PI7C8154 2-Port PCI-to-PCI Bridge REVISION 1.02 2380 Bering Drive, San Jose, CA 95131 Telephone: 1-877-PERICOM, (1-877-737-4266) Fax: 408-435-1100 Email: [email protected] Internet: http://www.pericom.com PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION LIFE SUPPORT POLICY Pericom Semiconductor Corporation’s products are not authorized for use as critical components in life support devices or systems unless a specific written agreement pertaining to such intended use is executed between the manufacturer and an officer of PSC. 1) Life support devices or system are devices or systems which: a) Are intended for surgical implant into the body or b) Support or sustain life and whose failure to perform, when properly used in accordance with instructions for use provided in the labeling, can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user. 2) A critical component is any component of a life support device or system whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to cause the failure of the life support device or system, or to affect its safety or effectiveness. Pericom Semiconductor Corporation reserves the right to make changes to its products or specifications at any time, without notice, in order to improve design or performance and to supply the best possible product. Pericom Semiconductor does not assume any responsibility for use of any circuitry described other than the circuitry embodied in a Pericom Semiconductor product. The Company makes no representations that circuitry described herein is free from patent infringement or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent, patent rights or other rights, of Pericom Semiconductor Corporation. All other trademarks are of their respective companies. Page 2 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION REVISION HISTORY Date 12/5/02 2/20/03 Revision Number 1.00 1.01 05/16/03 1.02 Description First Release of Data Sheet Correct pin designation errors/omissions: page 17: S_PAR64 should be N21 page 17: S_REQ64_L should be B19 page 17: S_ACK64_L should be C18 page 19: pin A14 should be SM66EN page 20: pin D11 should be PMEENA_L Added PMEENA_L pin description on page 18. Added GPIO register descriptions Bit [31:8] offset 64h Added Signal Types for configuration register (section 12.1) Page 3 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION This page intentionally left blank. Page 4 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 SIGNAL DEFINITIONS ................................................................................................................... 11 1.1 SIGNAL TYPES .......................................................................................................................... 11 1.2 SIGNALS ..................................................................................................................................... 11 1.2.1 PRIMARY BUS INTERFACE SIGNALS .......................................................................... 11 1.2.2 PRIMARY BUS INTERFACE SIGNALS – 64-BIT EXTENSION .................................. 13 1.2.3 SECONDARY BUS INTERFACE SIGNALS .................................................................... 14 1.2.4 SECONDARY BUS INTERFACE SIGNALS – 64-BIT EXTENSION ............................ 16 1.2.5 CLOCK SIGNALS ............................................................................................................... 17 1.2.6 MISCELLANEOUS SIGNALS........................................................................................... 18 1.2.7 GENERAL PURPOSE I/O INTERFACE SIGNALS ........................................................ 18 1.2.8 JTAG BOUNDARY SCAN SIGNALS ................................................................................ 18 1.2.9 POWER AND GROUND..................................................................................................... 19 1.3 PIN LIST ...................................................................................................................................... 19 2 SIGNAL DEFINITIONS ................................................................................................................... 22 2.1 TYPES OF TRANSACTIONS ..................................................................................................... 22 2.2 SINGLE ADDRESS PHASE........................................................................................................ 23 2.3 DUAL ADDRESS PHASE........................................................................................................... 23 2.4 DEVICE SELECT (DEVSEL_L) GENERATION....................................................................... 24 2.5 DATA PHASE.............................................................................................................................. 24 2.6 WRITE TRANSACTIONS .......................................................................................................... 24 2.6.1 MEMORY WRITE TRANSACTIONS................................................................................ 24 2.6.2 MEMORY WRITE AND INVALIDATE ............................................................................ 25 2.6.3 DELAYED WRITE TRANSACTIONS............................................................................... 26 2.6.4 WRITE TRANSACTION ADDRESS BOUNDARIES....................................................... 27 2.6.5 BUFFERING MULTIPLE WRITE TRANSACTIONS..................................................... 27 2.6.6 FAST BACK-TO-BACK WRITE TRANSACTIONS ......................................................... 27 2.7 READ TRANSACTIONS ............................................................................................................ 28 2.7.1 PREFETCHABLE READ TRANSACTIONS.................................................................... 28 2.7.2 NON-PREFETCHABLE READ TRANSACTIONS.......................................................... 28 2.7.3 READ PREFECTCH ADDRESS BOUNDARIES............................................................. 28 2.7.4 DELAYED READ REQUESTS .......................................................................................... 29 2.7.5 DELAYED READ COMPLETION ON TARGET BUS .................................................... 30 2.7.6 DELAYED READ COMPLETION ON INITIATOR BUS................................................ 30 2.7.7 FAST BACK-TO-BACK READ TRANSACTION ............................................................. 31 2.8 CONFIGURATION TRANSACTIONS ...................................................................................... 31 2.8.1 TYPE 0 ACCESS TO PI7C8154 ......................................................................................... 32 2.8.2 TYPE 1 TO TYPE 0 CONVERSION .................................................................................. 32 2.8.3 TYPE 1 TO TYPE 1 FORWARDING................................................................................. 34 2.8.4 SPECIAL CYCLES ............................................................................................................. 34 2.9 64-BIT OPERATION ................................................................................................................... 35 2.9.1 64-BIT AND 32-BIT TRANSACTIONS INITIATED BY PI7C8154................................ 35 2.9.2 64-BIT TRANSACTIONS – ADDRESS PHASE ............................................................... 36 2.9.3 64-BIT TRANSACTIONS – DATA PHASE....................................................................... 36 2.9.4 64-BIT TRANSACTIONS – RECEIVED BY PI7C8154 ................................................... 37 2.9.5 64-BIT TRANSACTIONS – SUPPORT DURING RESET ............................................... 37 2.10 TRANSACTION FLOW THROUGH.......................................................................................... 38 2.11 TRANSACTION TERMINATION.............................................................................................. 38 2.11.1 MASTER TERMINATION INITIATED BY PI7C8154.................................................... 39 2.11.2 MASTER ABORT RECEIVED BY PI7C8154................................................................... 39 Page 5 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 2.11.3 2.11.4 3 TARGET TERMINATION RECEIVED BY PI7C8154 .................................................... 40 TARGET TERMINATION INITIATED BY PI7C8154 .................................................... 42 ADDRESS DECODING..................................................................................................................... 44 3.1 ADDRESS RANGES ................................................................................................................... 44 3.2 I/O ADDRESS DECODING ........................................................................................................ 45 3.2.1 I/O BASE AND LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTER................................................................ 45 3.2.2 ISA MODE........................................................................................................................... 46 3.3 MEMORY ADDRESS DECODING............................................................................................ 46 3.3.1 MEMORY-MAPPED I/O BASE AND LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTERS ......................... 47 3.3.2 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY BASE AND LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTERS ................. 48 3.3.3 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY 64-BIT ADDRESSING REGISTERS.............................. 49 3.4 VGA SUPPORT ........................................................................................................................... 50 3.4.1 VGA MODE......................................................................................................................... 50 3.4.2 VGA SNOOP MODE........................................................................................................... 50 4 TRANSACTION ORDERING.......................................................................................................... 51 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 5 TRANSACTIONS GOVERNED BY ORDERING RULES ........................................................ 51 GENERAL ORDERING GUIDELINES...................................................................................... 52 ORDERING RULES .................................................................................................................... 52 DATA SYNCHRONIZATION .................................................................................................... 54 ERROR HANDLING......................................................................................................................... 54 5.1 ADDRESS PARITY ERRORS .................................................................................................... 54 5.2 DATA PARITY ERRORS............................................................................................................ 55 5.2.1 CONFIGURATION WRITE TRANSACTIONS TO CONFIGURATION SPACE.......... 55 5.2.2 READ TRANSACTIONS .................................................................................................... 56 5.2.3 DELAYED WRITE TRANSACTIONS............................................................................... 56 5.2.4 POSTED WRITE TRANSACTIONS.................................................................................. 59 5.3 DATA PARITY ERROR REPORTING SUMMARY ................................................................. 60 5.4 SYSTEM ERROR (SERR_L) REPORTING ............................................................................... 64 6 EXCLUSIVE ACCESS ...................................................................................................................... 65 6.1 CONCURRENT LOCKS ............................................................................................................. 65 6.2 ACQUIRING EXCLUSIVE ACCESS ACROSS PI7C8154........................................................ 65 6.2.1 LOCKED TRANSACTIONS IN DOWNSTREAM DIRECTION ..................................... 65 6.2.2 LOCKED TRANSACTION IN UPSTREAM DIRECTION .............................................. 67 6.3 ENDING EXCLUSIVE ACCESS ................................................................................................ 67 7 PCI BUS ARBITRATION................................................................................................................. 68 7.1 PRIMARY PCI BUS ARBITRATION......................................................................................... 68 7.2 SECONDARY PCI BUS ARBITRATION .................................................................................. 68 7.2.1 SECONDARY BUS ARBITRATION USING THE INTERNAL ARBITER.................... 68 7.2.2 PREEMPTION .................................................................................................................... 70 7.2.3 SECONDARY BUS ARBITRATION USING AN EXTERNAL ARBITER...................... 70 7.2.4 BUS PARKING.................................................................................................................... 70 8 GENERAL PURPOSE I/O INTERFACE........................................................................................ 71 8.1 8.2 8.3 9 GPIO CONTROL REGISTERS ................................................................................................... 71 SECONDARY CLOCK CONTROL............................................................................................ 72 LIVE INSERTION ....................................................................................................................... 73 CLOCKS ............................................................................................................................................. 74 9.1 PRIMARY AND SECONDARY CLOCK INPUTS .................................................................... 74 Page 6 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 9.2 SECONDARY CLOCK OUTPUTS............................................................................................. 74 10 PCI POWER MANAGEMENT .................................................................................................... 74 11 RESET............................................................................................................................................. 75 11.1 11.2 11.3 12 PRIMARY INTERFACE RESET ................................................................................................ 75 SECONDARY INTERFACE RESET .......................................................................................... 76 CHIP RESET ................................................................................................................................ 76 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS................................................................................................ 76 12.1 CONFIGURATION REGISTER.................................................................................................. 77 12.1.1 SIGNAL TYPES .................................................................................................................. 77 12.1.2 VENDOR ID REGISTER – OFFSET 00h......................................................................... 78 12.1.3 DEVICE ID REGISTER – OFFSET 00h .......................................................................... 78 12.1.4 COMMAND REGISTER – OFFSET 04h.......................................................................... 78 12.1.5 STATUS REGISTER – OFFSET 04h ................................................................................ 79 12.1.6 REVISION ID REGISTER – OFFSET 08h ...................................................................... 80 12.1.7 CLASS CODE REGISTER – OFFSET 08h....................................................................... 80 12.1.8 CACHE LINE SIZE REGISTER – OFFSET 0Ch ............................................................ 80 12.1.9 PRIMARY LATENCY TIMER REGISTER – OFFSET 0Ch ........................................... 80 12.1.10 HEADER TYPE REGISTER – OFFSET 0Ch............................................................... 80 12.1.11 PRIMARY BUS NUMBER REGISTSER – OFFSET 18h............................................ 81 12.1.12 SECONDARY BUS NUMBER REGISTER – OFFSET 18h ........................................ 81 12.1.13 SUBORDINATE BUS NUMBER REGISTER – OFFSET 18h.................................... 81 12.1.14 SECONDARY LATENCY TIMER REGISTER – OFFSET 18h .................................. 81 12.1.15 I/O BASE ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 1Ch ...................................................... 81 12.1.16 I/O LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 1Ch ..................................................... 81 12.1.17 SECONDARY STATUS REGISTER – OFFSET 1Ch................................................... 82 12.1.18 MEMORY BASE ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 20h ........................................... 82 12.1.19 MEMORY LIMIT REGISTER – OFFSET 20h............................................................. 83 12.1.20 PEFETCHABLE MEMORY BASE ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 24h ............. 83 12.1.21 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 24h ......... 83 12.1.22 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY BASE ADDRESS UPPER 32-BITS REGISTER – OFFSET 28h ....................................................................................................................................... 84 12.1.23 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY LIMIT ADDRESS UPPER 32-BITS REGISTER – OFFSET 2Ch....................................................................................................................................... 84 12.1.24 I/O BASE ADDRESS UPPER 16-BITS REGISTER – OFFSET 30h .......................... 84 12.1.25 I/O LIMIT ADDRESS UPPER 16-BITS REGISTER – OFFSET 30h......................... 84 12.1.26 ECP POINTER REGISTER – OFFSET 34h................................................................. 84 12.1.27 INTERRUPT LINE REGISTER – OFFSET 3Ch ......................................................... 85 12.1.28 INTERRUPT PIN REGISTER – OFFSET 3Ch............................................................ 85 12.1.29 BRIDGE CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 3Ch ....................................................... 85 12.1.30 DIAGNOSTIC / CHIP CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 40h.................................. 87 12.1.31 ARBITER CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 40h...................................................... 88 12.1.32 EXTENDED CHIP CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 48h....................................... 88 12.1.33 SECONDARY BUS ARBITER PREEMPTION CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 4Ch .......................................................................................................................................... 89 12.1.34 P_SERR_L EVENT DISABLE REGISTER – OFFSET 64h........................................ 89 12.1.35 GPIO DATA REGISTER – OFFSET 64h...................................................................... 90 12.1.36 GPIO CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 64h ............................................................. 90 12.1.37 SECONDARY CLOCK CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 68h ................................. 91 12.1.38 P_SERR_L STATUS REGISTER – OFFSET 68h ........................................................ 92 12.1.39 PORT OPTION REGISTER – OFFSET 74h ................................................................ 93 12.1.40 RETRY COUNTER REGISTER – OFFSET 78h .......................................................... 94 Page 7 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.41 12.1.42 12.1.43 12.1.44 12.1.45 12.1.46 12.1.47 12.1.48 13 PRIMARY MASTER TIMEOUT COUNTER – OFFSET 80h ..................................... 94 SECONDARY MASTER TIMEOUT COUNTER – OFFSET 82h ............................... 