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SUMMARYLogical Block Addressing (LBA) is a method of accessing hard disk drives. This allows IDE disks larger than 504 megabytes (1024 cylinders) in size to be fully partitioned using the MS-DOS fdisk command. Prior to this technology, ROM BIOS limitations prevented the fdisk command from using an entire hard disk that was larger than 504 megabytes (MB) in size, except by using other controller ROM routines that effectively translate the hard disk's native geometry. MORE INFORMATION
LBA is a run-time function of the system BIOS. The BIOS uses LBA for the
following commands: read (with and without retries), read verify, read
long, write (with and without retries), write verify, write long, read
multiple, write multiple, read DMA, write DMA, seek, and format track.
American Megatrends Inc.American Megatrends, Inc. has confirmed that versions of its BIOS dated 4-25-94 and later are compatible with LBA. For more information, contact American Megatrends.PhoenixMicro Firmware, the sole provider of BIOS upgrades for Phoenix BIOS chip sets, has confirmed that BIOS versions 4.03 and later are compatible with LBA. However, various computer and system board manufacturers may be using specific revisions of the version 4.03 BIOS that do not support LBA. In these cases, the hardware manufacturer should be contacted for an appropriate BIOS upgrade. For more information, contact Micro Firmware.This article refers to products manufactured by vendors independent of Microsoft; we make no warranty, implied or otherwise, regarding these products' performance or reliability. Additional query words: ata eide translation gb gigabyte ami
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