The present application is related to commonly assigned application bearing Ser. No. 13/718,278, which has a filing date of Dec. 18, 2012.
The present application is also related to commonly assigned application bearing Ser. No. 13/896,159, which has a filing date of May 16, 2013.
The present application is also related to commonly assigned application bearing Ser. No. 13/896,209, which has a filing date of May 16, 2013.
This invention relates generally to information storage systems using rotating disks, and more particularly to servo systems and servo patterns on recording disks used to selectively position transducers (heads) over tracks on the rotating disks.
Disk 111 will typically have multiple servo wedges 120 arranged radially around the disk, but only two are shown for simplicity. Information recorded on the disks is generally organized in concentric tracks or, alternatively, the tracks can be arrange in a plurality of spiral tracks. (For a description of spiral tracks see, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,113,362 Lee, et al. Sep. 26, 2006.) In embodiments either of these tracks organizations can be used, and the term “tracks” will be used generically to include these any other similar forms of arrangement.
As part of the manufacturing process permanent servo information is recorded on the disks that provides information to the system about the position of the heads when the disks are rotating during operation. The servo identifier (SID) data on the disk provides several fundamental functions and is conventionally arranged in four distinct fields in each of the plurality of servo sectors angularly spaced around the disk.
The SID also supplies a position error field (A & B bursts in this example), which provides the fractional-track Position Error Signal (PES). A repeatable run-out (RRO) field follows the PES bursts in this example. During read or write operations the drive's servo control system uses the PES servo information recorded on the disk surface as feedback to maintain the head in a generally centered position over the target data track. The typical PES pattern includes a burst pattern in which the bursts are identical sets of high frequency magnetic flux transitions. Unlike the track-ID (TID) field number, the PES bursts do not encode numerical information. In contrast to the TID, it is the position of the bursts that provide information on where the head is relative to the centerline of a track.
Each of these servo functions typically consumes a relatively independent portion of the servo wedge in conventional servo systems. Typically, the servo fields consume a significant portion of the recording surface of the disk and are, therefore, an attractive target for reduction.
The Integrated Servo concepts which are referenced herein are described in published U.S. patent applications:
Embodiments of the Integrated Servo concept implement some or all major servo subfunctions for a storage device in Integrated Servo fields comprising sequences of encoded bits having selected mathematical properties. The Integrated Servo field is composed of one or more encoded sequences, which are members of a selected allowable sequence set that is constrained to provide some or all of the following functions: the Servo Address Mark (SAM), the Position Error Signal (PES) and higher level positional information such as the track-ID. The Integrated Servo fields can also provide a fractional Position Error Signal (PES) in relation to the center of a data track through the relative amplitude of the signal read for adjacent sequences disposed laterally across the tracks. The servo system detects the sequences in the signal from the read head using a set of digital filters corresponding to the set of encoded sequences. Embodiments of Integrated Servo constraint the placement of sequences so that only mathematically orthogonal sequences are placed next to each other on adjacent tracks.
As illustrated in
Disk drive embodiments with a servo system according to the invention include a servo ID pattern (SID) with a SAM field, as well as, one or more Integrated Servo sequences designed to provide a redundant timing sync mark function. The write-to-read gaps are omitted before the selected servo sector SIDs. For example, write-to-read gaps can be omitted before alternating servo sector SIDs. When in write-mode that allows writing an extended user data sector without a write-to-read gap, the servo system's servo gate assertion is delayed in relation to the following SID as a result of the absence of the write-to-read gap, which means that the SAM field cannot be read, but the Integrated Servo sequence(s) can be read and detected by the digital filters. Embodiments of the invention include synchronization timing (time syncing) for each SID (not just every other SID) even when writing extended user data sectors by using the Integrated Servo sequences to provide a sync-timing function. The prior art mini-mode servo technique does not provide sync-mark to sync-mark timing between SID bursts, i.e., it only times between every other SID when writing extended user data sectors. Thus, in embodiments of the invention user data space gained by including the gapless sectors is maintained without loss of sync-timing between SIDs.
During seeking and reading operations the SIDs in a servo system according to embodiments of the invention can be read in the standard way for every servo wedge. The gapless SIDs are read and used normally during read operations.
