PCI Express
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PCI Express, officially abbreviated as PCI-E or PCIe, is a computer expansion card interface format introduced by Intel in 2004. Specifications of the format are being maintained and developed by a group of more than 900 industry-leading companies called the PCI Special Interest Group (PCI-SIG). PCI Express was designed to replace the general-purpose PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) expansion bus, the high-end PCI-X bus and the AGP graphics card interface. Unlike previous PC expansion interfaces, rather than being a bus it is structured around point-to-point full duplex serial links called lanes. In PCIe 1.1 (currently the most common version) each lane carries 250 MB/s (250 million bytes per second) in each direction. PCIe 2.0 doubles this, emerging in late 2007, and is found on newer systems such as the Mac Pro. The latest proposed PCIe 3.0 standard will increase this further (scheduled for release around 2010). Each PCIe slot carries either one, two, four, eight, sixteen or thirty-two lanes of data between the motherboard and the card. Lane counts are written with an x prefix e.g. x1 for a single-lane card and x16 for a sixteen-lane card. Thirty-two lanes of 250 MB/s gives a maximum transfer rate of 8 GB/s (250 MB/s x 32, i.e., 8 billion bytes per second) in each direction for PCIe 1.1. However the largest size in common use is x16, giving a transfer rate of 4 GB/s (250 MB/s x 16) in each direction. Putting this into perspective, a single lane has nearly twice the data rate of normal PCI, a four-lane slot has a comparable data rate to the fastest version of PCI-X 1.0, and an eight-lane slot has a data rate comparable to the fastest version of AGP. PCIe slots come in a variety of physically different sizes referred to by the maximum lane count they support, ie. x1, x2, x4, x8, x16 and x32. A PCIe card will fit into a slot of its size or bigger, but not into a smaller PCIe slot. The number of lanes actually connected to a slot may also be less than the number supported by the physical slot size. An example is a x8 slot that actually only runs at x1; these slots will allow any x1, x2, x4 or x8 card to be used, though only running at the x1 speed. This type of socket is described as a 'x8 (x1 mode)' slot, meaning it physically accepts up to x8 cards but only runs at x1 speed. The advantage gained is that a larger range of PCIe cards can still be used without requiring the motherboard hardware to support the full transfer rate - so keeping design and implementation costs down. The number of lanes is "negotiated" during power-up or explicitly during operation. By making the lane count flexible a single standard can provide for the needs of high-bandwidth cards (e.g. graphics cards, 10 Gigabit Ethernet cards and multiport Gigabit Ethernet cards) while also being economical for less demanding cards. As well as the ordinary expansion cards for desktops and servers, the PCIe electrical interface is used in a variety of other form factors including the ExpressCard laptop expansion card interface. PCIe is also often used to connect integrated peripherals on the motherboard.
OverviewImage:PCI-Express-Bus.jpg
A PCI Express x16 slot
Image:PCI-Express-Bus-1-lane.jpg
A PCI Express x1 slot
The PCIe physical layer consists of a network of serial interconnects. A hub on the mainboard acts as a crossbar switch allowing point-to-point device interconnections to be rerouted on the fly. This dynamic point-to-point connection behavior leads to parallelism since more than one pair of devices may communicate with each other at the same time. (In contrast, older PC interfaces had all devices permanently wired to the same bus; therefore, only one device could talk at a time.) This is similar to the difference between conversing over a telephone where you can only call one person at a time, and conversing in a meeting, where you can talk to a person beside you directly. The format also allows channel grouping, where multiple lanes are bonded to a single device pair in order to provide higher bandwidth. The bonded serial format was chosen over a traditional parallel format due to the phenomenon of timing skew. Timing skew is a direct result of the limitations imposed by the speed of an electrical signal traveling down a wire, which it does at a finite speed. Because different traces in an interface have different lengths, parallel signals transmitted simultaneously from a source arrive at their destinations at different times. When the interconnection clock rate rises to the point where the wavelength of a single bit is less than this difference in path length, the bits of a single word do not arrive at their destination simultaneously, making parallel recovery of the word difficult. Thus, the speed of the electrical signal, combined with the difference in length between the longest and shortest trace in a parallel interconnect, leads to a naturally imposed maximum bandwidth. Serial channel bonding avoids