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Copy of SCSI2SD from codesrc.com, as found at
ed1dff172e
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SCSI2SD, The SCSI Hard Drive Emulator for retro computing. Traditional hard drives last 5 years*. Maybe, if you're luckly, you'll get 10 years of service from a particular drive. The lubricants wear out, the spindles rust. SCSI2SD is a modern replacement for failed drives. It allows the use of vintage computer hardware long after their mechanical drives fail. The use of SD memory cards solves the problem of transferring data between the vintage computer and a modern PC (who still has access to a working floppy drive ?) *All statistics are made up. Features In-built active terminator. Can optional supply terminator power back to the SCSI bus Emulates a non-removable hard drive for maximum compatibility. Firmware updatable over USB (TODO software not yet implemented) Highly configurable over USB (TODO software not yet implemented) Selectable SCSI ID Selectable parity support Enable/disable Unit Attention Condition Artificial limits on the SCSI disk size (eg. limit size to 4G to avoid OS bugs) Technical Specifications SCSI Interface SCSI-2 Narrow 8-bit 50-pin connector. Supports asynchronous transfers only. SD Card Interface Standard SDSC (1GB maximum size) SDHC (32GB maximum size) SDXC cards are untested. Donations welcome. Communication is via the SPI protocol at 25MHz. Power 5V via standard molex drive connector. Dimensions 10cm x 10cm x 1.5cm A 3D-printable bracket is in testing to suit a standard 3.5" hard disk bay. Performance As currently implemented: Sequential read: 424kb/sec Sequential write: 414kb/sec Tested with a 16GB class 10 SD card, via the commands: # WRITE TEST sudo dd bs=8192 count=100 if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdX oflag=dsync # READ TEST sudo dd bs=8192 count=100 if=/dev/sdX of=/dev/null I am working on updating the SD card communication to use DMA, to allow simultaneous use of the SD and SCSI interfaces. I expect the performance to reach 1Mb/sec. Compatibility Tested with Linux (current), Apple Macintosh System 7.5.3 on LC-III, and LC-475 hardware.