| PCI Express Bus Tutorial | |||||||||||||||||||||
| By Cássio Lima on September 6, 2005 | Page 3 of 4 | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Operation Modes The PCI Express bus has been developed to substitute PCI and AGP buses. It’s compatible in terms of software to the PCI bus, which means old drivers and operating systems don’t need to go through changes in order to support the PCI Express bus. The PCI Express bus is a serial bus that works in full-duplex mode. Data is transmitted in this bus through two pairs of wires called lane, by using the codification system 8b/10b, the same system used in Fast Ethernet (100BaseT, 100 Mbps) networks. Each lane allows a maximum transfer rate of 250 MB/s in each direction, almost twice the rate of the PCI bus. The PCI Express bus can be built by combining several lanes in order to achieve higher performance. We can find PCI Express systems with 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 and 32 lanes. For example, the transfer rate of a PCI Express system with 8 lanes (x8) is 2 GB/s (250 * 8).
On the chart below we compared the transfer rates of the PCI, AGP and PCI Express busses.
The PCI Express bus is hot plug, i.e., it’s possible to install and remove PCI Express boards even when the PC is on. | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Originally at http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/190/3 | Pages (4): 1 2 3 4 » | ||||||||||||||||||||
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