94 CAPABILITY ID REGISTER – OFFSET DCh............................................................. 94 NEXT ITEM POINTER REGISTER – OFFSET DDh ................................................. 94 POWER MANAGEMENT CAPABILITIES REGISTER – OFFSET DEh ................. 94 POWER MANAGEMENT DATA REGISTER – OFFSET E0h................................... 95 PPB SUPPORT EXTENSIONS REGISTER – OFFSET E2h...................................... 95 DATA REGISTER – OFFSET E3h................................................................................ 95 BRIDGE BEHAVIOR.................................................................................................................... 95 13.1 BRIDGE ACTIONS FOR VARIOUS CYCLE TYPES................................................................ 96 13.2 ABNORMAL TERMINATION (INITIATED BY BRIDGE MASTER)..................................... 96 13.2.1 MASTER ABORT................................................................................................................ 96 13.2.2 PARITY AND ERROR REPORTING ................................................................................ 96 13.2.3 REPORTING PARITY ERRORS ....................................................................................... 97 13.2.4 SECONDARY IDSEL MAPPING ...................................................................................... 97 14 IEEE 1149.1 COMPATIBLE JTAG CONTROLLER................................................................ 97 14.1 BOUNDARY SCAN ARCHITECTURE ..................................................................................... 97 14.1.1 TAP PINS ............................................................................................................................ 98 14.1.2 INSTRUCTION REGISTER .............................................................................................. 98 14.2 BOUNDARY SCAN INSTRUCTION SET ................................................................................. 99 14.3 TAP TEST DATA REGISTERS .................................................................................................. 99 14.4 BYPASS REGISTER ................................................................................................................. 100 14.5 BOUNDARY-SCAN REGISTER.............................................................................................. 100 14.6 TAP CONTROLLER ................................................................................................................. 100 15 ELECTRICAL AND TIMING SPECIFICATIONS................................................................. 104 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 15.8 15.9 16 MAXIMUM RATINGS ............................................................................................................. 104 DC SPECIFICATIONS .............................................................................................................. 105 AC SPECIFICATIONS .............................................................................................................. 105 66MHZ PCI SIGNALING TIMING........................................................................................... 106 33MHZ PCI SIGNALING TIMING........................................................................................... 106 RESET TIMING......................................................................................................................... 106 GPIO TIMING (66MHZ AND 33MHZ) .................................................................................... 106 JTAG TIMING ........................................................................................................................... 107 POWER CONSUMPTION......................................................................................................... 107 PACKAGE INFORMATION...................................................................................................... 108 16.1 16.2 304-BALL PBGA PACKAGE DIAGRAM................................................................................ 108 ORDERING INFORMATION................................................................................................... 108 LIST OF TABLES Table 1-1 Table 2-1 Table 2-2 Table 2-3 Table 2-4 Table 2-5 Table 2-6 Table 2-7 PIN LIST – 304-BALL PBGA...................................................................................................... 19 PCI TRANSACTIONS ................................................................................................................. 22 WRITE TRANSACTION FORWARDING ................................................................................... 24 WRITE TRANSACTION DISCONNECT ADDRESS BOUNDARIES.......................................... 27 READ PREFETCH ADDRESS BOUNDARIES .......................................................................... 29 READ TRANSACTION PREFETCHING.................................................................................... 29 DEVICE NUMBER TO IDSEL S_AD PIN MAPPING ............................................................... 33 DELAYED WRITE TARGET TERMINATION RESPONSE....................................................... 41 Page 8 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Table 2-8 RESPONSE TO POSTED WRITE TARGET TERMINATION .................................................... 41 Table 2-9 RESPONSE TO DELAYED READ TARGET TERMINATION ................................................... 42 Table 4-1 SUMMARY OF TRANSACTION ORDERING ........................................................................... 53 Table 5-1 SETTING THE PRIMARY INTERFACE DETECTED PARITY ERROR BIT (bit 31 of Offset 04h) ...................................................................................................................................................................... 60 Table 5-2 SETTING THE SECONDARY INTERFACE DETECTED PARITY ERROR BIT ........................ 61 Table 5-3 SETTING THE PRIMARY INTERFACE DATA PARITY DETECTED BIT (bit 24 of Offset 04h) ...................................................................................................................................................................... 61 Table 5-4 SETTING THE SECONDARY INTERFACE DATA PARITY DETECTED BIT .......................... 62 Table 5-5 ASSERTION OF P_PERR_L....................................................................................................... 63 Table 5-6 ASSERTION OF S_PERR_L ....................................................................................................... 63 Table 5-7 ASSERTION OF P_SERR_L FOR DATA PARITY ERRORS...................................................... 64 Table 8-1 GPIO OPERATION .................................................................................................................... 72 Table 8-2 GPIO SERIAL DATA FORMAT.................................................................................................. 72 Table 10-1 POWER MANAGEMENT TRANSITIONS ................................................................................ 75 Table 12-1 CONFIGURATION SPACE MAP ............................................................................................. 77 Table 14-1 TAP PINS .................................................................................................................................. 99 Table 14-2 JTAG BOUNDARY REGISTER ORDER ................................................................................ 101 LIST OF FIGURES Figure 7-1 SECONDARY ARBITER EXAMPLE ......................................................................................... 69 Figure 14-1 TEST ACCESS PORT BLOCK DIAGRAM.............................................................................. 98 Figure 15-1 PCI SIGNAL TIMING MEASUREMENT CONDITIONS ..................................................... 105 Figure 16-1 304-BALL PBGA PACKAGE OUTLINE............................................................................... 108 Page 9 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION This page intentionally left blank. Page 10 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 1 SIGNAL DEFINITIONS 1.1 SIGNAL TYPES Signal Type I O P TS STS OD 1.2 Description Input Only Output Only Power Tri-State bi-directional Sustained Tri-State. Active LOW signal must be pulled HIGH for 1 cycle when deasserting. Open Drain SIGNALS Note: Signal names that end with “_L” are active LOW. 1.2.1 PRIMARY BUS INTERFACE SIGNALS Name P_AD[31:0] Pin # U2, U4, U1, V2, V1, V3, W2, W1, W4, Y3, AA1, AA3, Y4, AB3, AA4, Y5, AB8, AA8, AC9, AB9, AA9, AC10, AA10, Y11, AB11, AA11, AA12, AB12, AB13, AA13, Y13, AA14 Type TS P_CBE[3:0] Y2, AB4, AA7, AC11 TS P_PAR AB7 TS Description Primary Address / Data: Multiplexed address and data bus. Address is indicated by P_FRAME_L assertion. Write data is stable and valid when P_IRDY_L is asserted and read data is stable and valid when P_TRDY_L is asserted. Data is transferred on rising clock edges when both P_IRDY_L and P_TRDY_L are asserted. During bus idle, PI7C8154 drives P_AD[31:0] to a valid logic level when P_GNT_L is asserted. Primary Command/Byte Enables: Multiplexed command field and byte enable field. During address phase, the initiator drives the transaction type on these pins. After that, the initiator drives the byte enables during data phases. During bus idle, PI7C8154 drives P_CBE[3:0] to a valid logic level when P_GNT_L is asserted. Primary Parity. P_PAR is even parity of P_AD[31:0] and P_CBE[3:0] (i.e. an even number of 1’s). P_PAR is valid and stable one cycle after the address phase (indicated by assertion of P_FRAME_L) for address parity. For write data phases, P_PAR is valid one clock after P_IRDY_L is asserted. For read data phase, P_PAR is valid one clock after P_TRDY_L is asserted. Signal P_PAR is tristated one cycle after the P_AD lines are tristated. During bus idle, PI7C8154 drives P_PAR to a valid logic level when P_GNT_L is asserted. Page 11 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Name P_FRAME_L Pin # AA5 Type STS P_IRDY_L AC5 STS P_TRDY_L AB5 STS P_DEVSEL_L AA6 STS P_STOP_L AC6 STS P_LOCK_L AB6 I P_IDSEL Y1 I P_PERR_L AC7 STS P_SERR_L Y7 OD Description Primary FRAME (Active LOW). Driven by the initiator of a transaction to indicate the beginning and duration of an access. The deassertion of P_FRAME_L indicates the final data phase requested by the initiator. Before being tri-stated, it is driven to a de-asserted state for one cycle. Primary IRDY (Active LOW). Driven by the initiator of a transaction to indicate its ability to complete current data phase on the primary side. Once asserted in a data phase, it is not de-asserted until the end of the data phase. Before tri-stated, it is driven to a de-asserted state for one cycle. Primary TRDY (Active LOW). Driven by the target of a transaction to indicate its ability to complete current data phase on the primary side. Once asserted in a data phase, it is not de-asserted until the end of the data phase. Before tri-stated, it is driven to a de-asserted state for one cycle. Primary Device Select (Active LOW). Asserted by the target indicating that the device is accepting the transaction. As a master, PI7C8154 waits for the assertion of this signal within 5 cycles of P_FRAME_L assertion; otherwise, terminate with master abort. Before tri-stated, it is driven to a de-asserted state for one cycle. Primary STOP (Active LOW). Asserted by the target indicating that the target is requesting the initiator to stop the current transaction. Before tri-stated, it is driven to a de-asserted state for one cycle. Primary LOCK (Active LOW). Asserted by an initiator, one clock cycle after the first address phase of a transaction, attempting to perform an operation that may take more than one PCI transaction to complete. Primary ID Select. Used as a chip select line for Type 0 configuration access to PI7C8154 configuration space. Primary Parity Error (Active LOW). Asserted when a data parity error is detected for data received on the primary interface. Before being tri-stated, it is driven to a deasserted state for one cycle. Primary System Error (Active LOW). Can be driven LOW by any device to indicate a system error condition. PI7C8154 drives this pin on: ! Address parity error ! Posted write data parity error on target bus ! Secondary S_SERR_L asserted ! Master abort during posted write transaction ! Target abort during posted write transaction ! Posted write transaction discarded ! Delayed write request discarded ! Delayed read request discarded ! Delayed transaction master timeout This signal requires an external pull-up resistor for proper operation. Page 12 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 1.2.2 Name P_REQ_L Pin # U3 Type TS P_GNT_L R2 I P_RESET_L R3 I P_M66EN AB10 I Description Primary Request (Active LOW): This is asserted by PI7C8154 to indicate that it wants to start a transaction on the primary bus. PI7C8154 de-asserts this pin for at least 2 PCI clock cycles before asserting it again. Primary Grant (Active LOW): When asserted, PI7C8154 can access the primary bus. During idle and P_GNT_L asserted, PI7C8154 will drive P_AD, P_CBE, and P_PAR to valid logic levels. Primary RESET (Active LOW): When P_RESET_L is active, all PCI signals should be asynchronously tri-stated. Primary Interface 66MHz Operation. This input is used to specify if PI7C8154 is capable of running at 66MHz. For 66MHz operation on the Primary bus, this signal should be pulled “HIGH”. For 33MHz operation on the Primary bus, this signal should be pulled “LOW”. In this condition, S_M66EN will be driven “LOW”, forcing the secondary bus to run at 33MHz also. PRIMARY BUS INTERFACE SIGNALS – 64-BIT EXTENSION Name P_AD[63:32] Pin # AA16, AB16, AA17, AB17, Y17, AB18, AC18, AA18, AC19, AA19, AB20, Y19, AA20, AB21, AC21, AA21, Y20, AA23, Y21, W20, Y23, W21, W23, W22, V21, V23, V22, U23, U20, U22, T23, T22 P_CBE[7:4] AA15, AB15, Y15, AC15 Type TS TS Description Primary Upper 32-bit Address / Data: Multiplexed address and data bus providing an additional 32 bits to the primary. When a dual address command is used and P_REQ64_L is asserted, the initiator drives the upper 32 bits of the 64-bit address. Otherwise, these bits are undefined and driven to valid logic levels. During the data phase of a transaction, the initiator drives the upper 32 bits of the 64-bit write data, or the target drives the upper 32 bits of the 64-bit read data, when P_REQ64_L and P_ACK64_L are both asserted. Otherwise, these bits are pulled up to a valid logic level through external resistors. Primary Upper 32-bit Command/Byte Enables: Multiplexed command field and byte enable field. During address phase, when the dual address command is used and P_REQ64_L is asserted, the initiator drives the transaction type on these pins. Otherwise, these bits are undefined, and the initiator drives a valid logic level onto the pins. For read and write transactions, the initiator drives these bits for the P_AD[63:32] data bits when P_REQ64_L and P_ACK64_L are both asserted. When not driven, these bits are pulled up to a valid logic level through external resistors. Page 13 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 1.2.3 Name P_PAR64 Pin # T21 Type TS P_REQ64_L AC14 STS P_ACK64_L AB14 STS Description Primary Upper 32-bit Parity: P_PAR64 carries the even parity of P_AD[63:32] and P_CBE[7:4] for both address and data phases. P_PAR64 is driven by the initiator and is valid 1 cycle after the first address phase when a dual address command is used and P_REQ64_L is asserted. P_PAR64 is valid 1 clock cycle after the second address phase of a dual address transaction when P_REQ64_L is asserted. P_PAR64 is valid 1 cycle after valid data is driven when both P_REQ64_L and P_ACK64_L are asserted for that data phase. P_PAR64 is driven by the device driving read or write data 1 cycle after the P_AD lines are driven. P_PAR64 is tri-stated 1 cycle after the P_AD lines are tri-stated. Devices receive data sample P_PAR64 as an input to check for possible parity errors during 64-bit transactions. When not driven, P_PAR64 is pulled up to a valid logic level through external resistors. Primary 64-bit Transfer Request: P_REQ64_L is asserted by the initiator to indicate that the initiator is requesting a 64-bit data transfer. P_REQ64_L has the same timing as P_FRAME_L. When P_REQ64_L is asserted LOW during reset, a 64-bit data path is supported. When P_REQ64_L is HIGH during reset, PI7C8154 drives P_AD[63:32], P_CBE[7:4], and P_PAR64 to valid logic levels. When deasserting, P_REQ64_L is driven to a deasserted state for 1 cycle and then sustained by an external pull-up resistor. Primary 64-bit Transfer Acknowledge: P_ACK64_L is asserted by the target only when P_REQ64_L is asserted by the initiator to indicate the target’s ability to transfer data using 64 bits. P_ACK64_L has the same timing as P_DEVSEL_L. When deasserting, P_ACK64_L is driven to a deasserted state for 1 cycle and then is sustained by an external pull-up resistor. SECONDARY BUS INTERFACE SIGNALS Name S_AD[31:0] Pin # C3, A3, B3, C4, A4, B4, C5, B5, A6, A7, D7, B7, A8, B8, C8, A9, C13, B13, A13, D13, C14, B14, C15, B15, C16, B16, C17, B17, D17, A17, B18, A18 Type TS Description Secondary Address/Data: Multiplexed address and data bus. Address is indicated by S_FRAME_L assertion. Write data is stable and valid when S_IRDY_L is asserted and read data is stable and valid when S_IRDY_L is asserted. Data is transferred on rising clock edges when both S_IRDY_L and S_TRDY_L are asserted. During bus idle, PI7C8154 drives S_AD[31:0] to a valid logic level when S_GNT_L is asserted respectively. Page 14 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Name S_CBE[3:0] Pin # C6, D9, C12, A15 Type TS S_PAR B12 TS S_FRAME_L B9 STS S_IRDY_L C9 STS S_TRDY_L A10 STS S_DEVSEL_L B10 STS S_STOP_L C10 STS S_LOCK_L A11 STS S_PERR_L C11 STS Description Secondary Command/Byte Enables: Multiplexed command field and byte enable field. During address phase, the initiator drives the transaction type on these pins. The initiator then drives the byte enables during data phases. During bus idle, PI7C8154 drives S_CBE[3:0] to a valid logic level when the internal grant is asserted. Secondary Parity: S_PAR is an even parity of S_AD[31:0] and S_CBE[3:0] (i.e. an even number of 1’s). S_PAR is valid and stable one cycle after the address phase (indicated by assertion of S_FRAME_L) for address parity. For write data phases, S_PAR is valid one clock after S_IRDY_L is asserted. For read data phase, S_PAR is valid one clock after S_TRDY_L is asserted. Signal S_PAR is tristated one cycle after the S_AD lines are tristated. During bus idle, PI7C8154 drives S_PAR to a valid logic level when the internal grant is asserted. Secondary FRAME (Active LOW): Driven by the initiator of a transaction to indicate the beginning and duration of an access. The deassertion of S_FRAME_L indicates the final data phase requested by the initiator. Before being tri-stated, it is driven to a de-asserted state for one cycle. Secondary IRDY (Active LOW): Driven by the initiator of a transaction to indicate its ability to complete current data phase on the secondary side. Once asserted in a data phase, it is not de-asserted until the end of the data phase. Before tri-stated, it is driven to a deasserted state for one cycle. Secondary TRDY (Active LOW): Driven by the target of a transaction to indicate its ability to complete current data phase on the secondary side. Once asserted in a data phase, it is not de-asserted until the end of the data phase. Before tri-stated, it is driven to a deasserted state for one cycle. Secondary Device Select (Active LOW): Asserted by the target indicating that the device is accepting the transaction. As a master, PI7C8154 waits for the assertion of this signal within 5 cycles of S_FRAME_L assertion; otherwise, terminate with master abort. Before tri-stated, it is driven to a deasserted state for one cycle. Secondary STOP (Active LOW): Asserted by the target indicating that the target is requesting the initiator to stop the current transaction. Before tri-stated, it is driven to a de-asserted state for one cycle. Secondary LOCK (Active LOW): Asserted by an initiator, one clock cycle after the first address phase of a transaction, when it is propagating a locked transaction downstream. PI7C8154 does not propagate locked transactions upstream. Secondary Parity Error (Active LOW): Asserted when a data parity error is detected for data received on the secondary interface. Before being tri-stated, it is driven to a deasserted state for one cycle. Page 15 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 1.2.4 Name S_SERR_L Pin # B11 Type I S_REQ_L[8:0] E1, E3, D2, D1, E4, D3, C2, C1, D4 I S_GNT_L[8:0] H1, G3, G2, G4, G1, F2, F1, F3, E2 TS S_RESET_L H2 O S_M66EN A14 I/OD S_CFN_L K1 I Description Secondary System Error (Active LOW): Can be driven LOW by any device to indicate a system error condition. Secondary Request (Active LOW): This is asserted by an external device to indicate that it wants to start a transaction on the secondary bus. The input is externally pulled up through a resistor to VDD. Secondary Grant (Active LOW): PI7C8154 asserts these pins to allow external masters to access the secondary bus. PI7C8154 de-asserts these pins for at least 2 PCI clock cycles before asserting it again. During idle and S_GNT_L deasserted, PI7C8154 will drive S_AD, S_CBE, and S_PAR. Secondary RESET (Active LOW): Asserted when any of the following conditions are met: 1. Signal P_RESET_L is asserted. 