Chapter 2, Product overview, Etx computer-on-module concept – ADLINK ETX-PVR User Manual

Page 9: Figure 2-1, Etx-pvr module and custom baseboard assembly, Chapter 2 product overview

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ETX-PVR

Reference Manual

3

Chapter 2

Product Overview

This introduction presents general information about the ETX Architecture and the ETX-PVR Computer-

on-Module (COM). After reading this chapter you should understand:

ETX Computer-on-Module concept

ETX-PVR product description

ETX-PVR features

Major components

Connectors

Specifications

ETX Computer-on-Module Concept

Embedded system designers face increasing pressures to bring products to market quickly. Many products

that once incorporated a custom CPU design can no longer afford the time to develop and debug a custom
CPU let alone port operating system software to it. Furthermore, CPU subsystem design usually plays a

small part in providing any uniqueness to an embedded product. The remainder of the embedded product

design adds key circuits that provide a unique product and differentiate it from other products serving the
same market. The challenge is to speed these designs to market by eliminating the need for a custom CPU

design while providing the flexibility to include all critical elements, which make the embedded product

unique.

The Embedded Technology eXtended (ETX) module provides an off-the-shelf CPU subsystem that can be

included in virtually any embedded system. An ETX module works like a high-integration chip, plugging

into your custom circuit board design to provide specific control for your logic application. See

Figure 2-1

.

Figure 2-1. ETX-PVR Module and Custom Baseboard Assembly

ETX provides a simple, standard interface that is independent of CPU type. The ETX interface includes the
industry-standard PCI bus, ISA bus (some models), I/O signals from the peripheral components on the ETX

module, power, and ground. Visit the ADLINK web site (

www.adlinktech.com

) for the latest ETX processor

availability and support information.

The standard ETX interface lets you try different processors in your actual product environment with the

ability to defer a processor choice until late in the project if you so choose. The interface also lets you easily
offer different versions of your product with different capabilities by either selecting different ETX modules

with the same baseboard, or by designing different baseboards for the same CPU. This simple ability to

upgrade by either selecting a more powerful CPU (without baseboard redesign) or enhancing the baseboard
without touching the CPU subsystem or the bulk of the applications software.

The ETX flexibility enables designers to take an accelerated, low risk path by using proven ETX module

designs. Your design flow might look similar to the one shown in

Figure 2-2

. This diagram gives a Typical

Design Flow of hardware and software functions.

ETX-PVR_Stack

ETX-PVR Computer -on -Module

Custom Baseboard Design

Stack Connectors

(4 pairs)

M2.5 PEM Nuts

Spacing 3 mm (4)

M2.5 Screws (4)

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