Pci/pmc technology overview, Pci/pmc technology, Appendix e – Interphase Tech iSPAN User Manual

Page 209: Epci/pmc technology overview

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iSPAN Serial WAN Adapter Users Guide

189

E

PCI/PMC Technology

Overview

PCI/PMC Technology

Intel® Corporation’s Architecture Lab, along with leading
computer vendors (the PCI SIG), designed the Peripheral
Component Interconnect (PCI) bus as the next generation I/O
expansion bus. Its predecessors were the ISA, EISA, and MCA
buses. The PCI bus is a high-performance bus found in systems
ranging from low-end PCs to high-end servers.

PCI was developed to overcome the bottlenecks associated
with traditional 16-bit expansion slots operating at 8 MHz, or,
essentially, 5 megabytes per second. The result was a local bus
system capable of transferring 32 bits of data at 33 MHz for a
maximum data transfer rate of 132 MBps. The PCI Local Bus
takes peripherals off the I/O bus and connects them together
with the CPU and the memory subsystem. This provides a
wider, faster pathway for data, which is especially important
for servers, graphic-intensive software, high-speed networks,
and other high-performance peripherals.

Features of the PCI Local Bus architecture include:

Processor-independent bridge between the CPU and

high-speed peripherals that serves as traffic controller
between buses

32-bit memory addressing for CPU, Direct Memory

Access (DMA) devices, and bus masters

32-bit data transfers at 33 MHz for CPU, DMA, and bus

master devices

132 MBps maximum data transfer rate

Data are written and read from peripherals in linear

bursts at every clock cycle

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