Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
CSS 372 Oct 4th - Lecture 3 Chapter 3 – Connecting Computer Components with Buses Bus Structures Synchronous, Asynchronous Typical Bus Signals Two level, Tri-state, Wired Or Hierarchical Bus Organizations PCI Bus Example Types of Buses • Synchronous • Asynchronous (Hand Shaking) • Serial (Twisted pair, Coaxial Cable, ..) • Parallel (Ribbon Cable, Types of Buses • Dedicated – Separate data & address lines • Multiplexed – – – – Shared lines Address valid or data valid control line Advantage - fewer lines Disadvantages • More complex control • Ultimate performance Physical Considerations for Buses • Media (voltage, optic) • Signal levels – the higher, the more immune to noise • Noise Absorption – wires can pick up noise from neighboring wires • Noise Generation – wires can be antennas • Length Creates Delay ( reduces Bandwidth) Consumes Power Creates reflections – (Terminations become more critical) Logic Threshold Voltage Levels Signal Scheme Alternatives • Totempole - High or Low output level Line always at a 1 level or 0 level • Open collector, open drain, wired-or Line is nominally at a 1 level or 0 level – line is “pulled” to non-nominal level • Tristate Has third state – open • Differential Uses a pair of lines – the level is the difference of signals on the two lines. Bus Challenges • Lots of devices on one bus leads to: – Propagation delays • Long data paths mean that co-ordination of bus use can adversely affect performance – Traffic congestion • Too many devices communicating reduces bandwidth • Alternative - Systems use multiple buses Simple Computer Bus + clock(s), power(s), and ground(S) Notes: 1) Bus lines need to be properly terminated 2) Power lines are to furnish reference voltage, not power Adding an Expansion Bus Hierarchical Bus Structure Bus Arbitration • More than one module may need to control the bus e.g. CPUs and DMA controller • Only one module may control the bus at one time • Arbitration may be centralised or distributed Centralised or Distributed Arbitration • Centralised – Single hardware device controlling bus access • Bus Controller • Arbiter – May be part of CPU or separate • Distributed – More than one module may claim the bus Need control logic on all these modules Timing • Co-ordination of events on bus • Synchronous – – – – – – Events determined by clock cycles Control Bus includes clock line(s) A single 1-0 is a bus cycle (or phase) All devices can read clock line Usually sync on leading edge Usually a single cycle for an event (may be multiple clock cycle) Timing Diagram Conventions Synchronous Timing Diagram Asynchronous Timing – Read Diagram Asynchronous Timing – Write Diagram Example - PCI Bus • • • • Peripheral Component Interconnection Intel released to public domain 32 or 64 bit 50 lines Typical PCI Bus Usage Multiple PCI Bus Configuration PCI Commands • Transaction between initiator (master) and target • Master claims bus • Determine type of transaction – e.g. I/O read/write • Address phase • One or more data phases PCI Read Timing Diagram PCI Bus Arbiter PCI Bus Arbitration Timing