2. Secondary reset bit in bridge control register in configuration space is set. 3. The chip reset bit in the chip control register in configuration space is set. When asserted, all control signals are tri-stated and zeroes are driven on S_AD, S_CBE, S_PAR, and S_PAR64. Secondary Interface 66MHz Operation: This input is used to specify if PI7C8154 is capable of running at 66MHz on the secondary side. When HIGH, the Secondary bus may run at 66MHz. When LOW, the Secondary bus may only run at 33MHz. If P_M66EN is pulled LOW, the S_M66EN is driven LOW. Secondary Bus Central Function Control Pin: When tied LOW, it enables the internal arbiter. When tied HIGH, an external arbiter must be used. S_REQ_L[0] is reconfigured to be the secondary bus grant input, and S_GNT_L[0] is reconfigured to be the secondary bus request output. SECONDARY BUS INTERFACE SIGNALS – 64-BIT EXTENSION Name S_AD[63:32] Pin # C20, A21, D20, C21, C23, C22, D21, E20, D22, E21, E23, F21, F23, F22, G20, G22, G21, H23, H22, H21, J23, J20, J22, K23, K22, K21, L23, L21, L22, M22, M23, M21 S_CBE[7:4] A19, C19, A20, D19 Type TS TS Description Secondary Upper 32-bit Address/Data: Multiplexed address and data bus. Address is indicated by S_FRAME_L assertion. Write data is stable and valid when S_IRDY_L is asserted and read data is stable and valid when S_IRDY_L is asserted. Data is transferred on rising clock edges when both S_IRDY_L and S_TRDY_L are asserted. During bus idle, PI7C8154 drives S_AD to a valid logic level when S_GNT_L is asserted respectively. Secondary Upper 32-bit Command/Byte Enables: Multiplexed command field and byte enable field. During address phase, the initiator drives the transaction type on these pins. The initiator then drives the byte enables during data phases. During bus idle, PI7C8154 drives S_CBE[7:0] to a valid logic level when the internal grant is asserted. Page 16 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 1.2.5 Name S_PAR64 Pin # N21 Type TS S_REQ64_L B19 STS S_ACK64_L C18 STS Description Secondary Upper 32-bit Parity: S_PAR64 carries the even parity of S_AD[63:32] and S_CBE[7:4] for both address and data phases. S_PAR64 is driven by the initiator and is valid 1 cycle after the first address phase when a dual address command is used and S_REQ64_L is asserted. S_PAR64 is valid 1 clock cycle after the second address phase of a dual address transaction when S_REQ64_L is asserted. S_PAR64 is valid 1 cycle after valid data is driven when both S_REQ64_L and S_ACK64_L are asserted for that data phase. S_PAR64 is driven by the device driving read or write data 1 cycle after the S_AD lines are driven. S_PAR64 is tri-stated 1 cycle after the S_AD lines are tri-stated. Devices receive data sample S_PAR64 as an input to check for possible parity errors during 64-bit transactions. When not driven, S_PAR64 is pulled up to a valid logic level through external resistors. Secondary 64-bit Transfer Request: S_REQ64_L is asserted by the initiator to indicate that the initiator is requesting a 64-bit data transfer. S_REQ64_L has the same timing as S_FRAME_L. When S_REQ64_L is asserted LOW during reset, a 64-bit data path is supported. When S_REQ64_L is HIGH during reset, PI7C8154 drives S_AD[63:32], S_CBE[7:4], and S_PAR64 to valid logic levels. When deasserting, S_REQ64_L is driven to a deasserted state for 1 cycle and then sustained by an external pull-up resistor. Secondary 64-bit Transfer Acknowledge: S_ACK64_L is asserted by the target only when S_REQ64_L is asserted by the initiator to indicate the target’s ability to transfer data using 64 bits. S_ACK64_L has the same timing as S_DEVSEL_L. When deasserting, S_ACK64_L is driven to a deasserted state for 1 cycle and then is sustained by an external pull-up resistor. CLOCK SIGNALS Name P_CLK Pin # T3 Type I S_CLKIN J4 I S_CLKOUT[9:0] P1, P2, P3, N1, N3, M2, M1, M3, L3, L2 O Description Primary Clock Input: Provides timing for all transactions on the primary interface. Secondary Clock Input: Provides timing for all transactions on the secondary interface. Secondary Clock Output: Provides secondary clocks phase synchronous with the P_CLK. When these clocks are used, one of the clock outputs must be fed back to S_CLKIN. Unused outputs may be disabled by: 1. Writing the secondary clock disable bits in the configuration space 2. Using the serial disable mask using the GPIO pins and MSK_IN 3. Terminating them electrically. Page 17 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 1.2.6 1.2.7 MISCELLANEOUS SIGNALS Name MSK_IN Pin # R21 Type I P_VIO R20 I S_VIO N22 I BPCCE R4 I CONFIG66 R22 I PMEENA_L D11 I GENERAL PURPOSE I/O INTERFACE SIGNALS Name GPIO[3:0] 1.2.8 Description Secondary Clock Disable Serial Input: This pin is used by PI7C8154 to disable secondary clock outputs. The serial stream is received by MSK_IN, starting when P_RESET is detected deasserted and S_RESET_L is detected as being asserted. The serial data is used for selectively disabling secondary clock outputs and is shifted into the secondary clock control configuration register. This pin can be tied LOW to enable all secondary clock outputs or tied HIGH to drive all the secondary clock outputs HIGH. Primary I/O Voltage: This pin is used to determine either 3.3V or 5V signaling on the primary bus. P_VIO must be tied to 3.3V only when all devices on the primary bus use 3.3V signaling. Otherwise, P_VIO is tied to 5V. Secondary I/O Voltage: This pin is used to determine either 3.3V or 5V signaling on the secondary bus. S_VIO must be tied to 3.3V only when all devices on the secondary bus use 3.3V signaling. Otherwise, S_VIO is tied to 5V. Bus/Power Clock Control Management Pin: When this pin is tied HIGH and the PI7C8154 is placed in the D2 or D3HOT power state, it enables the PI7C8154 to place the secondary bus in the B2 power state. The secondary clocks are disabled and driven to 0. When this pin is tied LOW, there is no effect on the secondary bus clocks when the PI7C8154 enters the D2 or D3HOT power state. 66MHz Configuration: This pin indicates if the PI7C8154 is capable of running at 66MHz operation. Tie HIGH to set bit [21] of offset 04h of the status register. Power Management Enable Support: This pin sets bits [31:27] offset DEh of the Power Management Capabilities Register. When tied LOW, bits [31:27] offset DEh are set to 11111 to indicate that the secondary devices are capable of asserting PME_L. When this pin is tied HIGH, bits [31:27] offset DEh are set to 00000 to indicate that PI7C8154 does not support the PME_L pin. Pin # K2, K3, L4, L1 Type TS Description General Purpose I/O Data Pins: The 4 general-purpose signals are programmable as either input-only or bi-directional signals by writing the GPIO output enable control register in the configuration space. JTAG BOUNDARY SCAN SIGNALS Name Pin # Type Description Page 18 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 1.2.9 Name TCK Pin # N20 TMS P21 I TDO P22 O TDI P23 I TRST_L N23 I Description Test Clock. Used to clock state information and data into and out of the PI7C8154 during boundary scan. Test Mode Select. Used to control the state of the Test Access Port controller. Test Data Output. Used as the serial output for the test instructions and data from the test logic. Test Data Input. Serial input for the JTAG instructions and test data. Test Reset. Active LOW signal to reset the Test Access Port (TAP) controller into an initialized state. POWER AND GROUND Name VDD VSS 1.3 Type I Pin # A2, A22, B1, B6, B20, B23, D5, D6, D10, D11, D14, D15, D18, E22, H4, H20, J1, J3, J21, M4, M20, N4, R1, R23, T1, T4, T20, W3, Y6, Y10, Y14, Y18, Y22, AB1, AB19, AB23, AC2, AC3, AC8, AC12, AC16, AC22 A1, A5, A12, A16, A23, B2, B21, B22, C7, D8, D12, D16, D23, F4, F20, G23, H3, J2, K4, K20, L20, N2, P4, P20, T2, U21, V4, V20, Y8, Y9, Y12, Y16, AA2, AA22, AB2, AB22, AC1, AC4, AC13, AC17, AC20, AC23 Type P P Description Power: +3.3V Digital power. Ground: Digital ground. PIN LIST Table 1-1 PIN LIST – 304-BALL PBGA BALL LOCATION A1 A3 A5 A7 A9 A11 A13 A15 A17 A19 A21 A23 B1 B3 B5 B7 B9 PIN NAME TYPE VSS S_AD[30] VSS S_AD[22] S_AD[16] S_LOCK_L S_AD13] S_CBE[0] S_AD[2] S_CBE[7] S_AD[62] VSS VDD S_AD[29] S_AD[24] S_AD[20] S_FRAME_L P TS P TS TS STS TS TS TS TS TS P P TS TS TS STS BALL LOCATION A2 A4 A6 A8 A10 A12 A14 A16 A18 A20 A22 B2 B4 B6 B8 B10 PIN NAME TYPE VDD S_AD[27] S_AD[23] S_AD[19] S_TRDY_L VSS SM66EN VSS S_AD[0] S_CBE[5] VDD VSS S_AD[26] VDD S_AD[18] S_DEVSEL_L P TS TS TS STS P I/OD P TS TS P P TS P TS STS Page 19 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION BALL LOCATION B11 B13 B15 B17 B19 B21 B23 C1 C3 C5 C7 C9 C11 C13 C15 C17 C19 C21 C23 D1 D3 D5 D7 D9 D11 D13 D15 D17 D19 D21 D23 E1 E3 E21 E23 F1 F3 F21 F23 G1 G3 G21 G23 H1 H3 H21 H23 J1 J3 J21 J23 K1 K3 K21 K23 L1 PIN NAME TYPE S_SERR_L S_AD[14] S_AD[8] S_AD[4] S_REQ64_L VSS VDD S_REQ_L[1] S_AD[31] S_AD[25] VSS S_IRDY_L S_PERR_L S_AD[15] S_AD[9] S_AD[5] S_CBE[6] S_AD[60] S_AD[59] S_REQ_L[5] S_REQ_[3] VDD S_AD[21] S_CBE[2] PMEENA_L S_AD[12] VDD S_AD[3] S_CBE[4] S_AD[57] VSS S_REQ_L[8] S_REQ_L[7] S_AD[54] S_AD[53] S_GNT_L[2] S_GNT_L[1] S_AD[52] S_AD[51] S_GNT_L[4] S_GNT_L[7] S_AD[47] VSS S_GNT_L[8] VSS S_AD[44] S_AD[46] VDD VDD VDD S_AD[43] S_CFN_L GPIO[2] S_AD[38] S_AD[40] GPIO[0] I TS TS TS STS P P I TS TS P STS STS TS TS TS TS TS TS I I P TS TS I TS P TS TS TS P I I TS TS TS TS TS TS TS TS TS P TS P TS TS P P P TS I TS TS TS TS BALL LOCATION B12 B14 B16 B18 B20 B22 C2 C4 C6 C8 C10 C12 C14 C16 C18 C20 C22 D2 D4 D6 D8 D10 D12 D14 D16 D18 D20 D22 E2 E4 E20 E22 F2 F4 F20 F22 G2 G4 G20 G22 H2 H4 H20 H22 J2 J4 J20 J22 K2 K4 K20 K22 L2 PIN NAME TYPE S_PAR S_AD[10] S_AD[6] S_AD[1] VDD VSS S_REQ_L[2] S_AD[28] S_CBE[3] S_AD[17] S_STOP_L S_CBE[1] S_AD[11] S_AD[7] S_ACK64_L S_AD[63] S_AD[58] S_REQ_L[6] S_REQ_L[0] VDD VSS VDD VSS VDD VSS VDD S_AD[61] S_AD[55] S_GNT_L[0] S_REQ_L[4] S_AD[56] VDD S_GNT_L[3] VSS VSS S_AD[50] S_GNT_L[6] S_GNT_L[5] S_AD[49] S_AD[48] S_RESET_L VDD VDD S_AD[45] VSS S_CLKIN S_AD[42] S_AD[41] GPIO[3] VSS VSS S_AD[39] S_CLKOUT[0] TS TS TS TS P P I TS TS TS STS TS TS TS STS TS TS I I P P P P P P P TS TS TS I TS P TS P P TS TS TS TS TS O P P TS P I TS TS TS P P TS O Page 20 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION BALL LOCATION L3 L21 L23 M1 M3 M21 M23 N1 N3 N21 N23 P1 P3 P21 P23 R1 R3 R21 R23 T1 T3 T21 T23 U1 U3 U21 U23 V1 V3 V21 V23 W1 W3 W21 W23 Y1 Y3 Y5 Y7 Y9 Y11 Y13 Y15 Y17 Y19 Y21 Y23 AA1 AA3 AA5 1 2 PIN NAME TYPE S_CLKOUT[1] S_AD[36] S_AD[37] S_CLKOUT[3] S_CLKOUT[2] S_AD[32] S_AD[33] S_CLKOUT[6] S_CLKOUT[5] S_PAR64 TRST_L S_CLKOUT[9] S_CLKOUT[7] TMS TDI VDD P_RESET_L MSK_IN VDD VDD P_CLK P_PAR64 P_AD[33] P_AD[29] P_REQ_L VSS P_AD[36] P_AD[27] P_AD[26] P_AD[39] P_AD[38] P_AD[24] VDD P_AD[42] P_AD[41] P_IDSEL P_AD[22] P_AD[16] P_SERR_L VSS P_AD[8] P_AD[1] P_CBE[5] P_AD[59] P_AD[52] P_AD[45] P_AD[43] P_AD[21] P_AD[20] P_FRAME_L O TS TS O O TS TS O O TS I O O I I P I I P P I TS TS TS TS P TS TS TS TS TS TS P TS TS I TS TS OD P TS TS TS TS TS TS TS TS TS STS BALL LOCATION L4 L20 L22 M2 M4 M20 M22 N2 N4 N20 N22 P2 P4 P20 P22 R2 R4 R20 R22 T2 T4 T20 T22 U2 U4 U20 U22 V2 V4 V20 V22 W2 W4 W20 W22 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 Y12 Y14 Y16 Y18 Y20 Y22 AA2 AA4 AA6 PIN NAME TYPE GPIO[1] VSS S_AD[35] S_CLKOUT[4] VDD VDD S_AD[34] VSS VDD TCK S_VIO S_CLKOUT[8] VSS VSS TDO P_GNT_L BPCCE P_VIO CONFIG66 VSS VDD VDD P_AD[32] P_AD[31] P_AD[30] P_AD[35] P_AD[34] P_AD[28] VSS Reserved1 P_AD[37] P_AD[25] P_AD[23] P_AD[44] P_AD[40] P_CBE[3] P_AD[19] VDD VSS VDD VSS VDD VSS Reserved2 P_AD[47] VDD VSS P_AD[17] P_DEVSEL_L TS P TS O P P TS P P I I O P P O I I I I P P P TS TS TS TS TS TS P P TS TS TS TS TS TS TS P P P P P P P TS P P TS STS Connected to GROUND Connected to VDD Page 21 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION BALL LOCATION AA7 AA9 AA11 AA13 AA15 AA17 AA19 AA21 AA23 AB1 AB3 AB5 AB7 AB9 AB11 AB13 AB15 AB17 AB19 AB21 AB23 AC1 AC3 AC5 AC7 AC9 AC11 AC13 AC15 AC17 AC19 AC21 AC23 2 PIN NAME TYPE P_CBE[1] P_AD[11] P_AD[6] P_AD[2] P_CBE[7] P_AD[61] P_AD[54] P_AD[48] P_AD[46] VDD P_AD[18] P_TRDY_L P_PAR P_AD[12] P_AD[7] P_AD[3] P_CBE[6] P_AD[60] VDD P_AD[50] VDD VSS VDD P_IRDY_L P_PERR_L P_AD[13] P_CBE[0] VSS P_CBE[4] VSS P_AD[55] P_AD[49] VSS TS TS TS TS TS TS TS TS TS P TS STS TS TS TS TS TS TS P TS P P P STS STS TS TS P TS P TS TS P BALL LOCATION AA8 AA10 AA12 AA14 AA16 AA18 AA20 AA22 AB2 AB4 AB6 AB8 AB10 AB12 AB14 AB16 AB18 AB20 AB22 AC2 AC4 AC6 AC8 AC10 AC12 AC14 AC16 AC18 AC20 AC22 - PIN NAME TYPE P_AD[14] P_AD[9] P_AD[5] P_AD[0] P_AD[63] P_AD[56] P_AD[51] VSS VSS P_CBE[2] P_LOCK_L P_AD[15] P_M66EN P_AD[4] P_ACK64_L P_AD[62] P_AD[58] P_AD[53] VSS VDD VSS P_STOP_L VDD P_AD[10] VDD P_REQ64_L VDD P_AD[57] VSS VDD - TS TS TS TS TS TS TS P P TS I TS I TS STS TS TS TS P P P STS P TS P STS P TS P P - SIGNAL DEFINITIONS This Chapter offers information about PCI transactions, transaction forwarding across PI7C8154, and transaction termination. The PI7C8154 has two 128-byte buffers for read data buffering of upstream and downstream transactions. Also, PI7C8154 has two 128-byte buffers for write data buffering of upstream and downstream transactions. 2.1 TYPES OF TRANSACTIONS This section provides a summary of PCI transactions performed by PI7C8154. Table 2-1 lists the command code and name of each PCI transaction. The Master and Target columns indicate support for each transaction when PI7C8154 initiates transactions as a master, on the primary and secondary buses, and when PI7C8154 responds to transactions as a target, on the primary and secondary buses. Table 2-1 PCI TRANSACTIONS Types of Transactions 0000 Interrupt Acknowledge Initiates as Master Primary N Secondary N Responds as Target Primary Secondary N N Page 22 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Types of Transactions 0001 Special Cycle 0010 I/O Read 0011 I/O Write 0100 Reserved 0101 Reserved 0110 Memory Read 0111 Memory Write 1000 Reserved 1001 Reserved 1010 Configuration Read 1011 Configuration Write 1100 Memory Read Multiple 1101 Dual Address Cycle 1110 Memory Read Line 1111 Memory Write and Invalidate Initiates as Master Y Y Y N N Y Y N N N Y (Type 1 only) Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N N Y Y N N Y Y Y Y Y Y Responds as Target N N Y Y Y Y N N N N Y Y Y Y N N N N Y N Y Y (Type 1 only) Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y As indicated in Table 2-1, the following PCI commands are not supported by PI7C8154: ! PI7C8154 never initiates a PCI transaction with a reserved command code and, as a target, PI7C8154 ignores reserved command codes. ! PI7C8142 does not generate interrupt acknowledge transactions. PI7C8154 ignores interrupt acknowledge transactions as a target. ! PI7C8154 does not respond to special cycle transactions. PI7C8154 cannot guarantee delivery of a special cycle transaction to downstream buses because of the broadcast nature of the special cycle command and the inability to control the transaction as a target. To generate special cycle transactions on other PCI buses, either upstream or downstream, Type 1 configuration write must be used. ! PI7C8154 neither generates Type 0 configuration transactions on the primary PCI bus nor responds to Type 0 configuration transactions on the secondary PCI bus. 2.2 SINGLE ADDRESS PHASE A 32-bit address uses a single address phase. This address is driven on P_AD[31:0], and the bus command is driven on P_CBE[3:0]. PI7C8154 supports the linear increment address mode only, which is indicated when the lowest two address bits are equal to zero. If either of the lowest two address bits is nonzero, PI7C8154 automatically disconnects the transaction after the first data transfer. 2.3 DUAL ADDRESS PHASE A 64-bit address uses two address phases. The first address phase is denoted by the asserting edge of FRAME_L. The second address phase always follows on the next clock cycle. For a 32-bit interface, the first address phase contains dual address command code on the CBE[3:0] lines, and the low 32 address bits on the AD[31:0] lines. The second address phase consists of the specific memory transaction command code on the CBE[3:0] lines, and the high 32 address bits on the AD[31:0] lines. In this way, 64-bit addressing can be supported on 32-bit PCI buses. Page 23 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION The PCI-to-PCI Bridge Architecture Specification supports the use of dual address transactions in the prefetchable memory range only. See Section 3.3.3 for a discussion of prefetchable address space. The PI7C8154 supports dual address transactions in both the upstream and the downstream direction. The PI7C8154 supports a programmable 64-bit address range in prefetchable memory for downstream forwarding of dual address transactions. Dual address transactions falling outside the prefetchable address range are forwarded upstream, but not downstream. Prefetching and posting are performed in a manner consistent with the guidelines given in this document for each type of memory transaction in prefetchable memory space. 2.4 DEVICE SELECT (DEVSEL_L) GENERATION PI7C8154 always performs positive address decoding (medium decode) when accepting transactions on either the primary or secondary buses. PI7C8154 never does subtractive decode. 2.5 DATA PHASE The address phase of a PCI transaction is followed by one or more data phases. A data phase is completed when IRDY_L and either TRDY_L or STOP_L are asserted. A transfer of data occurs only when both IRDY_L and TRDY_L are asserted during the same PCI clock cycle. The last data phase of a transaction is indicated when FRAME_L is de-asserted and both TRDY_L and IRDY_L are asserted, or when IRDY_L and STOP_L are asserted. See Section 2.11for further discussion of transaction termination. Depending on the command type, PI7C8154 can support multiple data phase PCI transactions. For detailed descriptions of how PI7C8154 imposes disconnect boundaries, see Section 2.6.4for write address boundaries and Section 2.7.3 read address boundaries. 