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A history of PC buses

A history of PC buses. From ISA to PCI Express. ISA (Industry Standard Architecture) - 1981. Originated in the original IBM PC (8-bit / 4.77 MHz = 4 MB/s). The ISA standard is based on PC/AT (16-bit / 8 MHz = 16 MB/s) – 1984 62 pins (8-bit PC ISA) or 98 pins (16-bit PC/AT ISA).

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A history of PC buses

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  1. A history of PC buses From ISA to PCI Express International Test Instruments Corporation

  2. ISA (Industry Standard Architecture) - 1981 • Originated in the original IBM PC (8-bit / 4.77 MHz = 4 MB/s). • The ISA standard is based on PC/AT (16-bit / 8 MHz = 16 MB/s) – 1984 • 62 pins (8-bit PC ISA) or 98 pins (16-bit PC/AT ISA). • The ISA bus supported 1MB (PC/XT) / 16 MB (PC/AT) Memory and 64K I/O address spaces. • Lacked bandwidth for graphical user interfaces (MS Windows). • VL Bus (VESA Local Bus) gave some bandwidth respite on newer PC motherboards but was married to the 486/33 CPU bus. • VL Bus no longer worked when Pentium came out (60 MHz +) due to different CPU bus protocol. • Later, IBM created MCA as future-proof, CPU-independent alternative. International Test Instruments Corporation

  3. ISA (Industry Standard Architecture) – 1981 (cont.) • 8-bit and 16-bit ISA slots International Test Instruments Corporation

  4. ISA (Industry Standard Architecture) – 1981 (cont.) • 16-bit ISA slot signals (PC/AT) International Test Instruments Corporation

  5. MCA (Micro Channel Architecture) – 1987 • Created by IBM to address deficiencies of the ISA bus (CPU-dependence and lack of performance). • Used by IBM PS/2 computers. • 16/32 bits, 10 MHz, 20/40 MB/s • Software-based configuration (i.e. no IRQ, DMA jumpers). • Was not an open standard so never caught on with PC manufacturers. • Not backwards compatible with existing ISA expansion cards. • Was used by advanced server platforms due to high overall performance. International Test Instruments Corporation

  6. MCA (Micro Channel Architecture) – 1987 (cont.) • 32-bit MCA slots. Connector later reused by PCI. International Test Instruments Corporation

  7. EISA (Extended Industry Standard Architecture) - 1988 • Created by 3rd-party PC clone vendors. • 32-bit / 8 MHz = 32 MB/s. • Software-based configuration (i.e. no IRQ, DMA jumpers). • EISA slots accepted ISA cards but EISA cards would not work in ISA slots. • Was never popular because ISA + VLB carried the PC platform until PCI came along. • Did see use in higher-performance server systems. International Test Instruments Corporation

  8. EISA (Extended Industry Standard Architecture) – 1988 (cont.) • EISA slots – Accepts ISA cards too. International Test Instruments Corporation

  9. EISA (Extended Industry Standard Architecture) – 1988 (cont.) • EISA card – Does not fit in ISA slot. International Test Instruments Corporation

  10. VLB (VESA Local Bus ) – 1992 • 32-bit, 33 MHz = 133 MB/s. • Created by Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) for attaching high-performance graphics cards to ISA, and later PCI, motherboards. • Custom slot that extends the 16-bit ISA slot (see next slide). • Directly tied to the 486/33 memory bus – Doomed for other CPUs due to different CPU memory bus protocol. • The CPU memory bus only allowed one or two VLB card loads (due to loading and SI issues). • Difficult implementation, especially for 40/50 MHz 486 versions (instability common). • 486DX2-66 and -100 used a 33 MHz front-side bus (x2/x3 internal clock) so compatible with VLB. International Test Instruments Corporation

  11. VLB (VESA Local Bus ) – 1992 (cont.) • 32-bit VLB slot on ISA motherboard. International Test Instruments Corporation

