s5935qrc Applied Micro Circuits Corporation (AMCC), s5935qrc Datasheet - Page 111

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s5935qrc

Manufacturer Part Number
s5935qrc
Description
Pci Product
Manufacturer
Applied Micro Circuits Corporation (AMCC)
Datasheet

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S5935 – PCI Product
PCI BUS MASTERSHIP
When the S5935 requires PCI bus mastership, it pre-
sents a request via the REQ# signal. This signal is
connected to the system’s PCI bus arbiter.
Only one initiator (bus master) may control the PCI
bus at a given time. The bus arbiter determines which
initiator is given control of the bus. Control is granted
to a requesting device by the arbiter asserting that
device’s grant signal (GNT#). Each REQ#/ GNT# sig-
nal pair is unique to a given PCI agent.
After asserting REQ#, the S5935 assumes bus owner-
ship on the first PCI clock edge where its GNT# input
is asserted along with FRAME# and IRDY# deas-
serted (indicating no other device is generating PCI
bus cycles). Once ownership is established by the
S5935, it maintains ownership as long as the arbiter
keeps its GNT# asserted. If GNT# is deasserted, the
S5935 completes the current transaction.
The S5935 does this by deasserting FRAME# and
then deasserting IRDY# upon data transfer. Figure 13
shows a sequence where the S5935 is granted owner-
ship of the bus and then is preempted by another
master before the S5935 can finish its current
transaction.
Bus Mastership Latency Components
It is often necessary for system designers to predict
and guarantee that a minimum data transfer rate is
sustainable to support a particular application. In the
design of a bus mastering application, knowledge of
the maximum delay a device might encounter from the
time it requests the PCI bus to the time in which it is
actually granted the bus is desirable. This allows the
design to provide adequate data buffering. The PCI
specification refers to this bus request to grant delay
as “arbitration latency.”
Figure 59. PCI Bus Access Latency Components
AMCC Confidential and Proprietary
REQ#
Asserted
--Arbitration Latency--
GNT#
Asserted
--Bus Acquisition--
Bus Access Latency
Latency
Once a PCI initiator has been granted the bus, the PCI
specification defines the delay from the grant to the
new initiator’s assertion of FRAME# as the “bus acqui-
sition latency.” Afterwards, the delay from FRAME#
asserted to target ready (TRDY#) asserted is defined
as “target latency.” Figure 14 shows a time-line depict-
ing the components of PCI bus access latency.
There are numerous configuration variations possible
with the PCI specification. A system designer can
determine whether a bus master can support a critical,
timely transfer by establishing a specific configuration
and by defining these latency values. The S5935, as
an initiator, produces the fastest response allowable
for its bus acquisition latency (GNT# to FRAME#
asserted). The S5935 also implements the PCI Master
Latency Timer. Once granted the bus, the S5935 is
guaranteed ownership for a minimum amount of time
defined by the Master Latency Timer. The S5935, as
an initiator, cannot control the responsiveness of a
particular target nor the bus arbitration delay.
The PCI specification provides two mechanisms to
control the amount of time a master may own the bus.
One mechanism is through the master (master initi-
ated termination). The other is by the target and is
achieved through a target-initiated disconnect.
Bus Arbitration
Although the PCI specification defines the condition
that constitutes bus ownership, it does not provide
rules to be used by the system’s PCI bus arbiter in
deciding which master is to be granted the PCI bus
next. The arbitration priority scheme implemented by a
system may be fixed, rotational, or custom. The arbi-
tration latency is a function of the system, not the
S5935.
FRAME#
Asserted
--Target Latency--
Revision 1.02 – June 27, 2006
TRDY#
Asserted
Data Book
DS1527
111

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