2.6 WRITE TRANSACTIONS Write transactions are treated as either posted write or delayed write transactions. Table 2-2 shows the method of forwarding used for each type of write operation. Table 2-2 WRITE TRANSACTION FORWARDING Type of Transaction Memory Write Memory Write and Invalidate Memory Write to VGA memory I/O Write Type 1 Configuration Write 2.6.1 Type of Forwarding Posted (except VGA memory) Posted Delayed Delayed Delayed MEMORY WRITE TRANSACTIONS Posted write forwarding is used for “Memory Write” and “Memory Write and Invalidate” transactions. Page 24 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION When PI7C8154 determines that a memory write transaction is to be forwarded across the bridge, PI7C8154 asserts DEVSEL_L with medium decode timing and TRDY_L in the next cycle, provided that enough buffer space is available in the posted memory write queue for the address and at least one DWORD of data. Under this condition, PI7C8154 accepts write data without obtaining access to the target bus. The PI7C8154 can accept one DWORD of write data every PCI clock cycle. That is, no target wait state is inserted. The write data is stored in an internal posted write buffers and is subsequently delivered to the target. The PI7C8154 continues to accept write data until one of the following events occurs: ! The initiator terminates the transaction by de-asserting FRAME_L and IRDY_L. ! An internal write address boundary is reached, such as a cache line boundary or an aligned 4KB boundary, depending on the transaction type. ! The posted write data buffer fills up. When one of the last two events occurs, the PI7C8154 returns a target disconnect to the requesting initiator on this data phase to terminate the transaction. Once the posted write data moves to the head of the posted data queue, PI7C8154 asserts its request on the target bus. This can occur while PI7C8154 is still receiving data on the initiator bus. When the grant for the target bus is received and the target bus is detected in the idle condition, PI7C8154 asserts FRAME_L and drives the stored write address out on the target bus. On the following cycle, PI7C8154 drives the first DWORD of write data and continues to transfer write data until all write data corresponding to that transaction is delivered, or until a target termination is received. As long as write data exists in the queue, PI7C8154 can drive one DWORD of write data in each PCI clock cycle; that is, no master wait states are inserted. If write data is flowing through PI7C8154 and the initiator stalls, PI7C8154 will signal the last data phase for the current transaction at the target bus if the queue empties. PI7C8154 will restart the follow-on transactions if the queue has new data. PI7C8154 ends the transaction on the target bus when one of the following conditions is met: ! All posted write data has been delivered to the target. ! The target returns a target disconnect or target retry (PI7C8154 starts another transaction to deliver the rest of the write data). ! The target returns a target abort (PI7C8154 discards remaining write data). ! The master latency timer expires, and PI7C8154 no longer has the target bus grant (PI7C8154 starts another transaction to deliver remaining write data). Section 2.11.3.2 provides detailed information about how PI7C8154 responds to target termination during posted write transactions. 2.6.2 MEMORY WRITE AND INVALIDATE Posted write forwarding is used for Memory Write and Invalidate transactions. Page 25 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION The PI7C8154 disconnects Memory Write and Invalidate commands at aligned cache line boundaries. The cache line size value in the cache line size register gives the number of DWORD in a cache line. If the value in the cache line size register does meet the memory write and invalidate conditions, the PI7C8154 returns a target disconnect to the initiator on a cache line boundary. 2.6.3 DELAYED WRITE TRANSACTIONS Delayed write forwarding is used for I/O write transactions and Type 1 configuration write transactions. A delayed write transaction guarantees that the actual target response is returned back to the initiator without holding the initiating bus in wait states. A delayed write transaction is limited to a single DWORD data transfer. When a write transaction is first detected on the initiator bus, and PI7C8154 forwards it as a delayed transaction, PI7C8154 claims the access by asserting DEVSEL_L and returns a target retry to the initiator. During the address phase, PI7C8154 samples the bus command, address, and address parity one cycle later. After IRDY_L is asserted, PI7C8154 also samples the first data DWORD, byte enable bits, and data parity. This information is placed into the delayed transaction queue. The transaction is queued only if no other existing delayed transactions have the same address and command, and if the delayed transaction queue is not full. When the delayed write transaction moves to the head of the delayed transaction queue and all ordering constraints with posted data are satisfied. The PI7C8154 initiates the transaction on the target bus. PI7C8154 transfers the write data to the target. If PI7C8154 receives a target retry in response to the write transaction on the target bus, it continues to repeat the write transaction until the data transfer is completed, or until an error condition is encountered. If PI7C8154 is unable to deliver write data after 224 (default) or 232 (maximum) attempts, PI7C8154 will report a system error. PI7C8154 also asserts P_SERR_L if the primary SERR_L enable bit is set in the command register. See Section 5.4for information on the assertion of P_SERR_L. When the initiator repeats the same write transaction (same command, address, byte enable bits, and data), and the completed delayed transaction is at the head of the queue, the PI7C8154 claims the access by asserting DEVSEL_L and returns TRDY_L to the initiator, to indicate that the write data was transferred. If the initiator requests multiple DWORD, PI7C8154 also asserts STOP_L in conjunction with TRDY_L to signal a target disconnect. Note that only those bytes of write data with valid byte enable bits are compared. If any of the byte enable bits are turned off (driven HIGH), the corresponding byte of write data is not compared. If the initiator repeats the write transaction before the data has been transferred to the target, PI7C8154 returns a target retry to the initiator. PI7C8154 continues to return a target retry to the initiator until write data is delivered to the target, or until an error condition is encountered. When the write transaction is repeated, PI7C8154 does not make a new entry into the delayed transaction queue. Section 2.11.3.1 provides detailed information about how PI7C8154 responds to target termination during delayed write transactions. Page 26 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION PI7C8154 implements a discard timer that starts counting when the delayed write completion is at the head of the delayed transaction completion queue. The initial value of this timer can be set to the retry counter register offset 78h. If the initiator does not repeat the delayed write transaction before the discard timer expires, PI7C8154 discards the delayed write completion from the delayed transaction completion queue. PI7C8154 also conditionally asserts P_SERR_L (see Section 5.4). 2.6.4 WRITE TRANSACTION ADDRESS BOUNDARIES PI7C8154 imposes internal address boundaries when accepting write data. The aligned address boundaries are used to prevent PI7C8154 from continuing a transaction over a device address boundary and to provide an upper limit on maximum latency. PI7C78154 returns a target disconnect to the initiator when it reaches the aligned address boundaries under conditions shown in Table 2-3. Table 2-3 WRITE TRANSACTION DISCONNECT ADDRESS BOUNDARIES Type of Transaction Delayed Write Posted Memory Write Posted Memory Write Posted Memory Write and Invalidate Posted Memory Write and Invalidate Condition All Memory write disconnect control bit = 0(1) Memory write disconnect control bit = 1(1) Cache line size ≠ 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 Aligned Address Boundary Disconnects after one data transfer 4KB aligned address boundary Cache line size = 1, 2, 4, 8 Cache line boundary if posted memory write data FIFO does not have enough space for the next cache line 16-DWORD aligned address boundary Disconnects at cache line boundary 4KB aligned address boundary Posted Memory Write and Cache line size = 16 Invalidate Note 1. Memory write disconnect control bit is bit 1 of the chip control register at offset 40h in the configuration space. 2.6.5 BUFFERING MULTIPLE WRITE TRANSACTIONS PI7C8154 continues to accept posted memory write transactions as long as space for at least one DWORD of data in the posted write data buffer remains. If the posted write data buffer fills before the initiator terminates the write transaction, PI7C8154 returns a target disconnect to the initiator. Delayed write transactions are accepted as long as at least one open entry in the delayed transaction queue exists. Therefore, several posted and delayed write transactions can exist in data buffers at the same time. See Chapter 4 for information about how multiple posted and delayed write transactions are ordered. 2.6.6 FAST BACK-TO-BACK WRITE TRANSACTIONS PI7C8154 is capable of decoding and forwarding fast back-to-back write transactions. When PI7C8154 cannot accept the second transaction because of buffer space limitations, it returns a target retry to the initiator. The fast back-to-back enable bit must be set in the command Page 27 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION register for upstream write transactions, and in the bridge control register for downstream write transactions. 2.7 READ TRANSACTIONS Delayed read forwarding is used for all read transactions crossing PI7C8154. Delayed read transactions are treated as either prefetchable or non-prefetchable. Table 2-5 shows the read behavior, prefetchable or non-prefetchable, for each type of read operation. 2.7.1 PREFETCHABLE READ TRANSACTIONS A prefetchable read transaction is a read transaction where PI7C8154 performs speculative DWORD reads, transferring data from the target before it is requested from the initiator. This behavior allows a prefetchable read transaction to consist of multiple data transfers. However, byte enable bits cannot be forwarded for all data phases as is done for the single data phase of the non-prefetchable read transaction. For prefetchable read transactions, PI7C8154 forces all byte enable bits to be on for all data phases. Prefetchable behavior is used for memory read line and memory read multiple transactions, as well as for memory read transactions that fall into prefetchable memory space. The amount of data that is prefetched depends on the type of transaction. The amount of prefetching may also be affected by the amount of free buffer space available in PI7C8154, and by any read address boundaries encountered. Prefetching should not be used for those read transactions that have side effects in the target device, that is, control and status registers, FIFO’s, and so on. The target device’s base address register or registers indicate if a memory address region is prefetchable. 2.7.2 NON-PREFETCHABLE READ TRANSACTIONS A non-prefetchable read transaction is a read transaction where PI7C8154 requests one and only one DWORD from the target and disconnects the initiator after delivery of the first DWORD of read data. Unlike prefetchable read transactions, PI7C8154 forwards the read byte enable information for the data phase. Non-prefetchable behavior is used for I/O and configuration read transactions, as well as for memory read transactions that fall into non-prefetchable memory space. If extra read transactions could have side effects, for example, when accessing a FIFO, use non-prefetchable read transactions to those locations. Accordingly, if it is important to retain the value of the byte enable bits during the data phase, use non-prefetchable read transactions. If these locations are mapped in memory space, use the memory read command and map the target into non-prefetchable (memory-mapped I/O) memory space to use nonprefetching behavior. 2.7.3 READ PREFECTCH ADDRESS BOUNDARIES Page 28 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION PI7C8154 imposes internal read address boundaries on read prefetched data. When a read transaction reaches one of these aligned address boundaries, the PI7C8154 stops pre-fetched data, unless the target signals a target disconnect before the read prefetched boundary is reached. When PI7C8154 finishes transferring this read data to the initiator, it returns a target disconnect with the last data transfer, unless the initiator completes the transaction before all pre-fetched read data is delivered. Any leftover pre-fetched data is discarded. Prefetchable read transactions in flow-through mode pre-fetch to the nearest aligned 4KB address boundary, or until the initiator de-asserts FRAME_L. Section 2.7.6 describes flowthrough mode during read operations. Table 2-4 READ PREFETCH ADDRESS BOUNDARIESshows the read pre-fetch address boundaries for read transactions during non-flow-through mode. Table 2-4 READ PREFETCH ADDRESS BOUNDARIES Type of Transaction Address Space Configuration Read I/O Read Memory Read Memory Read Non-Prefetchable Prefetchable Cache Line (CLS) * * * CLS = 0 or 16 Memory Read Memory Read Line Prefetchable - CLS = 1, 2, 4, 8 CLS = 0 or 16 Memory Read Line CLS = 1, 2, 4, 8 Memory Read Multiple CLS = 0 or 16 Memory Read Multiple CLS = 1, 2, 4, 8 - does not matter if it is prefetchable or non-prefetchable * don’t care Size Prefetch Aligned Address Boundary One DWORD (no prefetch) One DWORD (no prefetch) One DWORD (no prefetch) 16-DWORD aligned address boundary Cache line address boundary 16-DWORD aligned address boundary Cache line boundary Queue full Second cache line boundary Table 2-5 READ TRANSACTION PREFETCHING Type of Transaction I/O Read Configuration Read Read Behavior Prefetching never allowed Prefetching never allowed Downstream: Prefetching used if address is prefetchable space Memory Read Upstream: Prefetching used or programmable Memory Read Line Prefetching always used Memory Read Multiple Prefetching always used See Section 3.3 for detailed information about prefetchable and non-prefetchable address spaces. 2.7.4 DELAYED READ REQUESTS PI7C8154 treats all read transactions as delayed read transactions, which means that the read request from the initiator is posted into a delayed transaction queue. Read data from the target is placed in the read data queue directed toward the initiator bus interface and is transferred to the initiator when the initiator repeats the read transaction. PI7C8154 accepts a delayed read request, by sampling the read address, read bus command, and address parity. When IRDY_L is asserted, PI7C8154 then samples the byte enable bits for the first data phase. This information is entered into the delayed transaction queue. PI7C8154 terminates the transaction by signaling a target retry to the initiator. Upon reception of the target retry, the initiator is required to continue to repeat the same read Page 29 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION transaction until at least one data transfer is completed, or until a target response (target abort or master abort) other than a target retry is received. 2.7.5 DELAYED READ COMPLETION ON TARGET BUS When delayed read request reaches the head of the delayed transaction queue, PI7C8154 arbitrates for the target bus and initiates the read transaction only if all previously queued posted write transactions have been delivered. PI7C8154 uses the exact read address and read command captured from the initiator during the initial delayed read request to initiate the read transaction. If the read transaction is a non-prefetchable read, PI7C8154 drives the captured byte enable bits during the next cycle. If the transaction is a prefetchable read transaction, it drives all byte enable bits to zero for all data phases. If PI7C8154 receives a target retry in response to the read transaction on the target bus, it continues to repeat the read transaction until at least one data transfer is completed, or until an error condition is encountered. If the transaction is terminated via normal master termination or target disconnect after at least one data transfer has been completed, PI7C8154 does not initiate any further attempts to read more data. If PI7C8154 is unable to obtain read data from the target after 224 (default) or 232 (maximum) attempts, PI7C8154 will report system error. The number of attempts is programmable. PI7C8154 also asserts P_SERR_L if the primary SERR_L enable bit is set in the command register. See Section 5.4 for information on the assertion of P_SERR_L. Once PI7C8154 receives DEVSEL_L and TRDY_L from the target, it transfers the data read to the opposite direction read data queue, pointing toward the opposite inter-face, before terminating the transaction. For example, read data in response to a downstream read transaction initiated on the primary bus is placed in the upstream read data queue. The PI7C8154 can accept one DWORD of read data each PCI clock cycle; that is, no master wait states are inserted. The number of DWORD’s transferred during a delayed read transaction matches the prefetch address boundary given in Table 2-4 READ PREFETCH ADDRESS BOUNDARIES (assuming no disconnect is received from the target). 2.7.6 DELAYED READ COMPLETION ON INITIATOR BUS When the transaction has been completed on the target bus, and the delayed read data is at the head of the read data queue, and all ordering constraints with posted write transactions have been satisfied, the PI7C8154 transfers the data to the initiator when the initiator repeats the transaction. For memory read transactions, PI7C8154 aliases memory read line and memory read multiple bus commands to memory read when matching the bus command of the transaction to the bus command in the delayed transaction queue if bit[3] of offset 74h is set to ‘1’. PI7C8154 returns a target disconnect along with the transfer of the last DWORD of read data to the initiator. If PI7C8154 initiator terminates the transaction before all read data has been transferred, the remaining read data left in data buffers is discarded. When the master repeats the transaction and starts transferring prefetchable read data from data buffers while the read transaction on the target bus is still in progress and before a read boundary is reached on the target bus, the read transaction starts operating in flow-through mode. Because data is flowing through the data buffers from the target to the initiator, long read bursts can then be sustained. In this case, the read transaction is allowed to continue until the initiator terminates the transaction, or until an aligned 4KB address boundary is reached, or until the buffer fills, whichever comes first. When the buffer empties, PI7C8154 Page 30 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION reflects the stalled condition to the initiator by disconnecting the initiator with data. The initiator may retry the transaction later if data are needed. If the initiator does not need any more data, the initiator will not continue the disconnected transaction. In this case, PI7C8154 will start the master timeout timer. The remaining read data will be discarded after the master timeout timer expires. To provide better latency, if there are any other pending data for other transactions in the RDB (Read Data Buffer), the remaining read data will be discarded even though the master timeout timer has not expired. PI7C8154 implements a master timeout timer that starts counting when the delayed read completion is at the head of the delayed transaction queue, and the read data is at the head of the read data queue. The initial value of this timer is programmable through configuration transaction. If the initiator does not repeat the read transaction and before the master timeout timer expires (215 default), PI7C8154 discards the read transaction and read data from its queues. PI7C8154 also conditionally asserts P_SERR_L (see Section 5.4). PI7C8154 has the capability to post multiple delayed read requests, up to a maximum of four in each direction. If an initiator starts a read transaction that matches the address and read command of a read transaction that is already queued, the current read command is not posted as it is already contained in the delayed transaction queue. See Section 4 for a discussion of how delayed read transactions are ordered when crossing PI7C8154. 2.7.7 FAST BACK-TO-BACK READ TRANSACTION PI7C8154 is capable of decoding fast back-to-back read transactions on both the primary and secondary. Also, PI7C8154 cannot generate fast back-to-back read transactions on the secondary or primary even though bit[23] of offset 3Ch is set to ‘1’ or bit[9] of offset 04h is set to ‘1’. 