ENCYCLOPEDIA 4U .com



Encyclopedia Home Page

Google
  Web Encyclopedia4u.com

 

Peripheral Component Interconnect

Peripheral Component Interconnect (in practice almost always shortened to PCI) is a computer bus standard for attaching peripheral devices to a computer motherboard (a so-called local bus). These devices can be integrated circuits fitted on the motherboard itself (called planar devices in the PCI specification) or expansion cards that fit in sockets. It is common in PCs, where it has displaced ISA as the standard bus, but is also used in other computer types. Unlike ISA buses, the PCI bus enables dynamic configuration of a peripheral device. At boot up time the PCI card's BIOS and the system BIOS interact and negotiate the resources that are requested by the PCI card. This enables allocation of IRQs and port addresses through a dynamic process unlike the ISA bus where IRQs had to be configured manually using external jumpers. Apart from this, the PCI bus provides a detailed description of all the connected PCI devices through the PCI Configuration Space.

The PCI specification covers physical size of the bus (including wire spacing), electrical characteristics, bus timing and protocols. The PCI Special Interest Group (PCISIG) sells copies of the specification at http://www.pcisig.com/.

Table of contents
1 Basic PCI Bus Specifications
2 Basic PCI Variants
3 Other PCI Variants

Basic PCI Bus Specifications

  • 33MHz clock with synchronous transfers
  • peak transfer rate of 133MB per second
  • 32-bit bus width
  • 32-bit address space (4G bytes)
  • 3.3 volt or 5 volt signalling
  • reflected-wave switching

Basic PCI Variants

Other PCI Variants

  • PCI-Express (or 3GIO), a serial bus using PCI signalling and programming concepts


See also:




Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities.



Copyright © 2005 Par Web Solutions All Rights reserved.
| Privacy

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Peripheral Component Interconnect".