this issue by not requiring the bits to arrive simultaneously. PCIe is just one example of a general trend away from parallel buses to serial interconnects. For other examples, see HyperTransport, Serial ATA, USB, SAS or FireWire. The multichannel serial design also increases flexibility by allowing slow devices to be allocated fewer lanes than fast devices. PCIe is supported primarily by Intel, which started working on the standard as the Arapahoe project after pulling out of the InfiniBand system. PCIe is intended to be used as a local interconnect only. It was designed to be software compatible with the preexisting PCI standard, making the conversion of PCI cards and systems to PCI Express as simple as replacing the physical layer without requiring a change to the supporting software. The increased bandwidth on PCI Express has led to unification, as it is fast enough to replace almost all existing internal buses, including AGP and PCI. Intel envisions a single PCI Express controller talking to all external devices in the future, as opposed to the northbridge/southbridge solution used in current machines. Unlike preceding PC expansion interface standards, PCIe is a point-to-point "bus". This type of connection removes the need for "arbitrating" the bus or waiting for the bus to free. This means that while standard PCI-X (133 MHz 64 bit) and PCIe x4 have roughly the same data transfer rate, PCIe x4 will give better performance if multiple device pairs are communicating simultaneously or if communication within a single device pair is bidirectional. HistoryWhile in development, PCI Express (PCIe) was referred to as Arapahoe or 3GIO for 3rd Generation I/O. PCIe is a technology which receives further development and improvement. The current standard version in general use at time of writing is PCIe 1.1; however, PCI-SIG announced the availability of the PCI Express Base 2.0 specification on 15 January 2007. PCIe 2.0 doubles the data rate of each lane from 2.5 GT/s to 5 GT/s. PCIe 2.0 is backward compatible with PCIe 1.1 as a physical interface slot and from within software, so older cards will still be able to work in machines fitted with this new version. Further information on PCIe 2.0 is detailed below. Hardware protocol summaryThe PCIe link is built around dedicated unidirectional couples of serial (1-bit), point-to-point connections known as "lanes". This is in sharp contrast to the PCI connection, which is a bus-based system where all the devices share the same bidirectional, 32-bit (or 64-bit), parallel bus. PCI Express is a layered protocol, consisting of a Transaction Layer, a Data Link Layer, and a Physical Layer. The Data Link Layer is further divided to include a Media Access Control sublayer. The Physical Layer is further divided into a logical sublayer and an electrical sublayer. The PHY logical sublayer contains a Physical Coding Sublayer (PCS). (Terms borrowed from the IEEE 802 model of networking protocol.) Physical LayerThe PCIe physical Layer interface is known by the acronym PIPE which stands for "Physical Interface for PCI Express". At the electrical level, each lane consists of two unidirectional LVDS or PCML pairs at 2.5 Gbit/s. Transmit and receive are separate differential pairs, for a total of 4 data wires per lane.
PCI Express slots (from top to bottom: x4, x16, x1, and x16), compared to a traditional 32-bit PCI slot (bottom), as seen on DFI's LanParty nF4 Ultra-D
A connection between any two PCIe devices is known as a "link", and is built up from a collection of 1 or more lanes. All devices must minimally support single-lane (x1) link. Devices may optionally support wider links composed of 2, 4, 8, 12, 16, or 32 lanes. This allows for very good compatibility in two ways:
In both cases, PCIe will negotiate the highest mutually supported number of lanes. It is not possible to place a physically larger PCIe card (e.g. a 16x sized card) into a smaller slot, even though the two would be signal-compatible if it were possible. The width of a PCIe connector is 8.8 mm, while the height is 11.25 mm, and the length is variable. The 'minor' half of the connector is 11.65 mm in length and contains 22 pins, while the length of the 'major' half is variable. The width of the card going into the connector is 1.8mm.[1][2]