2.8 CONFIGURATION TRANSACTIONS Configuration transactions are used to initialize a PCI system. Every PCI device has a configuration space that is accessed by configuration commands. All registers are accessible in configuration space only. In addition to accepting configuration transactions for initialization of its own configuration space, the PI7C8154 also forwards configuration transactions for device initialization in hierarchical PCI systems, as well as for special cycle generation. To support hierarchical PCI bus systems, two types of configuration transactions are specified: Type 0 and Type 1. Type 0 configuration transactions are issued when the intended target resides on the same PCI bus as the initiator. A Type 0 configuration transaction is identified by the configuration command and the lowest two bits of the address set to 00b. Type 1 configuration transactions are issued when the intended target resides on another PCI bus, or when a special cycle is to be generated on another PCI bus. A Type 1 configuration command is identified by the configuration command and the lowest two address bits set to 01b. Page 31 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION The register number is found in both Type 0 and Type 1 formats and gives the DWORD address of the configuration register to be accessed. The function number is also included in both Type 0 and Type 1 formats and indicates which function of a multifunction device is to be accessed. For single-function devices, this value is not decoded. The addresses of Type 1 configuration transaction include a 5-bit field designating the device number that identifies the device on the target PCI bus that is to be accessed. In addition, the bus number in Type 1 transactions specifies the PCI bus to which the transaction is targeted. 2.8.1 TYPE 0 ACCESS TO PI7C8154 The configuration space is accessed by a Type 0 configuration transaction on the primary interface. The configuration space cannot be accessed from the secondary bus. The PI7C8154 responds to a Type 0 configuration transaction by asserting P_DEVSEL_L when the following conditions are met during the address phase: ! The bus command is a configuration read or configuration write transaction. ! Lowest two address bits P_AD[1:0] must be 00b. ! Signal P_IDSEL must be asserted. PI7C8154 limits all configuration access to a single DWORD data transfer and returns target-disconnect with the first data transfer if additional data phases are requested. Because read transactions to configuration space do not have side effects, all bytes in the requested DWORD are returned, regardless of the value of the byte enable bits. Type 0 configuration write and read transactions do not use data buffers; that is, these transactions are completed immediately, regardless of the state of the data buffers. The PI7C8154 ignores all Type 0 transactions initiated on the secondary interface. 2.8.2 TYPE 1 TO TYPE 0 CONVERSION Type 1 configuration transactions are used specifically for device configuration in a hierarchical PCI bus system. A PCI-to-PCI bridge is the only type of device that should respond to a Type 1 configuration command. Type 1 configuration commands are used when the configuration access is intended for a PCI device that resides on a PCI bus other than the one where the Type 1 transaction is generated. PI7C8154 performs a Type 1 to Type 0 translation when the Type 1 transaction is generated on the primary bus and is intended for a device attached directly to the secondary bus. PI7C8154 must convert the configuration command to a Type 0 format so that the secondary bus device can respond to it. Type 1 to Type 0 translations are performed only in the downstream direction; that is, PI7C8154 generates a Type 0 transaction only on the secondary bus, and never on the primary bus. PI7C8154 responds to a Type 1 configuration transaction and translates it into a Type 0 transaction on the secondary bus when the following conditions are met during the address phase: ! The lowest two address bits on P_AD[1:0] are 01b. Page 32 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! The bus number in address field P_AD[23:16] is equal to the value in the secondary bus number register in configuration space. ! The bus command on P_CBE[3:0] is a configuration read or configuration write transaction. When PI7C8154 translates the Type 1 transaction to a Type 0 transaction on the secondary interface, it performs the following translations to the address: ! Sets the lowest two address bits on S_AD[1:0] to 0. ! Decodes the device number and drives the bit pattern specified in Table 2-6on S_AD[31:16] for the purpose of asserting the device’s IDSEL signal. ! Sets S_AD[15:11] to 0. ! Leaves unchanged the function number and register number fields. PI7C8154 asserts a unique address line based on the device number. These address lines may be used as secondary bus IDSEL signals. The mapping of the address lines depends on the device number in the Type 1 address bits P_AD[15:11]. Table 2-6 presents the mapping that PI7C8154 uses. Table 2-6 DEVICE NUMBER TO IDSEL S_AD PIN MAPPING Device Number 0h 1h 2h 3h 4h 5h 6h 7h 8h 9h Ah Bh Ch Dh Eh Fh 10h – 1Eh 1Fh P_AD[15:11] 00000 00001 00010 00011 00100 00101 00110 00111 01000 01001 01010 01011 01100 01101 01110 01111 10000 – 11110 11111 Secondary IDSEL S_AD[31:16] 0000 0000 0000 0001 0000 0000 0000 0010 0000 0000 0000 0100 0000 0000 0000 1000 0000 0000 0001 0000 0000 0000 0010 0000 0000 0000 0100 0000 0000 0000 1000 0000 0000 0001 0000 0000 0000 0010 0000 0000 0000 0100 0000 0000 0000 1000 0000 0000 0001 0000 0000 0000 0010 0000 0000 0000 0100 0000 0000 0000 1000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 Generate special cycle (P_AD[7:2] = 00h) 0000 0000 0000 0000 (P_AD[7:2] = 00h) S_AD 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 - PI7C8154 can assert up to 16 unique address lines to be used as IDSEL signals for up to 16 devices on the secondary bus, for device numbers ranging from 0 through 8. Because of electrical loading constraints of the PCI bus, more than 16 IDSEL signals should not be necessary. However, if device numbers greater than 16 are desired, some external method of generating IDSEL lines must be used, and no upper address bits are then asserted. The configuration transaction is still translated and passed from the primary bus to the secondary bus. If no IDSEL pin is asserted to a secondary device, the transaction ends in a master abort. Page 33 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION PI7C8154 forwards Type 1 to Type 0 configuration read or write transactions as delayed transactions. Type 1 to Type 0 configuration read or write transactions are limited to a single 32-bit data transfer. 2.8.3 TYPE 1 TO TYPE 1 FORWARDING Type 1 to Type 1 transaction forwarding provides a hierarchical configuration mechanism when two or more levels of PCI-to-PCI bridges are used. When PI7C8154 detects a Type 1 configuration transaction intended for a PCI bus downstream from the secondary bus, PI7C8154 forwards the transaction unchanged to the secondary bus. Ultimately, this transaction is translated to a Type 0 configuration command or to a special cycle transaction by a downstream PCI-to-PCI bridge. Downstream Type 1 to Type 1 forwarding occurs when the following conditions are met during the address phase: ! The lowest two address bits are equal to 01b. ! The bus number falls in the range defined by the lower limit (exclusive) in the secondary bus number register and the upper limit (inclusive) in the subordinate bus number register. ! The bus command is a configuration read or write transaction. PI7C8154 also supports Type 1 to Type 1 forwarding of configuration write transactions upstream to support upstream special cycle generation. A Type 1 configuration command is forwarded upstream when the following conditions are met: ! The lowest two address bits are equal to 01b. ! The bus number falls outside the range defined by the lower limit (inclusive) in the secondary bus number register and the upper limit (inclusive) in the subordinate bus number register. ! The device number in address bits AD[15:11] is equal to 11111b. ! The function number in address bits AD[10:8] is equal to 111b. ! The bus command is a configuration write transaction. The PI7C8154 forwards Type 1 to Type 1 configuration write transactions as delayed transactions. Types 1 to Type 1 configuration write transactions are limited to a single data transfer. 2.8.4 SPECIAL CYCLES The Type 1 configuration mechanism is used to generate special cycle transactions in hierarchical PCI systems. Special cycle transactions are ignored by acting as a target and are not forwarded across the bridge. Special cycle transactions can be generated from Type 1 configuration write transactions in either the upstream or the down-stream direction. Page 34 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION PI7C8154 initiates a special cycle on the target bus when a Type 1 configuration write transaction is being detected on the initiating bus and the following conditions are met during the address phase: ! The lowest two address bits on AD[1:0] are equal to 01b. ! The device number in address bits AD[15:11] is equal to 11111b. ! The function number in address bits AD[10:8] is equal to 111b. ! The register number in address bits AD[7:2] is equal to 000000b. ! The bus number is equal to the value in the secondary bus number register in configuration space for downstream forwarding or equal to the value in the primary bus number register in configuration space for upstream forwarding. ! The bus command on CBE is a configuration write command. When PI7C8154 initiates the transaction on the target interface, the bus command is changed from configuration write to special cycle. The address and data are for-warded unchanged. Devices that use special cycles ignore the address and decode only the bus command. The data phase contains the special cycle message. The transaction is forwarded as a delayed transaction, but in this case the target response is not forwarded back (because special cycles result in a master abort). Once the transaction is completed on the target bus, through detection of the master abort condition, PI7C8154 responds with TRDY_L to the next attempt of the con-figuration transaction from the initiator. If more than one data transfer is requested, PI7C8154 responds with a target disconnect operation during the first data phase. 2.9 64-BIT OPERATION Both the primary and secondary interfaces of the PI7C8154 support 32-bit operation and 64bit operation. This chapter describes how to use the 64-bit operations as well as the conditions that go along with it. 2.9.1 64-BIT AND 32-BIT TRANSACTIONS INITIATED BY PI7C8154 64-bit transactions are requested by asserting P_REQ64_L on the primary and S_REQ64_L on the secondary during the address phase. REQ64_L is asserted and deasserted during the same cycles as FRAME_L. Under certain conditions, PI7C8154 does not use the 64-bit extension when initiating transactions. In this case, REQ64_L is not asserted. If REQ64_L is not asserted, the transaction is initiated as a 32-bit transaction when any of the following conditions are met: ! P_REQ64_L was not asserted by the primary during reset (64-bit extension not supported on the primary) for upstream transactions only ! PI7C8154 is initiating an I/O transaction ! PI7C8154 is initiating a special cycle transaction Page 35 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 2.9.2 ! PI7C8154 is initiating a configuration transaction ! PI7C8154 is initiating a nonprefetchable memory read transaction ! The address is not QUADWORD aligned ! The address is near the top of a cache line ! A single DWORD read transaction is being performed ! A single or two-DWORD memory write transaction is being performed ! PI7C8154 is resuming memory write transaction after a target disconnect, and ACK64_L was not asserted by the target in the previous transaction – does not apply when the previous target termination was a target retry 64-BIT TRANSACTIONS – ADDRESS PHASE When a transaction using the primary bus 64-bit extension is a single address cycle, the upper 32-bits of the address, AD[63:32], are assumed to be 0 and CBE[7:4] are not defined but driven to valid logic levels during the address phase. When a transaction using the primary bus 64-bit extension is a dual address cycle, the upper 32-bit of the address, AD[63:32], contain the upper 32-bits of the address and CBE[7:4] contain memory bus command during both address phases. A 64-bit target then has the opportunity to decode the entire 64-bit address and bus command after the first address phase. A 32-bit target needs both address phases to decode the full address and bus command. 2.9.3 64-BIT TRANSACTIONS – DATA PHASE PI7C8154 asserts REQ64_L to indicate it is initiating a 64-bit transfer during memory write transactions. During the data phase, PI7C8154 asserts the following: ! The low 32 bits of data on AD[31:0] ! The low 4 bits on CBE[3:0] ! The high 32 bits of data on AD[63:32] ! The high 4 bits on CBE[7:4] Every data phase will consist of 64 bits and 8 byte enable bits when PI7C8154 detects ACK64#_L asserted by the target at the same time it detects DEVSEL_L. For write transactions, PI7C8154 redirects the write data that it has on the AD[63:32] bus to AD[31:0] during the second data phase if it does not detect ACK64_L asserted at the same time that it detects DEVSEL_L asserted. Also, the CBE[7:4] is redirected to CBE[3:0] during the second data phase. Page 36 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION For 64-bit memory write transactions that end at an odd DWORD boundary, PI7C8154 drives the byte enable bits to 1 during the last data phase. AD[63:32] are then unpredictable but are driven to a valid logic level. For read transactions, PI7C8154 drives 8 bits of byte enables on CBE[7:0] when it has asserted REQ64_L. CBE[7:0] is always 0 because the only read transactions that use the 64bit extension are prefetchable memory reads. No special redirection is needed based on the target’s assertion or lack of assertion of ACK64_L. When the target asserts ACK64_L at the same time that it asserts DEVSEL_L, all read data transfers consist of 64 bits and the target asserts PAR64, which covers AD[63:32] and CBE[7:4]. All data phase consist of 32-bit transactions when the target does not assert ACK64_L and asserts DEVSEL_L. 2.9.4 64-BIT TRANSACTIONS – RECEIVED BY PI7C8154 PI7C8154 does one of 2 things when it is the target of a transaction and REQ64_L is asserted. PI7C8154 either asserts ACK64_L at the same time it asserts DEVSEL_L to indicate its ability to perform 64-bit data transfers, or it does not use the 64-bit extension as a target and does not assert ACK64_L. PI7C8154 does not assert ACK64_L under any of the following conditions: ! REQ64_L was not asserted by the initiator ! PI7C8154 is responding to a nonprefetchable memory read transaction ! PI7C8154 is responding to an I/O transaction ! PI7C8154 is responding to a configuration transaction ! Only 1 DWORD of data was read from the target If PI7C8154 is the target of a 64-bit memory write transaction, it is able to accept 64 bits of data during each data phase. If PI7C8154 is the target of a memory read transaction, it delivers 64 bits of read data during each data phase and drives PAR64 corresponding to AD[63:32] and CBE[7:4] for each data phase. If an odd number of DWORDS is read from the target and PI7C8154 has asserted ACK64_L when returning read data to the initiator, PI7C8154 disconnects before the last DWORD is returned. PI7C8154 may have read an odd number of DWORD’s because of either a target disconnect or a master latency timer expiration during 32-bit data transfers on the opposite interface. 2.9.5 64-BIT TRANSACTIONS – SUPPORT DURING RESET PI7C8154 checks P_REQ64_L while P_RESET_L is asserted to determine whether the 64bit extensions are connected. If P_REQ64_L is HIGH, PI7C8154 knows that the 64-bit extension signals are not connected so it always drives the 64-bit extension outputs to have valid logic levels on the inputs. PI7C8154 will then treat all transactions on the primary as 32-bit. If P_REQ64_L is LOW, the 64-bit signals should be connected to pull-up resistors on the board and PI7C8154 does not perform any input biasing. PI7C8154 can then treat memory write and prefetchabel memory read transactions as 64-bit transactions on the primary. Page 37 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION PI7C8154 always asserts S_REQ64_L LOW during S_RESET_L to indicate that the 64-bit extension is supported on the secondary bus. Individual pull-up resistors must always be supplied for S_AD[63:32], S_CBE[7:4], and S_PAR64. 2.10 TRANSACTION FLOW THROUGH Transaction flow through refers to data being removed from the read/write buffers concurrently as data is still being written to the buffer. For reads, flow through occurs when the initiator repeats the delayed transaction while some read data is in the buffer, but the transaction is still ongoing on the target bus. For read flow through to occur, there can be no other reads or writes previously posted in the same direction. For writes, flow through occurs when PI7C8154 is able to arbitrate for the target bus, initiate the transaction and receive TRDY_L from the target, while receiving data from the same transaction on the initiator bus. Flow through can only occur if the writes that were previously posted in the same direction are completed. 2.11 TRANSACTION TERMINATION This section describes how PI7C8154 returns transaction termination conditions back to the initiator. The initiator can terminate transactions with one of the following types of termination: ! Normal termination Normal termination occurs when the initiator de-asserts FRAME_L at the beginning of the last data phase, and de-asserts IRDYL at the end of the last data phase in conjunction with either TRDY_L or STOP_L assertion from the target. ! Master abort A master abort occurs when no target response is detected. When the initiator does not detect a DEVSEL_L from the target within five clock cycles after asserting FRAME_L, the initiator terminates the transaction with a master abort. If FRAME_L is still asserted, the initiator de-asserts FRAME_L on the next cycle, and then de-asserts IRDY_L on the following cycle. IRDY_L must be asserted in the same cycle in which FRAME_L deasserts. If FRAME_L is already deasserted, IRDY_L can be deasserted on the next clock cycle following detection of the master abort condition. The target can terminate transactions with one of the following types of termination: ! Normal termination TRDY_L and DEVSEL_L asserted in conjunction with FRAME_L deasserted and IRDY_L asserted. ! Target retry STOP_L and DEVSEL_L asserted with TRDY_L deasserted during the first data phase. No data transfers occur during the transaction. This transaction must be repeated. ! Target disconnect with data transfer Page 38 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION STOP_L, DEVSEL_L and TRDY_L asserted. It signals that this is the last data transfer of the transaction. ! Target disconnect without data transfer STOP_L and DEVSEL_L asserted with TRDY_L de-asserted after previous data transfers have been made, indicating that no more data transfers will be made during this transaction. ! Target abort STOP_L asserted with DEVSEL_L and TRDY_L de-asserted. Indicates that target will never be able to complete this transaction. DEVSEL_L must be asserted for at least one cycle during the transaction before the target abort is signaled. 