This invention relates to a method of performing a system boot in a computer comprising a disk drive, a controller for a disk drive and a disk drive provided with said controller.
Personal computers are conventionally provided with a storage medium comprising a hard disk drive. A hard disk drive conventionally comprises a plurality of platters or disks on which data is recorded on the upper and lower surfaces. To enable data to be read from or written to the disks, the disks are spun at a substantially constant operational rate of rotation by a suitable motor. To improve the speed of data transfer and reduce latency, that is the delay in reading data from a platter, the operated rate of rotation has been increased as hard disk drives have been developed. Originally, all hard disk drives spun at 3600 rpm but development has led to hard disk drives with operational rates of rotation of 15000 rpm and above.
A problem with high rotational rates for hard disk drives is that the time taken to spin up the disks to the operational rate of rotation is greater than would be required for a lower rate of rotation. When a computer is turned on and performs a system boot, it is conventionally necessary during the system boot procedure to read from a so-called boot sector of the hard disk drive. If the hard disk drive has not yet reached its operational rate of rotation, the system boot procedure waits for the disk to reach its operational rate of rotation before continuing. This leads to an undesirable delay in the system boot procedure.
An aim of the present invention is to reduce or overcome the above problem.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, we provide a method of performing a system boot in a computer comprising a disk drive having at least one disk comprising the steps of initiating a system boot procedure, operating the disk drive to rotate the at least one disk at a first rate of rotation, reading boot data from the at least one disk and operating the disk drive to rotate the at least one disk at a second rate of rotation.
The method may comprise the step of completing the system boot procedure and, when the at least one disk is rotating at the second rate of rotation, commencing an operating system boot procedure.
The method may comprise the step of reading data from the disk drive at a first data rate when the at least one disk is rotating at its first rate of rotation, and reading data from the disk drive at a second data rate when the at least one disk is rotating at its second rate of rotation.
The method may comprise the step, following reading the boot data from the disk drive, of sending a signal to a disk drive controller to cause the at least one disk to rotate at its second rate of rotation.
The first rate of rotation may be slower than the second rate of rotation.
According to a second aspect of the present invention we provide a controller for a disk drive comprising at least one disk, operable on commencing operation to rotate the at least one disk at a first rate of rotation, and on receipt of a signal, to rotate the at least one disk at a second rate of rotation.
The controller may be operable to read data from the disk at a first data rate when the at least one disk is rotating at the first rate of rotation, and operable to read data at a second data rate when the at least one disk is rotating at its second rate of rotation.
According to a third aspect of the invention, we provide a disk drive comprising at least one disk and a controller according to the second aspect of the invention, wherein the at least one disk comprises a first data portion and a second data portion, wherein data to be read when the at least one disk is rotating at its first rate of rotation are stored in said first data portion, and wherein data to be read when the at least one disk is spinning at its second rate of rotation are stored in its second data portion.
The invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
a is a time line for the system boot procedure of
b is a timeline for the system boot procedure of
Referring to
Referring to
In part II of the system boot procedure, it is necessary for the system BIOS 13 to identify a drive to boot from and look for boot information. As shown in step 26, if the disks 14 of the hard disk drive 12 are not yet rotating at an operational rate, it is necessary for the system boot process to wait until the hard disk drive 12 is available. When the disks 14 of the hard disk drive 12 are rotating at an operational rate of rotation as shown at step 28, at step 26 the system BIOS 13 can identify the hard disk drive 12 as the boot drive, the system looks for a master boot record on the disks 14 and then reads the information from a boot sector. As shown in part III of the system boot procedure, the system BIOS 13 then completes the system boot procedure at step 29 and at step 30 an operating system boot procedure commences.
Referring to the timing diagram of
Referring now to
In part III of the system boot procedure, the system BIOS 13 then performs steps 29 and 30 as shown in
Part II thus only comprises a relatively short wait period 34a which the system boot procedure waits for the disks 14 to reach the first operational rate of rotation.
As seen in the timing diagram of
Although there is a trade off in that at a lower operational rate of rotation, there will be a higher latency in obtaining data from the hard disk drive and the data may be read at a lower data rate, the quantity of information required for the system boot procedure is sufficiently small that the slightly longer period taken to read the boot information from the hard disk drive is substantially less than the time taken to wait for a hard disk drive to spin up to an operational rate of rotation in a conventional computer.
The disks 14 will store two data sets, the boot data which is to be read at the first, lower rate of rotation and all other data which is to be read at the higher second rate of rotation. Both data sets may be distributed anywhere on the disks 14 in a conventional manner. Alternatively, it may be advantageous to physically separate the two data sets on the disks 14. In the example shown in
Although the invention has been described with reference to a hard disk drive, it will be apparent that the invention may be applied to any similar rotating storage medium where there exists a trade-off between the time taken for the medium to be available for operation from start up, latency and rotation rate.
The features disclosed in the foregoing description, or the following claims, or the accompanying drawings, expressed in their specific forms or in terms of a means for performing the disclosed function, or a method or process for attaining the disclosed result, as appropriate, may, separately, or in any combination of such features, be utilized for realizing the invention in diverse forms thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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01410079 | Jul 2001 | EP | regional |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030033513 A1 | Feb 2003 | US |