Data transmissionPCIe sends all control messages, including interrupts, over the same links used for data. The serial protocol can never be blocked, so latency is still comparable to PCI, which has dedicated interrupt lines. Data transmitted on multiple-lane links is interleaved, meaning that each successive byte is sent down successive lanes. The PCIe specification refers to this interleaving as "data striping." While requiring significant hardware complexity to synchronize (or deskew) the incoming striped data, striping can significantly increase the throughput of the link. Due to padding requirements, striping may not necessarily reduce the latency of small data packets on a link. As with all high data rate serial transmission protocols, clocking information must be embedded in the signal. At the physical level, PCI Express utilizes the very common 8b/10b encoding scheme to ensure that strings of consecutive ones or consecutive zeros are limited in length. This is necessary to prevent the receiver from losing track of where the bit edges are. In this coding scheme every 8 (uncoded) payload bits of data are replaced with 10 (encoded) bits of transmit data, consuming an extra 25% of the overall electrical bandwidth. Many other protocols (such as SONET) use a different form of encoding known as "scrambling" to embed clock information into data streams. The PCI Express specification also defines a scrambling algorithm, but it is used to reduce EMI (Electromagnetic interference) by preventing repeating data patterns in the transmitted data stream. Signaling rateThe First-generation PCIe transfers data at a 2.5 GT/s (gigatransfer per second) signaling rate per lane. The PCI Special Interest Group (the industry organization that maintains and develops the various PCI standards) recently announced PCIe version 2.0 which increases the signaling rate to 5 GT/s per lane. Data Link LayerThe Data Link Layer implements the sequencing of the Transaction Layer Packets (TLPs) that are generated by the Transaction Layer, data protection via a 32-bit cyclic redundancy check code (CRC, known in this context as LCRC) and an acknowledgment protocol (ACK and NAK signaling). TLPs that pass an LCRC check and a sequence number check result in an acknowledgment, or ACK, while those that fail these checks result in a negative acknowledgment, or NAK. TLPs that result in a NAK, or timeouts that occur while waiting for an ACK, result in the TLPs being replayed from a special buffer in the transmit data path of the Data Link Layer. This guarantees delivery of TLPs in spite of electrical noise, barring any malfunction of the device or transmission medium. ACK and NAK signals are communicated via a low-level packet known as a data link layer packet, or DLLP. DLLPs are also used to communicate flow control information between the transaction layers of two connected devices, as well as some power management functions. Transaction LayerPCI Express implements split transactions (transactions with request and response separated by time), allowing the link to carry other traffic while the target device gathers data for the response. PCI Express utilizes credit-based flow control. In this scheme, a device advertises an initial amount of credit for each of the receive buffers in its Transaction Layer. The device at the opposite end of the link, when sending transactions to this device, will count the number of credits consumed by each TLP from its account. The sending device may only transmit a TLP when doing so does not result in its consumed credit count exceeding its credit limit. When the receiving device finishes processing the TLP from its buffer, it signals a return of credits to the sending device, which then increases the credit limit by the restored amount. The credit counters are modular counters, and the comparison of consumed credits to credit limit requires modular arithmetic. The advantage of this scheme (compared to other methods such as wait states or handshake-based transfer protocols) is that the latency of credit return does not affect performance, provided that the credit limit is not encountered. This assumption is generally met if each device is designed with adequate buffer sizes. First-generation PCIe is often quoted to support a data rate of 250 MB/s in each direction, per (x1) lane. This figure is a calculation from the physical signaling rate (2.5 Gbaud) divided by the encoding overhead (10 bits per byte.) This means a sixteen lane (x16) PCIe card would then be theoretically capable of 250 MB/s * 16 = 4 GB/s in each direction. While this is correct in terms of data bytes, more meaningful calculations will be based on the usable data payload rate, which depends on the profile of the traffic, which is a function of the high-level (software) application and intermediate protocol levels. Like other high data rate serial interconnect systems, PCIe has a protocol and processing overhead due to the additional transfer robustness (CRC and Acknowledgments). Long continuous unidirectional transfers (such as those typical in high-performance storage controllers) can approach >95% of PCIe's raw (lane) data rate. These transfers also benefit the most from increased number of lanes (x2, x4, etc.) But in more typical applications (such as a USB or Ethernet controller), the traffic profile is characterized as short data packets with frequent enforced acknowledgments.[citation needed] This type of traffic reduces the efficiency of the link, due to overhead from packet parsing and forced interrupts (either in the device's host interface or the PC's CPU.) This loss of efficiency is not particular to PCIe. Form factorsImage:RS232 PCI-E.jpg
A PCI-E x1 card with a RS-232 port
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