined for the system BIOS. Most PC systems are limited to accessing drives with a capacity of 8.4 GB or less (7.9 GB on some systems.) The BIOS's of these systems do not have adequate address locations to access more than 8.4 GB.

A solution to this problem requires updating the current system BIOS to one that supports the interrupt 13 extensions or patching the current BIOS with the extension support. In the future, all PC system BIOS's should support the interrupt 13 extensions, allowing systems to address drives of extraordinarily large capacities.

The problem

The current ATA interface uses 28 bit addressing which supports drives that are 2** X 512 bytes or 137 GB. Unfortunately, most system BIOS's use 24 bit addressing which only allows access to 2**24 X 512 bytes or 8.4 GB. (This number really multiplies out to be 8.6GB but because of the way the BIOS uses the bit, only 8.4 GB can be accessed.) When the system wants to read or write data to the disk, the BIOS has to use a software interrupt. The main interrupt that is used to access the disk drive is interrupt 13h. This interrupt was assigned 24 bits of addressing, which only allows the system to access 8.4GB on a disk drive. System designers were aware of this limitation and defined extensions for interrupt 13. This allows for a quad-word or 64 bits of addressing, which is equal to 2**64 X 512 bytes or 9.4 x 10**21 bytes. That is 9.4 Tera Gigabytes or over a trillion times as large as an 8.4 GB drive.

Systems affected

Very few systems built in 1997 (or before) properly support the BIOS interrupt 13 extensions. However, all major BIOS manufacturers have corrected the BIOS's that support the extensions. By mid 1998, all new systems have this support. Systems without the support can be modified to use drives greater than 8.4 GB.

The Solution

There are a number of things that can be done to update a system in order to allow the use of large drives.

The options available are:

1. Obtain a new version of BIOS that supports the interrupt 13 extensions from the system or BIOS manufacturer.

2. Load software on the system that links into the BIOS to add the interrupt 13 support. Gold Source supplies this SW with every hard drive purchased from us or you can download it from our "Free Downloads" section found on our home page.

3. Use an intelligent host adapter whose BIOS supports interrupt 13 extensions. This adds the cost of additional hardware, but may be the best solution for certain systems.  

Operating System limitation

With the increase in disk drive size, there is another limitation that affects the user that cannot be corrected by updating the BIOS. This is due to an inherent limitation within the operating systems. The most widely used are Windows 3.x and Windows 95. Most versions of these operating systems only support a maximum partition size of 2.1GB. This means that drives over 2.1GB will have to be partitioned into several logical drives, C:, D:, and so on. 8.4GB drives will require at least 4 logical drives.

Microsoft has provided extended file system support as a solution. They have increased the addressing bits in the File Allocation Table (FAT) from 16 bits (FAT16) to 32 bits (FAT32) which allows for much larger logical drive sizes, up to 2.2TB. Unfortunately, the new extended file system is only supported in the very latest versions of Windows 95, called OSR2.x. All Win 98' OS and OS's created after will support the FAT 32 options.

To check if a version of Windows 95 supports the extended file system (FAT32), select:

-START
-SETTINGS
-CONTROL PANEL
-Double click on the SYSTEM icon
-Look under GENERAL
-If SYSTEMS PROPERTIES shows:

*4.00.950b -This version supports the extended file system (FAT32.)

*4.00.950 or 4.00.950a -This version only supports FAT16.

What's the next limitation?

The next limitation with the ATA interface should occur at 137 GB. (Some systems and operating systems may encounter other unforeseen limitations before this.) At 137 GB, the 28 bits of addressing on the ATA bus run out. Some possible solutions for this problem follow:

1. The ATA's Feature Register could be used to add an additional 8 bits giving 28+8=36 or 35.2 TB of addressable space.

2. The size of each sector could be increased. For example, a sector size of 4096 bytes would increase the maximum size of the drives to 2.2 TB.

3. The industry could switch to a completely different interface. The IEEE 1394 interface is the most likely candidate and may gain popularity before one of the other options needs to be implemented.

 

 

             


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