Glossary
227
system. Examples of code in ROM include the program that initiates your system’s
boot routine and the POST.
ROMB
— RAID on motherboard.
rpm
— Revolutions per minute.
RTC
— Real-time clock.
SAS
— Serial-attached SCSI.
SATA
— Serial Advanced Technology Attachment. A standard interface between the
system board and storage devices.
SCSI
— Small computer system interface. An I/O bus interface with faster data
transmission rates than standard ports.
SDRAM
— Synchronous dynamic random-access memory.
sec
— Second(s).
serial port
— An I/O port used most often to connect a modem to your system. You
can usually identify a serial port on your system by its 9-pin connector.
service tag
— A bar code label on the system used to identify it when you call Dell for
technical support.
simple disk volume
— The volume of free space on a single dynamic, physical disk.
SIP
— Server interface pod.
SMART
— Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology. Allows hard drives to
report errors and failures to the system BIOS and then display an error message on the
screen.
SMP
— Symmetric multiprocessing. Used to describe a system that has two or more
processors connected via a high-bandwidth link and managed by an operating system,
where each processor has equal access to I/O devices.
SNMP
— Simple Network Management Protocol. A standard interface that allows a
network manager to remotely monitor and manage workstations.
spanning
— Spanning, or concatenating, disk volumes combines unallocated space
from multiple disks into one logical volume, allowing more efficient use of all the
space and all drive letters on a multiple-disk system.
striping
— Disk striping writes data across three or more disks in an array, but only
uses a portion of the space on each disk. The amount of space used by a "stripe" is the
same on each disk used. A virtual disk may use several stripes on the same set of disks
in an array. See also
guarding
,
mirroring
, and
RAID.
SVGA
— Super video graphics array. VGA and SVGA are video standards for video
adapters with greater resolution and color display capabilities than previous standards.
Summary of Contents for PowerEdge M600
Page 10: ...10 Contents 8 Getting Help 217 Contacting Dell 217 Glossary 219 Index 231 ...
Page 50: ...50 About Your System Figure 1 16 Example of Full Height Blade Port Mapping Blade 3 ...
Page 52: ...52 About Your System Figure 1 17 Example of Half Height Blade Port Mapping ...
Page 156: ...156 Installing Blade Components ...
Page 178: ...178 Installing Enclosure Components ...
Page 202: ...202 Running System Diagnostics ...
Page 216: ...216 System Board Information ...
Page 218: ...218 Getting Help ...
Page 236: ...236 Index ...