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COMPACT HIGH-SPEED DISK RECORDERBougan, Timothy B. 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 17-20, 1994 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / In order to meet the high-speed and high-density recording requirements for today's
development and testing environments, we are seeking to merge the cutting edge
technologies of tiny, high-performance disk drives and field programmable gate arrays
(FPGAs) to build a high-speed compact disk recorder (CHSDR). Specifically, we
designed, built, and tested a multi-drive controller that handles the interleaving of data
to eight inexpensive IDE drives. These drives and controller comprise a "cell" capable
of transferring data at 2.45 MB/sec (4 to 5 times the rate of a single drive).
Furthermore, these "cells" can be run in parallel (with a single controller interleaving
data between the cells). This "tree" effect multiplies the data rate by the number of
cells employed. For example, 8 cells (of 8 drives each) can reach nearly 20
MB/second (sustained) and can be built for less than $30,000. The drives we used are
the size of match boxes (the Hewlett Packard KittyHawk). These tiny drives hold 42
megabytes each and can withstand 150 Gs while operating. The cell controller is a
Xilinx 4005 FPGA. Furthermore, we've designed a 120 MB/sec RAM FIFO to buffer
data entering the system (to account for unavoidable drive seek latencies).
In short, the compact high-speed disk array is a small, relatively low cost recording
solution for anyone requiring high data speed but modest data volume. Missile shots,
nuclear tests, and other short-term experiments are good examples of such
requirements.
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Storage Systems and Security Challenges in Telemetry Post Processing EnvironmentsKalibjian, Jeff 10 1900 (has links)
ITC/USA 2008 Conference Proceedings / The Forty-Fourth Annual International Telemetering Conference and Technical Exhibition / October 27-30, 2008 / Town and Country Resort & Convention Center, San Diego, California / A common concern in telemetry post-processing environments is adequate disk storage capacity to house captured and post-processed telemetry data. In today's network environments there are many storage solutions that can be deployed to address storage needs. Recent trends in storage systems reveal movement to implement security services in storage systems. After reviewing storage options appropriate for telemetry post-processing environments; the security services such systems typically offer will also be discussed and contrasted with other third party security services that might be implemented directly on top of a networked storage system.
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