The spacing between the SIDs is also constant around a track just as is the case in the prior art. Because each of the SIDs have the preamble, SAM and TID fields, they can all be read during seeking operations. Accordingly the ability of the servo system to read the TIDs and know where the head is, is not reduced.
As illustrated in
The gapless SIDs can be arranged in a repeating pattern such as every other one (odd and even) as shown in
In the prior art, full position and timing information can typically be read from all of the servo sectors while writing data to the disk. In mini-mode servo, the servo gate timing and read channel configuration are modified to read only the fractional track fine position information from the PES bursts signals in the gapless subset of the servo sectors when writing the preceding sector of user data.
As shown in
The embodiments described above are the most straightforward from a servo system perspective, but having different length data sectors adds complexity to other systems in the disk drive. An alternative will be described that keeps the data sectors equal in length and uses the additional space for a dual RRO field. Preferably the RRO field data is exactly the same length as the space freed up by eliminating the gaps. Some disk drive designs do not use RRO fields, so this alternative it not useful in those cases.
The RRO fields cannot be moved independently from the other fields in the SID, so the RRO field cannot be placed directly into the space in front of the gapless SIDs. Instead the RRO fields are placed at the end of the gapped SIDs (i.e. at the beginning of the “gapless user data area” instead of the end of the “gapless user data area”) then the gapless user data area remains the same length, it is just delayed by the length of the RRO field. In comparison to a standard RRO implementation, the RRO fields are removed from the end of every SID, bundled into a “dual-RRO field” and added onto the end of every gapped SID. This increases both gapless and gapped user data areas by the length of the original RRO fields.
The SID format can be the same for gapped and gapless SIDs as described above, but in an alternative, a dual RRO field can be included in the gapped SID and omitted in the gapless SIDs. The additional space that is freed up by omitting the write-to-read gap is used by the dual RRO field. The dual RRO field is larger than a comparable single RRO field. If the gapless sector is reduced equally at the front end (partial preamble SAM and TID) and the backend (RRO field) then the data sectors are extended equally for the gapped sectors and the gapless sectors.
In general, the Integrated Servo sequences can be designed to supply multiple functions including all or part of the TID, SAM, RRO and PES as described in the cited published patent applications. The fractional PES is supplied by the relative amplitude of the read head signal generated from two or more sequences disposed laterally across the tracks. Additional information is encoded in the selection and arrangement of the specific sequences from track to track and sector to sector. Extraction of the encoded information requires decoding or reading each sequence in the servo pattern and then converting this sequence combination into numerical values which give the predetermined information, for example, for the LSBs of the track identifier, etc. The number of bits allocated to the Gray code versus the Integrated Servo sequences can vary according to the specific application. The sector number can be encoded using the Integrated Servo sequences according to standard encoding schemes.
The requirements of the servo system during seeking are substantially different than during track following. Because the read heads are moving across tracks some information in the SIDs may not be reliably readable. Integrated Servo sequences are more difficult to read during seeks and can appear to be smeared. Accordingly reliance on detecting the SAM from an Integrated Servo sequence during seeking can be problematic. Therefore, applications allow the separate SAM field to be used during seeks.
However, there are also advantages to including a sync mark function in the Integrated Servo Sequence fields 64 in addition to the standard separate SAM field as is used in embodiments of the present invention. This allows the signal to be detected even when using servo gate window 25B as described above or servo gate window 25C as described below, when writing gapless data sectors. Although a particular servo system might be able to tolerate a failure to detect a single SAM, for example, having the redundancy of being able to detect a timing sync function in the Integrated Servo Sequences fields increases the robustness of the design. In addition, when a sync function is included in the Integrated Servo Sequence field, it needs only be found while in the track-following mode, and there is no need to find it while seeking. This alternative increases the number of usable patterns of sequences from which to choose. It is increased because many patterns that meet the requirements while in the track-following mode, fail to meet them when those patterns are subjected to the distortions caused by seeking. With a greater choice of patterns, it may be possible to identify otherwise unusable sequence patterns which minimize the susceptibility to servo head instabilities because a conventional servo pattern's servo timing mark can be used while seeking.
This timing provides advantages over the prior art mini-mode servo technique as illustrated in
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