Hard Disk Drive Testing Prerequisites
This topic describes the tasks that you must complete before you test a hard disk by using the Windows Hardware Certification Kit (Windows HCK):
Review the hardware requirements.
Review the software requirements.
Configure the test computer.
The tests that you must run depend on the capabilities of the hard disk that you want to test, its connection type (for example, an external USB-based hard drive), or how it's configured (as part of a RAID system or part of an IP-based storage solution).
The Windows HCK supports the testing of hard disks that have these connection types:
Fibre Channel
IEEE 1394
Parallel Advanced Technology Attachment (PATA)
PC Card
Serial Attached SCSI (SAS)
Serial Advanced Technology Attachment (SATA)
SCSI
USB
SD / EMMC
Hardware Requirements
The hardware that's required for testing a hard drive varies depending on the connection type. But, all tests for hard disks require 1 test computer. The test computer must meet the Windows HCK requirements. For more information, see Windows HCK Prerequisites.
Note
You might need additional hardware if the hard drive is part of a storage system. To determine whether additional hardware requirements apply, see the test description for each test that appears for the device in Windows HCK Studio.
To certify your product for use on servers, the test computer must support four processors and a minimum of 1 GB of RAM. These system capabilities are required to test the Rebalance, D3 State, and Multiple Processor Group functionality of the device and driver. You do not need a computer that actually has more than 64 processors to test your device. Additionally, the server system(s) being used for device or driver testing must have Server Core installed prior to testing. For more information see Windows Server Installation Options.
If you use a pool of test computers to test your device, at least 1 computer in the pool must contain 4 processors and a minimum of 1 GB of RAM. Additionally, that computer must contain the device and the driver that you want to test. As long as the driver is the same on all the computers in the pool, the system creates a schedule to run against all test computers.
For tests that don't include a driver, like tests for a hard disk drive, the Windows HCK scheduler constrains the tests that validate the device's and driver's Rebalance, D3 State, and Multiple Processor Groups functionality to run on the default test computer. You must manually configure this computer to have multiple processor groups. The default computer is the first test computer in the list. Make sure that the first test computer in the list meets the minimum hardware requirements.
Note
Except for para-virtualization drivers you can't use any form of virtualization when you test physical devices and their associated drivers for server certification or signature. Virtualization products don't support the underlying functionality that's required to pass the tests that relate to multiple processor groups, device power management, device Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) functionality, and other tests.
The following sections provide additional hardware requirements for the test computer, based on the connection type.
General
For all configurations:
1 disk drive with a minimum capacity of 6 GB used as the boot drive.
1 CD-ROM drive (may be optional)
Network card, keyboard, mouse, display, power cable as needed
For each physical interface, please see the table below for additional hardware requirements.
Interface | Hardware Equipment Description |
---|---|
Fibre Channel |
|
IEEE 1394 |
|
PATA |
If the connection type is PATA, you need this hardware:
Note
ATA-66 and ATA-100 controllers require 80-conductor cables. |
PC Card |
|
SAS |
|
SATA |
|
SCSI |
|
USB 2.0 |
|
USB 3.0 |
|
Software Requirements
To test a hard disk, you need this software:
The drivers for the hard disk controllers, if required
The latest Windows HCK filters or updates
Configuring the Test Computer
Before you begin testing the hard disk, you must configure the test computer and install the appropriate controller (if the test computer doesn't include this kind of controller). Then, you must complete the appropriate configuration steps, based on the type of hard disk that you're certifying.
Make sure that the test computer is in the ready state before you begin your testing. If a test requires you to set parameters before you run it, a dialog box will appear for that test. For more information, review the specific test topic.
Some Windows HCK tests require user intervention. When you're running tests for a submission, it's a best practice to run the automated tests in a block separately from manual tests. This prevents a manual test from interrupting the completion of an automated test.
Warning
When testing storage devices, we strongly recommend that you complete all Device Fundamentals tests before starting storage tests. Storage tests will reconfigure your test device, leaving the device in a state unsuitable to support Device Fundamentals tests. The following configurations provide steps to create volume on the storage test device. This is important to complete the Device Fundamental part of testing (DevFund).
To configure the test computer to test your Fibre Channel hard disk
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the test computer, and then configure the computer for your test network. The test network is the network that contains Windows HCK Studio and Windows HCK Controller.
If the test system doesn't have a SCSI adapter installed, install the SCSI adapter.
Install 2 identical SCSI hard disk drives and 1 CD-ROM drive onto the SCSI bus.
Install 1 Fibre Channel controller.
Install 1 Fibre Channel hub on the Fibre Channel controller.