  12. VLB (VESA Local Bus ) – 1992 (cont.) • 32-bit VLB Graphics Card International Test Instruments Corporation

  13. PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) – 1992 • Created by Intel (later PCI-SIG) to bring together best ideas from prior bus architectures. • 32-bit, 33 MHz = 133 MB/s • Also supported 64-bit (while not commonly implemented) = 266 MB/s • Full plug-and-play (cards report Memory, IRQ, I/O requirements – device drivers and operating system make sure the cards get the resources they need and that no resource clashes occur). • Growing used PCI bandwidth eventually necessitated separate AGP graphics card bus. International Test Instruments Corporation

  14. PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) – 1992 (cont.) • 4x32-bit PCI slots + 4x16-bit ISA slots. International Test Instruments Corporation

  15. PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) – 1992 (cont.) • PCI bus now decoupled from CPU bus. International Test Instruments Corporation

  16. PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) – 1992 (cont.) • PCI Bus interface signals (32/64 bit data). International Test Instruments Corporation

  17. PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) – 1992 (cont.) • Configuration Space Registers & PnP International Test Instruments Corporation

  18. PCI-X (Peripheral Component Interconnect - Extended) - 1998 • 32/64-bit, 66/133/266/533 MHz (up to 4,266 MB/s). • PCI-SIG (IBM, Compaq, HP). Note: Intel wanted a better option. • Improved protocol over PCI (Split-Response Transactions, MSI signals interrupts via memory writes in host PCI bridge rather than dedicated INTx interrupt lines.). • Due to higher cost, normally only server PCs used 64-bit PCI-X. • Desktop systems migrated directly from PCI to PCI Express, bypassing PCI-X. • Wide buses resulted in difficult length matching of the bus signals (in worst case, violating Tsu/Th). • PCI-X reached practical frequency limit due to loading and skew of the wide buses • The wide buses tied up most I/O pins on the chipsets, limiting overall chip functionality. International Test Instruments Corporation

  19. PCI-X (Peripheral Component Interconnect - Extended) – 1998 (cont.) International Test Instruments Corporation

  20. PCI-X (Peripheral Component Interconnect - Extended) – 1998 (cont.) • Fast and wide buses result in Tsu/Th timing skew between signals within the buses. • If the skew is too high, the interface will break! International Test Instruments Corporation

  21. PCI Express – 2004 • Actually not a bus but a point-to-point link. • High-speed bi-directional serial link (2.5 / 5.0 / 8.0 Gbps per lane, 1 to 32 lanes). • Clock 8b/10b encoded within serial data stream. • Maintains software backwards compatibility of Configuration Space registers (Plug-and-Play). • Also software backwards compatible with regards to I/O and Memory-mapped device registers. • No length matching between lanes needed (separate lane-to-lane de-skew built into receiver). International Test Instruments Corporation

  22. PCI Express – 2004 (cont.) • PCI Express vs. PCI slots. International Test Instruments Corporation

  23. PCI Express – 2004 (cont.) • PCI Express bandwidth comparison. International Test Instruments Corporation

  24. PCI Express – 2004 (cont.) • PCI Express 1.0a/1.1: 250 MB/s per lane (max 8 GB/s for 32 Lanes) – 2003/2005. • PCI Express 2.0: 500 MB/s per lane (max 16 GB/s for 32 Lanes) - 2007. • PCI Express 3.0: 800 MB/s per lane (max 26 GB/s for 32 Lanes) - 2010. • PCI Express 4.0: Again doubling transfer rate? Expected to be released 2014/2015. • Efficient and physically compact enables use for all platforms (mobile, desktop, server). • No longer need for separate AGP graphics bus slot (lots of available bandwidth). International Test Instruments Corporation

  25. A history of PC buses • This completes the overview of the legacy PC buses. • For a continued description of the PCI Express bus architecture, see the presentation “PCI Express 101”. International Test Instruments Corporation

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