2.11.1 MASTER TERMINATION INITIATED BY PI7C8154 PI7C8154, as an initiator, uses normal termination if DEVSEL_L is returned by target within five clock cycles of PI7C8154’s assertion of FRAME_L on the target bus. As an initiator, PI7C8154 terminates a transaction when the following conditions are met: ! During a delayed write transaction, a single DWORD is delivered. ! During a non-prefetchable read transaction, a single DWORD is transferred from the target. ! During a prefetchable read transaction, a pre-fetch boundary is reached. ! For a posted write transaction, all write data for the transaction is transferred from data buffers to the target. ! For burst transfer, with the exception of “Memory Write and Invalidate” transactions, the master latency timer expires and the PI7C8154’s bus grant is de-asserted. ! The target terminates the transaction with a retry, disconnect, or target abort. If PI7C8154 is delivering posted write data when it terminates the transaction because the master latency timer expires, it initiates another transaction to deliver the remaining write data. The address of the transaction is updated to reflect the address of the current DWORD to be delivered. If PI7C8154 is pre-fetching read data when it terminates the transaction because the master latency timer expires, it does not repeat the transaction to obtain more data. 2.11.2 MASTER ABORT RECEIVED BY PI7C8154 If the initiator initiates a transaction on the target bus and does not detect DEVSEL_L returned by the target within five clock cycles of the assertion of FRAME_L, PI7C8154 terminates the transaction with a master abort. This sets the received-master-abort bit in the status register corresponding to the target bus. For delayed read and write transactions, PI7C8154 is able to reflect the master abort condition back to the initiator. When PI7C8154 detects a master abort in response to a delayed transaction, and when the initiator repeats the transaction, PI7C8154 does not Page 39 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION respond to the transaction with DEVSEL_L, which induces the master abort condition back to the initiator. The transaction is then removed from the delayed transaction queue. When a master abort is received in response to a posted write transaction, PI7C8154 discards the posted write data and makes no more attempts to deliver the data. PI7C8154 sets the received-master-abort bit in the status register when the master abort is received on the primary bus, or it sets the received master abort bit in the secondary status register when the master abort is received on the secondary interface. When master abort is detected in posted write transaction with both master-abort-mode bit (bit[5] of bridge control register) and the SERR_L enable bit (bit 8 of command register for secondary bus) are set, PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L if the master-abort-on-posted-write is not set. The master-abort-on-posted-write bit is bit 4 of the P_SERR_L event disable register (offset 64h). Note: When PI7C8154 performs a Type 1 to special cycle conversion, a master abort is the expected termination for the special cycle on the target bus. In this case, the master abort received bit is not set, and the Type 1 configuration transaction is disconnected after the first data phase. 2.11.3 TARGET TERMINATION RECEIVED BY PI7C8154 When PI7C8154 initiates a transaction on the target bus and the target responds with DEVSEL_L, the target can end the transaction with one of the following types of termination: ! Normal termination (upon de-assertion of FRAME_L) ! Target retry ! Target disconnect ! Target abort PI7C8154 handles these terminations in different ways, depending on the type of transaction being performed. 2.11.3.1 DELAYED WRITE TARGET TERMINATION RESPONSE When PI7C8154 initiates a delayed write transaction, the type of target termination received from the target can be passed back to the initiator. Table 2-7 shows the response to each type of target termination that occurs during a delayed write transaction. PI7C8154 repeats a delayed write transaction until one of the following conditions is met: ! PI7C8154 completes at least one data transfer. ! PI7C8154 receives a master abort. ! PI7C8154 receives a target abort. PI7C8154 makes 224 (default) or 232 (maximum) write attempts resulting in a response of target retry. Page 40 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Table 2-7 DELAYED WRITE TARGET TERMINATION RESPONSE Target Termination Normal Target Retry Target Disconnect Target Abort Response Returning disconnect to initiator with first data transfer only if multiple data phases requested. Returning target retry to initiator. Continue write attempts to target Returning disconnect to initiator with first data transfer only if multiple data phases requested. Returning target abort to initiator. Set received target abort bit in target interface status register. Set signaled target abort bit in initiator interface status register. After the PI7C8154 makes 224 (default) attempts of the same delayed write trans-action on the target bus, PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L if the SERR_L enable bit (bit 8 of command register for the secondary bus) is set and the delayed-write-non-delivery bit is not set. The delayed-write-non-delivery bit is bit 5 of P_SERR_L event disable register (offset 64h). PI7C8154 will report system error. See Section 5.4 for a description of system error conditions. 2.11.3.2 POSTED WRITE TARGET TERMINATION RESPONSE When PI7C8154 initiates a posted write transaction, the target termination cannot be passed back to the initiator. Table 2-8 shows the response to each type of target termination that occurs during a posted write transaction. Table 2-8 RESPONSE TO POSTED WRITE TARGET TERMINATION Target Termination Normal Target Retry Target Disconnect Target Abort Repsonse No additional action. Repeating write transaction to target. Initiate write transaction for delivering remaining posted write data. Set received-target-abort bit in the target interface status register. Assert P_SERR# if enabled, and set the signaled-system-error bit in primary status register. Note that when a target retry or target disconnect is returned and posted write data associated with that transaction remains in the write buffers, PI7C8154 initiates another write transaction to attempt to deliver the rest of the write data. If there is a target retry, the exact same address will be driven as for the initial write trans-action attempt. If a target disconnect is received, the address that is driven on a subsequent write transaction attempt will be updated to reflect the address of the current DWORD. If the initial write transaction is Memory-Write-and-Invalidate transaction, and a partial delivery of write data to the target is performed before a target disconnect is received, PI7C8154 will use the memory write command to deliver the rest of the write data. It is because an incomplete cache line will be transferred in the subsequent write transaction attempt. After the PI7C8154 makes 224 (default) write transaction attempts and fails to deliver all posted write data associated with that transaction, PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L if the primary SERR_L enable bit is set (bit 8 of command register for secondary bus) and postedwrite-non-delivery bit is not set. The posted-write-non-delivery bit is the bit 2 of P_SERR_L event disable register (offset 64h). PI7C8154 will report system error. See Section 5.4 for a discussion of system error conditions. 2.11.3.3 DELAYED READ TARGET TERMINATION RESPONSE Page 41 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION When PI7C8154 initiates a delayed read transaction, the abnormal target responses can be passed back to the initiator. Other target responses depend on how much data the initiator requests. Table 2-9 shows the response to each type of target termination that occurs during a delayed read transaction. PI7C8154 repeats a delayed read transaction until one of the following conditions is met: ! PI7C8154 completes at least one data transfer. ! PI7C8154 receives a master abort. ! PI7C8154 receives a target abort. PI7C8154 makes 224 (default) read attempts resulting in a response of target retry. Table 2-9 RESPONSE TO DELAYED READ TARGET TERMINATION Target Termination Normal Target Retry Target Disconnect Target Abort Response If prefetchable, target disconnect only if initiator requests more data than read from target. If non-prefetchable, target disconnect on first data phase. Re-initiate read transaction to target If initiator requests more data than read from target, return target disconnect to initiator. Return target abort to initiator. Set received target abort bit in the target interface status register. Set signaled target abort bit in the initiator interface status register. After PI7C8154 makes 224(default) attempts of the same delayed read transaction on the target bus, PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L if the primary SERR_L enable bit is set (bit 8 of command register for secondary bus) and the delayed-write-non-delivery bit is not set. The delayed-write-non-delivery bit is bit 5 of P_SERR_L event disable register (offset 64h). PI7C8154 will report system error. See Section 5.4 for a description of system error conditions. 2.11.4 TARGET TERMINATION INITIATED BY PI7C8154 PI7C8154 can return a target retry, target disconnect, or target abort to an initiator for reasons other than detection of that condition at the target interface. 2.11.4.1 TARGET RETRY PI7C8154 returns a target retry to the initiator when it cannot accept write data or return read data as a result of internal conditions. PI7C8154 returns a target retry to an initiator when any of the following conditions is met: FOR DELAYED WRITE TRANSACTIONS: ! The transaction is being entered into the delayed transaction queue. ! Transaction has already been entered into delayed transaction queue, but target response has not yet been received. Page 42 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! Target response has been received but has not progressed to the head of the return queue. ! The delayed transaction queue is full, and the transaction cannot be queued. ! A transaction with the same address and command has been queued. ! A locked sequence is being propagated across PI7C8154, and the write transaction is not a locked transaction. ! The target bus is locked and the write transaction is a locked transaction. ! Use more than 16 clocks to accept this transaction. FOR DELAYED READ TRANSACTIONS: ! The transaction is being entered into the delayed transaction queue. ! The read request has already been queued, but read data is not yet available. ! Data has been read from target, but it is not yet at head of the read data queue or a posted write transaction precedes it. ! The delayed transaction queue is full, and the transaction cannot be queued. ! A delayed read request with the same address and bus command has already been queued. ! A locked sequence is being propagated across PI7C8154, and the read transaction is not a locked transaction. ! PI7C78154 is currently discarding previously pre-fetched read data. ! The target bus is locked and the write transaction is a locked transaction. ! Use more than 16 clocks to accept this transaction. FOR POSTED WRITE TRANSACTIONS: 2.11.4.2 ! The posted write data buffer does not have enough space for address and at least one DWORD of write data. ! A locked sequence is being propagated across PI7C8154, and the write transaction is not a locked transaction. ! When a target retry is returned to the initiator of a delayed transaction, the initiator must repeat the transaction with the same address and bus command as well as the data if it is a write transaction, within the time frame specified by the master timeout value. Otherwise, the transaction is discarded from the buffers. TARGET DISCONNECT Page 43 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION PI7C8154 returns a target disconnect to an initiator when one of the following conditions is met: ! PI7C8154 hits an internal address boundary. ! PI7C8154 cannot accept any more write data. ! PI7C8154 has no more read data to deliver. See Section 2.6.4 for a description of write address boundaries, and Section 2.7.3 for a description of read address boundaries. 2.11.4.3 TARGET ABORT PI7C8154 returns a target abort to an initiator when one of the following conditions is met: 3 ! PI7C8154 is returning a target abort from the intended target. ! When PI7C8154 returns a target abort to the initiator, it sets the signaled target abort bit in the status register corresponding to the initiator interface. ADDRESS DECODING PI7C8154 uses three address ranges that control I/O and memory transaction forwarding. These address ranges are defined by base and limit address registers in the configuration space. This chapter describes these address ranges, as well as ISA-mode and VGAaddressing support. 3.1 ADDRESS RANGES PI7C8154 uses the following address ranges that determine which I/O and memory transactions are forwarded from the primary PCI bus to the secondary PCI bus, and from the secondary bus to the primary bus: ! Two 32-bit I/O address ranges ! Two 32-bit memory-mapped I/O (non-prefetchable memory) ranges ! Two 32-bit prefetchable memory address ranges Transactions falling within these ranges are forwarded downstream from the primary PCI bus to the secondary PCI bus. Transactions falling outside these ranges are forwarded upstream from the secondary PCI bus to the primary PCI bus. No address translation is required in PI7C8154. The addresses that are not marked for downstream are always forwarded upstream. Page 44 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 3.2 I/O ADDRESS DECODING PI7C8154 uses the following mechanisms that are defined in the configuration space to specify the I/O address space for downstream and upstream forwarding: ! I/O base and limit address registers ! The ISA enable bit ! The VGA mode bit ! The VGA snoop bit This section provides information on the I/O address registers and ISA mode Section 3.4 provides information on the VGA modes. To enable downstream forwarding of I/O transactions, the I/O enable bit must be set in the command register in configuration space. All I/O transactions initiated on the primary bus will be ignored if the I/O enable bit is not set. To enable upstream forwarding of I/O transactions, the master enable bit must be set in the command register. If the master-enable bit is not set, PI7C8154 ignores all I/O and memory transactions initiated on the secondary bus. The master-enable bit also allows upstream forwarding of memory transactions if it is set. CAUTION If any configuration state affecting I/O transaction forwarding is changed by a configuration write operation on the primary bus at the same time that I/O transactions are ongoing on the secondary bus, PI7C8154 response to the secondary bus I/O transactions is not predictable. Configure the I/O base and limit address registers, ISA enable bit, VGA mode bit, and VGA snoop bit before setting I/O enable and master enable bits, and change them subsequently only when the primary and secondary PCI buses are idle. 3.2.1 I/O BASE AND LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTER PI7C8154 implements one set of I/O base and limit address registers in configuration space that define an I/O address range per port downstream forwarding. PI7C8154 supports 32-bit I/O addressing, which allows I/O addresses downstream of PI7C8154 to be mapped anywhere in a 4GB I/O address space. I/O transactions with addresses that fall inside the range defined by the I/O base and limit registers are forwarded downstream from the primary PCI bus to the secondary PCI bus. I/O transactions with addresses that fall outside this range are forwarded upstream from the secondary PCI bus to the primary PCI bus. The I/O range can be turned off by setting the I/O base address to a value greater than that of the I/O limit address. When the I/O range is turned off, all I/O trans-actions are forwarded upstream, and no I/O transactions are forwarded downstream. The I/O range has a minimum granularity of 4KB and is aligned on a 4KB boundary. The maximum I/O range is 4GB in size. The I/O base register consists of an 8-bit field at configuration address 1Ch, and a 16bit field at address 30h. The top 4 bits of the 8-bit field define bits [15:12] of the I/O base Page 45 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION address. The bottom 4 bits read only as 1h to indicate that PI7C8154 supports 32-bit I/O addressing. Bits [11:0] of the base address are assumed to be 0, which naturally aligns the base address to a 4KB boundary. The 16 bits contained in the I/O base upper 16 bits register at configuration offset 30h define AD[31:16] of the I/O base address. All 16 bits are read/write. After primary bus reset or chip reset, the value of the I/O base address is initialized to 0000 0000h. The I/O limit register consists of an 8-bit field at configuration offset 1Dh and a 16-bit field at offset 32h. The top 4 bits of the 8-bit field define bits [15:12] of the I/O limit address. The bottom 4 bits read only as 1h to indicate that 32-bit I/O addressing is supported. Bits [11:0] of the limit address are assumed to be FFFh, which naturally aligns the limit address to the top of a 4KB I/O address block. The 16 bits contained in the I/O limit upper 16 bits register at configuration offset 32h define AD[31:16] of the I/O limit address. All 16 bits are read/write. After primary bus reset or chip reset, the value of the I/O limit address is reset to 0000 0FFFh. Note: The initial states of the I/O base and I/O limit address registers define an I/O range of 0000 0000h to 0000 0FFFh, which is the bottom 4KB of I/O space. Write these registers with their appropriate values before setting either the I/O enable bit or the master enable bit in the command register in configuration space. 3.2.2 ISA MODE PI7C8154 supports ISA mode by providing an ISA enable bit in the bridge control register in configuration space. ISA mode modifies the response of PI7C8154 inside the I/O address range in order to support mapping of I/O space in the presence of an ISA bus in the system. This bit only affects the response of PI7C8154 when the transaction falls inside the address range defined by the I/O base and limit address registers, and only when this address also falls inside the first 64KB of I/O space (address bits [31:16] are 0000h). When the ISA enable bit is set, PI7C8154 does not forward downstream any I/O transactions addressing the top 768 bytes of each aligned 1KB block. Only those transactions addressing the bottom 256 bytes of an aligned 1KB block inside the base and limit I/O address range are forwarded downstream. Transactions above the 64KB I/O address boundary are forwarded as defined by the address range defined by the I/O base and limit registers. Accordingly, if the ISA enable bit is set, PI7C8154 forwards upstream those I/O transactions addressing the top 768 bytes of each aligned 1KB block within the first 64KB of I/O space. The master enable bit in the command configuration register must also be set to enable upstream forwarding. All other I/O transactions initiated on the secondary bus are forwarded upstream only if they fall outside the I/O address range. When the ISA enable bit is set, devices downstream of PI7C8154 can have I/O space mapped into the first 256 bytes of each 1KB chunk below the 64KB boundary, or anywhere in I/O space above the 64KB boundary. 3.3 MEMORY ADDRESS DECODING PI7C8154 has three mechanisms for defining memory address ranges for forwarding of memory transactions: Page 46 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! Memory-mapped I/O base and limit address registers ! Prefetchable memory base and limit address registers ! VGA mode This section describes the first two mechanisms. Section 3.4.1 describes VGA mode. To enable downstream forwarding of memory transactions, the memory enable bit must be set in the command register in configuration space. To enable upstream forwarding of memory transactions, the master-enable bit must be set in the command register. The master-enable bit also allows upstream forwarding of I/O transactions if it is set. CAUTION If any configuration state affecting memory transaction forwarding is changed by a configuration write operation on the primary bus at the same time that memory transactions are ongoing on the secondary bus, response to the secondary bus memory transactions is not predictable. Configure the memory-mapped I/O base and limit address registers, prefetchable memory base and limit address registers, and VGA mode bit before setting the memory enable and master enable bits, and change them subsequently only when the primary and secondary PCI buses are idle. 3.3.1 MEMORY-MAPPED I/O BASE AND LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTERS Memory-mapped I/O is also referred to as non-prefetchable memory. Memory addresses that cannot automatically be pre-fetched but that can be conditionally pre-fetched based on command type should be mapped into this space. Read transactions to non-prefetchable space may exhibit side effects; this space may have non-memory-like behavior. PI7C8154 prefetches in this space only if the memory read line or memory read multiple commands are used; transactions using the memory read command are limited to a single data transfer. The memory-mapped I/O base address and memory-mapped I/O limit address registers define an address range that PI7C8154 uses to determine when to forward memory commands. PI7C8154 forwards a memory transaction from the primary to the secondary interface if the transaction address falls within the memory-mapped I/O address range. PI7C8154 ignores memory transactions initiated on the secondary interface that fall into this address range. Any transactions that fall outside this address range are ignored on the primary interface and are forwarded upstream from the secondary interface (provided that they do not fall into the prefetchable memory range or are not forwarded downstream by the VGA mechanism). The memory-mapped I/O range supports 32-bit addressing only. The PCI-to-PCI Bridge Architecture Specification does not provide for 64-bit addressing in the memory-mapped I/O space. The memory-mapped I/O address range has a granularity and alignment of 1MB. The maximum memory-mapped I/O address range is 4GB. The memory-mapped I/O address range is defined by a 16-bit memory-mapped I/O base address register at configuration offset 20h and by a 16-bit memory-mapped I/O limit address register at offset 22h. The top 12 bits of each of these registers correspond to bits [31:20] of the memory address. The low 4 bits are hardwired to 0. The lowest 20 bits of the memory-mapped I/O base address are assumed to be 0 0000h, which results in a natural alignment to a 1MB boundary. The lowest 20 bits of the memory-mapped I/O limit address are assumed to be FFFFFh, which results in an alignment to the top of a 1MB block. Page 47 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Note: The initial state of the memory-mapped I/O base address register is 0000 0000h. The initial state of the memory-mapped I/O limit address register is 000F FFFFh. Note that the initial states of these registers define a memory-mapped I/O range at the bottom 1MB block of memory. Write these registers with their appropriate values before setting either the memory enable bit or the master enable bit in the command register in configuration space. To turn off the memory-mapped I/O address range, write the memory-mapped I/O base address register with a value greater than that of the memory-mapped I/O limit address register. 