Connect the Fibre Channel hard disk drives (test devices) to the Fibre Channel hub.
Set the system BIOS to support the S3 state.
Install the appropriate operating system on 1 of the SCSI hard disk drives.
Install any manufacturer-supplied drivers that devices in the test system require, and then restart the system.
Use the Windows Disk Management tool to delete all existing partitions on the Fibre Channel hard disk drives.
Install the Windows HCK client application on the test computer.
Use Windows HCK Studio to create a computer pool, and then move the test computer to that pool.
To configure the test computer to test your IEEE 1394 hard disk
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the test computer, and then configure the computer for your test network. The test network is the network that contains Windows HCK Studio and Windows HCK Controller.
Install the ATA/ATAPI hard disk drive as a stand-alone Device 0 on the primary ATA/ATAPI channel by using a standard ATA/ATAPI cable.
Install the ATA/ATAPI CD-ROM drive as a stand-alone Device 0 on the secondary ATA/ATAPI channel by using a standard ATA/ATAPI cable.
If the IEEE 1394 controller isn't an embedded component, install 1 IEEE 1394 controller.
By using an IEEE 1394 cable, install the IEEE 1394 hard disk drive (test device) as a stand-alone device on IEEE 1394 socket port 1 of the IEEE 1394 controller.
Set the system BIOS to support the S3 state.
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the ATA/ATAPI hard disk drive.
Install any manufacturer-supplied drivers that devices in the test system require.
Remove any partitions on the test device, and then convert the test device to use the master boot record (MBR) partitioning style.
Install the Windows HCK client application on the test computer.
Use Windows HCK Studio to create a computer pool, and then move the test computer to that pool.
To configure the test computer to test your PATA hard disk
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the test computer, and then configure the computer for your test network. The test network is the network that contains Windows HCK Studio and Windows HCK Controller.
Install the hard disk drive (test device) as a stand-alone Device 0 on the primary ATA/ATAPI channel by using a standard ATA/ATAPI cable. This drive is called Drive 1.
Install the CD-ROM drive by using a standard ATA/ATAPI cable.
You can install the CD-ROM drive as Device 1 or Cable Select Device 1 on the primary ATA/ATAPI channel. Or, you can install the CD-ROM as Device 0, Device 1, Cable Select Device 0, or Cable Select Device 1 on the secondary ATA/ATAPI channel.
Set the system BIOS to support the S3 state.
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on Drive 1.
Install any manufacturer-supplied drivers that devices in the test system require.
With the test system turned off, install an identical hard disk drive by using a standard ATA/ATAPI cable.
You can install this drive as Device 1 or Cable Select Device 1 on the primary ATA/ATAPI channel. Or, you can install this drive as Device 0, Device 1, Cable Select Device 0, or Cable Select Device 1 on the secondary ATA/ATAPI channel. This drive is called Drive 2.
If you're testing a hybrid disk, install the disk on a secondary channel and make sure that the disk is a secondary disk.
Remove any partitions on Drive 2, and then convert the drive to use the MBR partitioning style.
Create three 4-GB NTFS-formatted partitions.
Install the Windows HCK client application on the test computer.
Use Windows HCK Studio to create a computer pool, and then move the test computer to that pool.
To configure the test computer to test your PC Card hard disk
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the test computer, and then configure the computer for your test network. The test network is the network that contains Windows HCK Studio and Windows HCK Controller.
Install 1 PC Card hard disk drive (test device) on the PC Card channel of the test system.
Install the PC Card network adapter on the second PC Card controller in the test system.
Set the system BIOS to support the S3 state.
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the ATA/ATAPI hard disk in the test system.
Install any manufacturer-supplied drivers that devices in the test system require.
Remove any partitions on the test device, and then convert the test device to use the MBR partitioning style.
Install the Windows HCK client application on the test computer.
Use Windows HCK Studio to create a computer pool, and then move the test computer to that pool.
To configure the test computer to test your SAS hard disk
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the test computer, and then configure the computer for your test network. The test network is the network that contains Windows HCK Studio and Windows HCK Controller.
If the test system doesn't contain a SCSI adapter, install the SCSI adapter.
Install a SCSI hard disk drive on the SCSI bus.
Install the SCSI CD-ROM drive on the SCSI bus.
Install 2 dual-ported SAS controllers
Connect 1 SAS hard disk drive to the SAS port.
Set the system BIOS to support the S3 state.
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the SCSI hard disk drive.
Install any manufacturer-supplied drivers that devices in the test system require.
Restart the test computer.
