Lectures 5-8 Types of Buses
Lectures 5-8 Types of Buses
Lectures 5-8 Types of Buses
1- Buses
In computer architecture, a bus is a communication system that transfers data
between components inside a computer, or between computers. This expression
covers all related hardware components (wire, optical fiber, etc.) and software,
including communication protocols. Early computer buses were parallel electrical
wires with multiple connections, but the term is now used for any physical
arrangement that provides the same logical function as a parallel electrical bus.
Modern computer buses can use both parallel and bit serial connections, and can be
wired in either a multidrop (electrical parallel) or daisy chain topology, or
connected by switched hubs, as in the case of USB.
Address - the components pass memory addresses to one another over the
address bus.
Control - used to send out signals to coordinate and manage the activities of the
motherboard components.
Data - transferred between peripherals, memory and the CPU. Obviously, the data
bus can be a very busy pathway.
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2. Bus Architectures
As well as the processor bus (also known as the Front-Side Bus or FSB), these are
the other buses you may encounter:
EISA - introduced when the 286 processor was available as it could access 16 bits.
PCI - a 64-bit bus, though it is usually implemented as a 32-bit bus. It can run at
clock speeds of 33 or 66MHz.
AGP - Accelerated Graphics Port based on the PCI slot but designed for graphical
throughput.
PCI Express - double the rate of PCI and uses two serial rather than one parallel
data bus.
Inside computers, there are many internal components. In order for these
components to communicate with each other they make use of wires that are
known as a ‘bus’.
A bus is a common pathway through which information flows from one computer
component to another. This pathway is used for communication purpose and it is
established between two or more computer components. We are going to check
different computer bus architectures that are found in computers.
1. Data sharing - All types of buses found in a computer transfer data between
the computer peripherals connected to it.
The buses transfer or send data in either serial or parallel method of data
transfer. This allows for the exchange of 1, 2, 4 or even 8 bytes of data at
a time. (A byte is a group of 8 bits). Buses are classified depending on
how many bits they can move at the same time, which means that we
have 8-bit, 16-bit, 32-bit or even 64-bit buses.
2. Addressing - A bus has address lines, which match those of the processor. This
allows data to be sent to or from specific memory locations.
4. Timing - The bus provides a system clock signal to synchronize the peripherals
attached to it with the rest of the system.
3. Bus Terminologies
1. System bus: This is the bus that connects the CPU to main memory on the
motherboard. The system bus is also called the front-side bus, memory bus, local
bus, or host bus.
2. A number of I/O Buses: (I/O is an acronym for input / output), connecting
various peripheral devices to the CPU. These devices connect to the system bus
via a ‘bridge’ implemented in the processors chipset. Other names for the I/O bus
include “expansion bus", "external bus” or “host bus”.
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These are some of the common expansion bus types that have ever been used in
computers:
ISA Bus
This is the most common type of early expansion bus, which was designed for use
in the original IBM PC. The IBM PC-XT used an 8-bit bus design. This means that
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the data transfers take place in 8 bit chunks (i.e. one byte at a time) across the
bus. The ISA bus ran at a clock speed of 4.77 MHz.
For the 80286-based IBM PC-AT, an improved bus design, which could transfer 16
bits of data at a time, was announced. The 16 bit version of the ISA bus is
sometimes known as the AT bus (AT-Advanced Technology).
The improved AT bus also provided a total of 24 address lines, which allowed
16MB of memory to be addressed. The AT bus was backward compatible with its
8 bit predecessor and allowed 8 bit cards be used in 16 bit expansion slots.
When it first appeared the 8 bit ISA bus ran at a speed of 4.77MHZ – the same
speed as the processor. Improvements done over the years eventually made the
AT bus ran at a clock speed of 8MHz.
All modern computers today no longer included the ISA slots and instead are
using more PCI, AGP, and other slots. Below is a graphic of what an ISA expansion
card may look like as well as the slot it connects into on the motherboard.
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To connect an ISA card to a computer the mother board must have an ISA slot. As
mentioned above, today's computers no longer come with ISA expansion slots
and most modern operating systems no longer support ISA. If your motherboard
does not have an ISA expansion slot, it must be recommended getting a more
modern card that your motherboard supports.
The MCA expansion bus did not support ISA cards and IBM decided to charge
other manufacturers royalties for use of the technology. This made it unpopular
and it is now an obsolete technology.
The primary downfall of the MCA bus was that it was proprietary and required
licensing fees. Due to this format and competing standards the MCA bus never
became widely used and was phased out of the desktop computers in the mid
1990s. The MCA bus was superseded by the ISA bus, which was later replaced
by PCI.
The EISA Bus Slots (on the left) where EISA Cards Were Connected
The EISA bus provided 32-bit slots at an 8.33 MHz cycle rate for use with 386DX
or higher processors. EISA can also accommodate a 16-bit ISA card in the first
row.
Although the EISA bus is backwards compatible and not a proprietary bus, it never
became widely used and is no longer found in computers today.
Like the MCA, EISA offered a disk-based setup for the cards, but it still ran at
8MHz in order for it to be compatible with ISA.
The EISA expansion slots are twice as deep as an ISA slot. If an ISA card is placed in
an EISA slot it will use only the top row of connectors, however, a full EISA card
uses both rows. It offered bus mastering.