3.3.2 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY BASE AND LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTERS Locations accessed in the prefetchable memory address range must have true memory-like behavior and must not exhibit side effects when read. This means that extra reads to a prefetchable memory location must have no side effects. PI7C8154 pre-fetches for all types of memory read commands in this address space. The prefetchable memory base address and prefetchable memory limit address registers define an address range that PI7C8154 uses to determine when to forward memory commands. PI7C8154 forwards a memory transaction from the primary to the secondary interface if the transaction address falls within the prefetchable memory address range. PI7C8154 ignores memory transactions initiated on the secondary interface that fall into this address range. PI7C8154 does not respond to any transactions that fall outside this address range on the primary interface and forwards those transactions upstream from the secondary interface (provided that they do not fall into the memory-mapped I/O range or are not forwarded by the VGA mechanism). The prefetchable memory range supports 64-bit addressing and provides additional registers to define the upper 32 bits of the memory address range, the prefetchable memory base address upper 32 bits register, and the prefetchable memory limit address upper 32 bits register. For address comparison, a single address cycle (32-bit address) prefetchable memory transaction is treated like a 64-bit address transaction where the upper 32 bits of the address are equal to 0. This upper 32-bit value of 0 is compared to the prefetchable memory base address upper 32 bits register and the prefetchable memory limit address upper 32 bits register. The prefetchable memory base address upper 32 bits register must be 0 to pass any single address cycle transactions downstream. Prefetchable memory address range has a granularity and alignment of 1MB. Maximum memory address range is 4GB when 32-bit addressing is being used. Prefetchable memory address range is defined by a 16-bit prefetchable memory base address register at configuration offset 24h and by a 16-bit prefetchable memory limit address register at offset 26h. The top 12 bits of each of these registers correspond to bits [31:20] of the memory address. The lowest 4 bits are hardwired to 1h. The lowest 20 bits of the prefetchable memory base address are assumed to be 0 0000h, which results in a natural alignment to a 1MB boundary. The lowest 20 bits of the prefetchable memory limit address are assumed to be FFFFFh, which results in an alignment to the top of a 1MB block. Note: The initial state of the prefetchable memory base address register is 0000 0000h. The initial state of the prefetchable memory limit address register is 000F FFFFh. Note that the initial states of these registers define a prefetchable memory range at the bottom 1MB block Page 48 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION of memory. Write these registers with their appropriate values before setting either the memory enable bit or the master enable bit in the command register in configuration space. To turn off the prefetchable memory address range, write the prefetchable memory base address register with a value greater than that of the prefetchable memory limit address register. The entire base value must be greater than the entire limit value, meaning that the upper 32 bits must be considered. Therefore, to disable the address range, the upper 32 bits registers can both be set to the same value, while the lower base register is set greater than the lower limit register. Otherwise, the upper 32-bit base must be greater than the upper 32bit limit. 3.3.3 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY 64-BIT ADDRESSING REGISTERS PI7C8154 supports 64-bit memory address decoding for forwarding of dual address memory transactions. Dual address cycle is used for 64-bit addressing. The first address phase of the dual address cycle contains the low 32 bits of the address and the second address phase contains the high 32 bits. The high 32 bits must never be 0 during a dual address cycle. The prefetchable memory address range is defined by implementing the prefetchable memory base address upper 32 bits register and the prefetchable memory limit address upper 32 bits register. The prefetchable address space can be defined as either: ! Residing entirely in the first 4GB of memory ! Residing entirely above the first 4GB of memory ! Crossing the first 4GB memory boundary If the prefetchable memory space on the secondary bus resides entirely in the first 4GB of memory, both upper 32 bit register must be set to 0. PI7C8154 then ignores all dual address cycles initiated on the primary interface and forwards all dual address transactions initiated on the secondary interface upstream. If the prefetchable memory space on the secondary bus resides entirely above the first 4GB of memory, both the prefetchable memory base address upper 32 bit register and the prefetchable memory limit address upper 32 bit register must be initialized to nonzero values. PI7C8154 ignores all single address memory transactions initiated on the primary and forwards all single address memory transactions initiated on the secondary upstream, unless the memory falls within the memory mapped I/O or VGA memory range. A dual address memory transaction is forwarded downstream from the primary if it falls within the address range defined by the prefetchable memory base address, prefetchable memory base address upper 32 bits, prefetchable memory limit address, and prefetchable memory limit address upper 32 bits. If the dual address cycle initiated on the secondary falls outside this address range, it is forwarded upstream to the primary. PI7C8154 does not respond to a dual address cycle initiated on the primary that falls outside this address range, or to a dual address cycle initiated on the secondary that falls within the address range. If the prefetchable memory space on the secondary bus resides on top of the 4GB boundary, the prefetchable memory base address upper 32 bit register is set to 0 and the prefetchable memory limit address upper 32 bit register is initialized to a nonzero value. Single address cycle memory transactions are compared to the prefetchable memory base address register only. A transaction initiated on the primary is forwarded downstream if the address is Page 49 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION greater than or equal to the base address. A transaction initiated on the secondary is forwarded upstream if the address is less than the base address. Dual address cycles are compared to the prefetchable memory limit address and the prefetchable memory limit address upper 32 bit register. If the address of the dual address cycle is less than or equal to the limit, the transaction is forwarded downstream from the primary and is ignored on the secondary. If the address of the dual address cycle is greater than this limit, the transaction is ignored on the primary and is forwarded upstream from the secondary. The prefetchable memory base address upper 32 bit register is located at offset 28h of the configuration register and the prefetchable memory limit address upper 32 bit register is located at offset 2Ch. Both registers are reset to 0. 3.4 VGA SUPPORT PI7C8154 provides two modes for VGA support: 3.4.1 ! VGA mode, supporting VGA-compatible addressing ! VGA snoop mode, supporting VGA palette forwarding VGA MODE When a VGA-compatible device exists downstream from PI7C8154, set the VGA mode bit in the bridge control register in configuration space to enable VGA mode. When PI7C8154 is operating in VGA mode, it forwards downstream those transactions addressing the VGA frame buffer memory and VGA I/O registers, regardless of the values of the base and limit address registers. PI7C8154 ignores transactions initiated on the secondary interface addressing these locations. The VGA frame buffer consists of the following memory address range: 000A 0000h–000B FFFFh Read transactions to frame buffer memory are treated as non-prefetchable. PI7C8154 requests only a single data transfer from the target, and read byte enable bits are forwarded to the target bus. The VGA I/O addresses are in the range of 3B0h–3BBh and 3C0h–3DFh I/O. These I/O addresses are aliases every 1KB throughout the first 64KB of I/O space. This means that address bits [5:10] are not decoded and can be any value, while address bits [31:16] must be all 0’s. VGA BIOS addresses starting at C0000h are not decoded in VGA mode. 3.4.2 VGA SNOOP MODE PI7C8154 provides VGA snoop mode, allowing for VGA palette write transactions to be forwarded downstream. This mode is used when a graphics device downstream from PI7C8154 needs to snoop or respond to VGA palette write transactions. To enable the mode, set the VGA snoop bit in the command register in configuration space. Note that Page 50 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION PI7C8154 claims VGA palette write transactions by asserting DEVSEL_L in VGA snoop mode. When VGA snoop bit is set, PI7C8154 forwards downstream transactions within the 3C6h, 3C8h and 3C9h I/O addresses space. Note that these addresses are also forwarded as part of the VGA compatibility mode previously described. Again, address bits [15:10] are not decoded, while address bits [31:16] must be equal to 0, which means that these addresses are aliases every 1KB throughout the first 64KB of I/O space. Note: If both the VGA mode bit and the VGA snoop bit are set, PI7C8154 behaves in the same way as if only the VGA mode bit were set. 4 TRANSACTION ORDERING To maintain data coherency and consistency, PI7C8154 complies with the ordering rules set forth in the PCI Local Bus Specification, Revision 2.2, for transactions crossing the bridge. This chapter describes the ordering rules that control transaction forwarding across PI7C8154. 4.1 TRANSACTIONS GOVERNED BY ORDERING RULES Ordering relationships are established for the following classes of transactions crossing PI7C8154: Posted write transactions, comprised of memory write and memory write and invalidate transactions. Posted write transactions complete at the source before they complete at the destination; that is, data is written into intermediate data buffers before it reaches the target. Delayed write request transactions, comprised of I/O write and configuration write transactions. Delayed write requests are terminated by target retry on the initiator bus and are queued in the delayed transaction queue. A delayed write transaction must complete on the target bus before it completes on the initiator bus. Delayed write completion transactions, comprised of I/O write and configuration write transactions. Delayed write completion transactions complete on the target bus, and the target response is queued in the buffers. A delayed write completion transaction proceeds in the direction opposite that of the original delayed write request; that is, a delayed write completion transaction proceeds from the target bus to the initiator bus. Delayed read request transactions, comprised of all memory read, I/O read, and configuration read transactions. Delayed read requests are terminated by target retry on the initiator bus and are queued in the delayed transaction queue. Delayed read completion transactions, comprised of all memory read, I/O read, & configuration read transactions. Page 51 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Delayed read completion transactions complete on the target bus, and the read data is queued in the read data buffers. A delayed read completion transaction proceeds in the direction opposite that of the original delayed read request; that is, a delayed read completion transaction proceeds from the target bus to the initiator bus. PI7C8154 does not combine or merge write transactions: 4.2 ! PI7C8154 does not combine separate write transactions into a single write transaction—this optimization is best implemented in the originating master. ! PI7C8154 does not merge bytes on separate masked write transactions to the same DWORD address—this optimization is also best implemented in the originating master. ! PI7C8154 does not collapse sequential write transactions to the same address into a single write transaction—the PCI Local Bus Specification does not permit this combining of transactions. GENERAL ORDERING GUIDELINES Independent transactions on primary and secondary buses have a relationship only when those transactions cross PI7C8154. The following general ordering guidelines govern transactions crossing PI7C8154: 4.3 ! The ordering relationship of a transaction with respect to other transactions is determined when the transaction completes, that is, when a transaction ends with a termination other than target retry. ! Requests terminated with target retry can be accepted and completed in any order with respect to other transactions that have been terminated with target retry. If the order of completion of delayed requests is important, the initiator should not start a second delayed transaction until the first one has been completed. If more than one delayed transaction is initiated, the initiator should repeat all delayed transaction requests, using some fairness algorithm. Repeating a delayed transaction cannot be contingent on completion of another delayed transaction. Otherwise, a deadlock can occur. ! Write transactions flowing in one direction have no ordering requirements with respect to write transactions flowing in the other direction. PI7C8154 can accept posted write transactions on both interfaces at the same time, as well as initiate posted write transactions on both interfaces at the same time. ! The acceptance of a posted memory write transaction as a target can never be contingent on the completion of a non-locked, non-posted transaction as a master. This is true for PI7C8154 and must also be true for other bus agents. Otherwise, a deadlock can occur. ! PI7C8154 accepts posted write transactions, regardless of the state of completion of any delayed transactions being forwarded across PI7C8154. ORDERING RULES Page 52 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Table 4-1 shows the ordering relationships of all the transactions and refers by number to the ordering rules that follow. Table 4-1 SUMMARY OF TRANSACTION ORDERING Pass Posted Write Delayed Write Request Yes5 No No Yes Delayed Read Completion Delayed Write Completion No1 No2 No4 No3 Delayed Read Request Yes5 No No Yes Posted Write Delayed Read Request Delayed Write Request Delayed Read Completion Delayed Write Completion Yes5 Yes Yes No Yes5 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes No No Note: The superscript accompanying some of the table entries refers to any applicable ordering rule listed in this section. Many entries are not governed by these ordering rules; therefore, the implementation can choose whether or not the transactions pass each other. The entries without superscripts reflect the PI7C8154’s implementation choices. The following ordering rules describe the transaction relationships. Each ordering rule is followed by an explanation, and the ordering rules are referred to by number in Table 4-1. These ordering rules apply to posted write transactions, delayed write and read requests, and delayed write and read completion transactions crossing PI7C8154 in the same direction. Note that delayed completion transactions cross PI7C8154 in the direction opposite that of the corresponding delayed requests. 1. Posted write transactions must complete on the target bus in the order in which they were received on the initiator bus. The subsequent posted write transaction can be setting a flag that covers the data in the first posted write transaction; if the second transaction were to complete before the first transaction, a device checking the flag could subsequently consume stale data. 2. A delayed read request traveling in the same direction as a previously queued posted write transaction must push the posted write data ahead of it. The posted write transaction must complete on the target bus before the delayed read request can be attempted on the target bus. The read transaction can be to the same location as the write data, so if the read transaction were to pass the write transaction, it would return stale data. 3. A delayed read completion must ‘‘pull’’ ahead of previously queued posted write data traveling in the same direction. In this case, the read data is traveling in the same direction as the write data, and the initiator of the read transaction is on the same side of PI7C8154 as the target of the write transaction. The posted write transaction must complete to the target before the read data is returned to the initiator. The read transaction can be a reading to a status register of the initiator of the posted write data and therefore should not complete until the write transaction is complete. 4. Delayed write requests cannot pass previously queued posted write data. For posted memory write transactions, the delayed write transaction can set a flag that covers the data in the posted write transaction. If the delayed write request were to complete before the earlier posted write transaction, a device checking the flag could subsequently consume stale data. 5. Posted write transactions must be given opportunities to pass delayed read and write requests and completions. Otherwise, deadlocks may occur when some bridges which support delayed transactions and other bridges which do not support delayed transactions are Page 53 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION being used in the same system. A fairness algorithm is used to arbitrate between the posted write queue and the delayed transaction queue. 4.4 DATA SYNCHRONIZATION Data synchronization refers to the relationship between interrupt signaling and data delivery. The PCI Local Bus Specification, Revision 2.2, provides the following alternative methods for synchronizing data and interrupts: ! The device signaling the interrupt performs a read of the data just written (software). ! The device driver performs a read operation to any register in the interrupting device before accessing data written by the device (software). ! System hardware guarantees that write buffers are flushed before interrupts are forwarded. PI7C8154 does not have a hardware mechanism to guarantee data synchronization for posted write transactions. Therefore, all posted write transactions must be followed by a read operation, either from the device to the location just written (or some other location along the same path), or from the device driver to one of the device registers. 