By using the Windows Disk Management tool, delete all existing partitions on the SAS hard disk drives.
Install the Windows HCK client application on the test computer.
Use Windows HCK Studio to create a computer pool, and then move the test computer to that pool.
To configure the test computer to test your SATA hard disk
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the test computer, and then configure the computer for your test network. The test network is the network that contains Windows HCK Studio and Windows HCK Controller.
Install the CD-ROM drive as Drive 0 on an ATA/ATAPI controller.
Install a SATA controller and attach 2 SATA hard disks. These hard disks are called Drive 1 and Drive 2.
Set the system BIOS to support the S3 state.
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on Drive 1.
During installation, delete any existing partitions on Drive 2 and create three 4-GB NTFS partitions.
Install any manufacturer-supplied drivers that devices in the test system require.
Install the Windows HCK client application on the test computer.
Use Windows HCK Studio to create a computer pool, and then move the test computer to that pool.
To configure the test computer to test your SCSI hard disk
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the test computer, and then configure the computer for your test network. The test network is the network that contains Windows HCK Studio and Windows HCK Controller.
Set the SCSI IDs on the hard disk drives (test devices) to the following:
Drive 1 = SCSI ID 0
Drive 2 = SCSI ID 1
Install the hard disk drives (test devices) on the SCSI adapter.
Set the SCSI ID on the SCSI CD-ROM drive to 6, and then physically install the SCSI CD-ROM drive on the SCSI adapter on a separate channel from the test devices.
Set the system BIOS to support the S3 state.
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on an NTFS-formatted volume on Drive 1.
Install any manufacturer-supplied drivers that devices in the test system require.
Remove any partitions on Drive 2, and then convert the test device to use the MBR partitioning style.
Create three 4-GB NTFS-formatted partitions on Drive 2.
Install the Windows HCK client application on the test computer.
Use Windows HCK Studio to create a computer pool, and then move the test computer to that pool.
To configure the test computer to test your USB hard disk
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on the test computer, and then configure the computer for your test network. The test network is the network that contains Windows HCK Studio and Windows HCK Controller.
If the test system doesn't have an embedded USB 2.0 controller, install a USB 2.0 controller.
Connect the USB 2.0 controller to the high-speed USB 2.0 hub.
Connect the test device to the downstream port of the high-speed USB 2.0 hub.
Note
Don't connect the USB test device directly to the root hub of the USB 2.0 controller.
Set the system BIOS to support the S3 state.
Install the appropriate Windows operating system on hard disk drive.
Install any manufacturer-supplied drivers that devices in the test system require.
Remove any partitions on the test device, and then convert the test device to use the MBR partitioning style.
Create three 4-GB partitions on the test device.
Install the Windows HCK client application on the test computer.
Use Windows HCK Studio to create a computer pool, and then move the test computer to that pool.
Feature-Based Configuration
If your device supports any of the feature(s) in this section, please update the associated configurations steps in addition to the general interface-based configuration steps in “Configuring the Test Computer.” Minor modifications may be applicable depending on the specifics of your device form-factor.
Device.Storage.Hd.Ehdd
If testing as a boot device, the system must support UEFI 2.3.1 (with TCG OPAL 2.0 implementation).
A secondary non-boot device is still required to be installed for testing.
Device.Storage.Hd.Flush
This feature and testing requires an external programmable power strip.
See the Flush Test for more details.
Device.Storage.Hd.Sata.HybridInformation
The target test device cannot be a boot device.
The target test device should be a different product (e.g. Hardware ID) than the boot device.
Set system BIOS to boot from AHCI.
Start the system using Microsoft AHCI driver.
Device.Storage.Hd.Trim
The target test device cannot be a boot device.
The target test device should be a different product (e.g. Hardware ID) than the boot device.
Set system BIOS to boot from AHCI.
Start the system using Microsoft AHCI driver.
Device.Storage.Hd.Uas
Install a USB 3.0 XHCI host controller in test system 1 ().
Note
Ff the host controller is already available as an embedded device on the system, skip this step.
Attach target device 1 to system 1 into the 3.0 port.
Attach target device 2 to system 2 into the 2.0 port. This step is necessary for testing cross XHCI and EHCI compatibility of UAS support on the test device.
Upon completing the configuration on the two systems, run the following tests:
UAS device connected to XHCI port: Run full test suite.
UAS device connected to EHCI port: Run the following 3 tests.
Disk Stress for UAS on EHCI (LOGO)
UAS Stress Reset logo test for UAS on EHCI
USB 2.0 & 3.0 SCSI Compliance test for UAS on EHCI (LOGO)