EISA cards were relatively expensive and were normally found on high-end
workstations and network servers.
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VESA Bus
It was also known as the Local bus or the VESA-Local bus. VESA (Video Electronics
Standards Association) was invented to help standardize PCs video specifications,
thus solving the problem of proprietary technology where different
manufacturers were attempting to develop their own buses.
The VL Bus provided 32-bit data path and ran at 25 or 33 MHZ. It ran at the same
clock frequency as the host CPU. But this became a problem as processor speeds
increased because, the faster the peripherals are required to run, the more
expensive they are to manufacture.
It was difficult to implement the VL-Bus on newer chips such as the 486s and the
new Pentiums and so eventually the VL-Bus was superseded by PCI.
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VESA slots had extra set of connectors and thus the cards were larger. The VESA
design was backward compatible with the older ISA cards.
● 32-bit interface
● 62/36-pin connector
PCI supports both 32-bit and 64-bit data width; it is compatible with 486s
and Pentiums. The bus data width is equal to the processor, such as, a 32 bit
processor would have a 32 bit PCI bus, and operates at 33MHz. Although
commonly used in computers from the late 1990s to the early 2000s, PCI has since
been replaced with PCI Express.
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Revisions came in 1993 to version 2.0, and in 1995 to PCI 2.1, as an expansion to
the ISA bus. PCI was used in developing Plug and Play (PnP) (therefore did not
require any jumpers or dip switches), and all PCI cards support PnP. This means a
user can plug a new card into the computer, power it on and it will “self-identify”
and “self-specify” and start working without manual configuration using jumpers.
Unlike VESA, PCI supports bus mastering that is, the bus has some processing
capability and thus the CPU spends less time processing data. Most PCI cards are
designed for 5v, but there are also 3v and dual-voltage cards. Keying slots used
help to differentiate 3v and 5v cards and also to make sure that a 3v card is not
slotted into a 5v socket and vice versa.
The picture below shows an example of what PCI examples and PCI slots look like
on a motherboard. As you can see, there are three PCI slots: PCI1, PCI2, and PCI3.
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● Modem
● Network card
● Sound card
● Video card
If you are looking for PCI drivers, you most likely need to download them for a
specific PCI device. For example, if you need a PCI Ethernet adapter driver, you
should install the drivers for the network card.
To connect a PCI card to a computer the motherboard must have a PCI slot. As
mentioned above, some of today's computers no longer come with a PCI expansion
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slot. If your motherboard does not have a PCI expansion slot, it must be
recommend that getting a more modern card which is supports by motherboard.
The need for high quality and very fast performance of video on computers
led to development of the Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP). Designed
by Intel and introduced in August of 1997, AGP introduces a dedicated point-to-
point channel that allows the graphics controller direct access to the
system memory. Below is an illustration of what the AGP slot may look like on
your motherboard.
The AGP channel is 32-bits wide and runs at 66 MHz, which is a total bandwidth
of 266 MBps and much greater than the PCI bandwidth of up to 133 MBps. AGP
also supports two optional faster modes, with a throughput of 533 MBps and 1.07
GBps. It also allows 3-D textures to be stored in main memory rather than video
memory.
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The AGP Port connects to the CPU and operates at the speed of the processor bus.
This means that video information is sent more quickly to the card for processing.
The AGP uses the main PC memory to hold 3D images. In effect, this gives the
AGP video card an unlimited amount of video memory. To speed up the data
transfer, Intel designed the port as a direct path to the PC’s main memory.
AGP is available in three different versions, the original AGP version mentioned
above, AGP 2.0 that was introduced in May of 1998, and AGP 3.0 (AGP 8x) that
was introduced in November of 2000. AGP 2.0 added 4x signaling and was
capable of operating at 1.5V and AGP 3.0 was capable of double the transfer
speeds.
Data transfer rate ranges from 264 Mbps to 528mbps, 800 Mbps up to 1.5 Gbps.
AGP connector is identified by its brown color.
running an older version of Windows, see the Windows versions page for
information about Windows versions that support AGP.
The Personal Computer Memory Card Industry Association was founded to give a
standard bus for laptop computers. So it is basically used in the small computers.
Short for Small Computer System Interface, a parallel interface standard used by
Apple Macintosh computers, PC's and Unix systems for attaching peripheral
devices to a computer.
This is an external bus standard that supports data transfer rates of 12 Mbps. A
single USB port connects up to 127 peripheral devices, such as mice, modems,
and keyboards. The USB also supports hot plugging or insertion (ability to connect
a device without turning the PC of) and plug and play (You connect a device and
start using it without configuration).
USB 2x
In 2002 a newer specification USB 2.0, also called Hi-Speed USB 2.0, was
introduced. It increased the data transfer rate for PC to USB device to 480 Mbps,
which is 40 times faster than the USB 1.1 specification. With the increased
bandwidth, high throughput peripherals such as digital cameras, CD burners and
video equipment could now be connected with USB.
IEEE 1394
The IEEE 1394 is a very fast external serial bus interface standard that supports
data transfer rates of up to 400Mbps (in 1394a) and 800Mbps (in 1394b). This
makes it ideal for devices that need to transfer high levels of data in real-time, such
as video devices. It was developed by apple with the name firewire.