5 ERROR HANDLING PI7C8154 checks, forwards, and generates parity on both the primary and secondary interfaces. To maintain transparency, PI7C8154 always tries to forward the existing parity condition on one bus to the other bus, along with address and data. PI7C8154 always attempts to be transparent when reporting errors, but this is not always possible, given the presence of posted data and delayed transactions. To support error reporting on the PCI bus, PI7C8154 implements the following: ! PERR_L and SERR_L signals on both the primary and secondary interfaces ! Primary status and secondary status registers ! The device-specific P_SERR_L event disable register This chapter provides detailed information about how PI7C8154 handles errors. It also describes error status reporting and error operation disabling. 5.1 ADDRESS PARITY ERRORS PI7C8154 checks address parity for all transactions on both buses, for all address and all bus commands. When PI7C8154 detects an address parity error on the primary interface, the following events occur: ! If the parity error response bit is set in the command register, PI7C8154 does not claim the transaction with P_DEVSEL_L; this may allow the transaction to terminate in a Page 54 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION master abort. If parity error response bit is not set, PI7C8154 proceeds normally and accepts the transaction if it is directed to or across PI7C8154. 5.2 ! PI7C8154 sets the detected parity error bit in the status register. ! PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L and sets signaled system error bit in the status register, if both the following conditions are met: ! The SERR_L enable bit is set in the command register. ! The parity error response bit is set in the command register. ! When PI7C8154 detects an address parity error on the secondary interface, the following events occur: ! If the parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register, PI7C8154 does not claim the transaction with S_DEVSEL_L; this may allow the transaction to terminate in a master abort. If parity error response bit is not set, PI7C8154 proceeds normally and accepts transaction if it is directed to or across PI7C8154. ! PI7C8154 sets the detected parity error bit in the secondary status register. ! PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L and sets signaled system error bit in status register, if both of the following conditions are met: ! The SERR_L enable bit is set in the command register. ! The parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register. DATA PARITY ERRORS When forwarding transactions, PI7C8154 attempts to pass the data parity condition from one interface to the other unchanged, whenever possible, to allow the master and target devices to handle the error condition. The following sections describe, for each type of transaction, the sequence of events that occurs when a parity error is detected and the way in which the parity condition is forwarded across PI7C8154. 5.2.1 CONFIGURATION WRITE TRANSACTIONS TO CONFIGURATION SPACE When PI7C8154 detects a data parity error during a Type 0 configuration write transaction to PI7C8154 configuration space, the following events occur: If the parity error response bit is set in the command register, PI7C8154 asserts P_TRDY_L and writes the data to the configuration register. PI7C8154 also asserts P_PERR_L. If the parity error response bit is not set, PI7C8154 does not assert P_PERR_L. PI7C8154 sets the detected parity error bit in the status register, regardless of the state of the parity error response bit. Page 55 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 5.2.2 READ TRANSACTIONS When PI7C8154 detects a parity error during a read transaction, the target drives data and data parity, and the initiator checks parity and conditionally asserts PERR_L. For downstream transactions, when PI7C8154 detects a read data parity error on the secondary bus, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 asserts S_PERR_L two cycles following the data transfer, if the secondary interface parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register. ! PI7C8154 sets the detected parity error bit in the secondary status register. ! PI7C8154 sets the data parity detected bit in the secondary status register, if the secondary interface parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register. ! PI7C8154 forwards the bad parity with the data back to the initiator on the primary bus. If the data with the bad parity is pre-fetched and is not read by the initiator on the primary bus, the data is discarded and the data with bad parity is not returned to the initiator. ! PI7C8154 completes the transaction normally. For upstream transactions, when PI7C8154 detects a read data parity error on the primary bus, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 asserts P_PERR_L 2 cycles following the data transfer, if the primary interface parity error response bit is set in the command register. ! PI7C8154 sets the detected parity error bit in the primary status register. ! PI7C8154 sets the data parity detected bit in the primary status register, if the primary interface parity-error-response bit is set in the command register. ! PI7C8154 forwards the bad parity with the data back to the initiator on the secondary bus. If the data with the bad parity is pre-fetched and is not read by the initiator on the secondary bus, the data is discarded and the data with bad parity is not returned to the initiator. ! PI7C8154 completes the transaction normally. PI7C8154 returns to the initiator the data and parity that was received from the target. When the initiator detects a parity error on this read data and is enabled to report it, the initiator asserts PERR_L two cycles after the data transfer occurs. It is assumed that the initiator takes responsibility for handling a parity error condition; therefore, when PI7C8154 detects PERR_L asserted while returning read data to the initiator, PI7C8154 does not take any further action and completes the transaction normally. 5.2.3 DELAYED WRITE TRANSACTIONS Page 56 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION When PI7C8154 detects a data parity error during a delayed write transaction, the initiator drives data and data parity, and the target checks parity and conditionally asserts PERR_L. For delayed write transactions, a parity error can occur at the following times: ! During the original delayed write request transaction ! When the initiator repeats the delayed write request transaction ! When PI7C8154 completes the delayed write transaction to the target When a delayed write transaction is normally queued, the address, command, address parity, data, byte enable bits, and data parity are all captured and a target retry is returned to the initiator. When PI7C8154 detects a parity error on the write data for the initial delayed write request transaction, the following events occur: ! If the parity-error-response bit corresponding to the initiator bus is set, PI7C8154 asserts TRDY_L to the initiator and the transaction is not queued. If multiple data phases are requested, STOP_L is also asserted to cause a target disconnect. Two cycles after the data transfer, PI7C8154 also asserts PERR_L. ! If the parity-error-response bit is not set, PI7C8154 returns a target retry. It queues the transaction as usual. PI7C8154 does not assert PERR_L. In this case, the initiator repeats the transaction. ! PI7C8154 sets the detected-parity-error bit in the status register corresponding to the initiator bus, regardless of the state of the parity-error-response bit. Note: If parity checking is turned off and data parity errors have occurred for queued or subsequent delayed write transactions on the initiator bus, it is possible that the initiator’s reattempts of the write transaction may not match the original queued delayed write information contained in the delayed transaction queue. In this case, a master timeout condition may occur, possibly resulting in a system error (P_SERR_L assertion). For downstream transactions, when PI7C8154 is delivering data to the target on the secondary bus and S_PERR_L is asserted by the target, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 sets the secondary interface data parity detected bit in the secondary status register, if the secondary parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register. ! PI7C8154 captures the parity error condition to forward it back to the initiator on the primary bus. Similarly, for upstream transactions, when PI7C8154 is delivering data to the target on the primary bus and P_PERR_L is asserted by the target, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 sets the primary interface data-parity-detected bit in the status register, if the primary parity-error-response bit is set in the command register. ! PI7C8154 captures the parity error condition to forward it back to the initiator on the secondary bus. A delayed write transaction is completed on the initiator bus when the initiator repeats the write transaction with the same address, command, data, and byte enable bits as the delayed Page 57 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION write command that is at the head of the posted data queue. Note that the parity bit is not compared when determining whether the transaction matches those in the delayed transaction queues. Two cases must be considered: ! When parity error is detected on the initiator bus on a subsequent re-attempt of the transaction and was not detected on the target bus ! When parity error is forwarded back from the target bus For downstream delayed write transactions, when the parity error is detected on the initiator bus and PI7C8154 has write status to return, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 first asserts P_TRDY_L and then asserts P_PERR_L two cycles later, if the primary interface parity-error-response bit is set in the command register. ! PI7C8154 sets the primary interface parity-error-detected bit in the status register. ! Because there was not an exact data and parity match, the write status is not returned and the transaction remains in the queue. Similarly, for upstream delayed write transactions, when the parity error is detected on the initiator bus and PI7C8154 has write status to return, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 first asserts S_TRDY_L and then asserts S_PERR_L two cycles later; if the secondary interface parity-error-response bit is set in the bridge control register (offset 3Ch). ! PI7C8154 sets the secondary interface parity-error-detected bit in the secondary status register. ! Because there was not an exact data and parity match, the write status is not returned and the transaction remains in the queue. For downstream transactions, where the parity error is being passed back from the target bus and the parity error condition was not originally detected on the initiator bus, the following events occur: ! ! PI7C8154 asserts P_PERR_L two cycles after the data transfer, if the following are both true: ! The parity-error-response bit is set in the command register of the primary interface. ! The parity-error-response bit is set in the bridge control register of the secondary interface. PI7C8154 completes the transaction normally. For upstream transactions, when the parity error is being passed back from the target bus and the parity error condition was not originally detected on the initiator bus, the following events occur: Page 58 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! ! 5.2.4 PI7C8154 asserts S_PERR_L two cycles after the data transfer, if the following are both true: ! The parity error response bit is set in the command register of the primary interface. ! The parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register of the secondary interface. PI7C8154 completes the transaction normally. POSTED WRITE TRANSACTIONS During downstream posted write transactions, when PI7C8154 responds as a target, it detects a data parity error on the initiator (primary) bus and the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 asserts P_PERR_L two cycles after the data transfer, if the parity error response bit is set in the command register of primary interface. ! PI7C8154 sets the parity error detected bit in the status register of the primary interface. ! PI7C8154 captures and forwards the bad parity condition to the secondary bus. ! PI7C8154 completes the transaction normally. Similarly, during upstream posted write transactions, when PI7C8154 responds as a target, it detects a data parity error on the initiator (secondary) bus, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 asserts S_PERR_L two cycles after the data transfer, if the parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register of the secondary interface. ! PI7C8154 sets the parity error detected bit in the status register of the secondary interface. ! PI7C8154 captures and forwards the bad parity condition to the primary bus. ! PI7C8154 completes the transaction normally. During downstream write transactions, when a data parity error is reported on the target (secondary) bus by the target’s assertion of S_PERR_L, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 sets the data parity detected bit in the status register of secondary interface, if the parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register of the secondary interface. ! PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L and sets the signaled system error bit in the status register, if all the following conditions are met: ! The SERR_L enable bit is set in the command register. ! The posted write parity error bit of P_SERR_L event disable register is not set. Page 59 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! The parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register of the secondary interface. ! The parity error response bit is set in the command register of the primary interface. ! PI7C8154 has not detected the parity error on the primary (initiator) bus which the parity error is not forwarded from the primary bus to the secondary bus. During upstream write transactions, when a data parity error is reported on the target (primary) bus by the target’s assertion of P_PERR_L, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 sets the data parity detected bit in the status register, if the parity error response bit is set in the command register of the primary interface. ! PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L and sets the signaled system error bit in the status register, if all the following conditions are met: ! The SERR_L enable bit is set in the command register. ! The parity error response bit is set in the bridge control register of the secondary interface. ! The parity error response bit is set in the command register of the primary interface. ! PI7C8154 has not detected the parity error on the secondary (initiator) bus, which the parity error is not forwarded from the secondary bus to the primary bus. Assertion of P_SERR_L is used to signal the parity error condition when the initiator does not know that the error occurred. Because the data has already been delivered with no errors, there is no other way to signal this information back to the initiator. If the parity error has forwarded from the initiating bus to the target bus, P_SERR_L will not be asserted. 5.3 DATA PARITY ERROR REPORTING SUMMARY In the previous sections, the responses of PI7C8154 to data parity errors are presented according to the type of transaction in progress. This section organizes the responses of PI7C8154 to data parity errors according to the status bits that PI7C8154 sets and the signals that it asserts. Table 5-1 shows setting the detected parity error bit in the status register, corresponding to the primary interface. This bit is set when PI7C8154 detects a parity error on the primary interface. Table 5-1 SETTING THE PRIMARY INTERFACE DETECTED PARITY ERROR BIT (bit 31 of Offset 04h) Primary Detected Parity Error Bit Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected 0 0 1 0 Read Read Read Read Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary/ Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/x x/x x/x Page 60 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Primary Detected Parity Error Bit Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 X = don’t care Posted Write Posted Write Posted Write Posted Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary/ Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x Table 5-2 shows setting the detected parity error bit in the secondary status register, corresponding to the secondary interface. This bit is set when PI7C8154 detects a parity error on the secondary interface. Table 5-2 SETTING THE SECONDARY INTERFACE DETECTED PARITY ERROR BIT Secondary Detected Parity Error Bit Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 X = don’t care Read Read Read Read Posted Write Posted Write Posted Write Posted Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary/ Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x Table 5-3 shows setting data parity detected bit in the primary interface’s status register. This bit is set under the following conditions: ! PI7C8154 must be a master on the primary bus. ! The parity error response bit in the command register, corresponding to the primary interface, must be set. ! The P_PERR_L signal is detected asserted or a parity error is detected on the primary bus. Table 5-3 SETTING THE PRIMARY INTERFACE DATA PARITY DETECTED BIT (bit 24 of Offset 04h) Primary Parity Bit 0 0 1 0 Data Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected Read Read Read Read Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary / Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/x 1/x x/x Page 61 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Primary Parity Bit Data 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 X = don’t care Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected Posted Write Posted Write Posted Write Posted Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary / Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/x 1/x x/x x/x x/x 1/x x/x Table 5-4 shows setting the data parity detected bit in the status register of secondary interface. This bit is set under the following conditions: ! The PI7C8154 must be a master on the secondary bus. ! The parity error response bit must be set in the bridge control register of secondary interface. ! The S_PERR_L signal is detected asserted or a parity error is detected on the secondary bus. Table 5-4 SETTING THE SECONDARY INTERFACE DATA PARITY DETECTED BIT Secondary Detected Parity Detected Bit Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 X= don’t care Read Read Read Read Posted Write Posted Write Posted Write Posted Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Delayed Write Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Downstream Downstream Upstream Upstream Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Primary / Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/1 x/x x/x x/x x/1 x/x x/x x/x x/1 x/x x/x Table 5-5 shows assertion of P_PERR_L. This signal is set under the following conditions: ! PI7C8154 is either the target of a write transaction or the initiator of a read transaction on the primary bus. ! The parity-error-response bit must be set in the command register of primary interface. ! PI7C8154 detects a data parity error on the primary bus or detects S_PERR_L asserted during the completion phase of a downstream delayed write transaction on the target (secondary) bus. Page 62 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Table 5-5 ASSERTION OF P_PERR_L P_PERR_L Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected Primary/ Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/x 1/x x/x 1/x x/x x/x x/x 1/x 1/1 x/x x/x 1 (de-asserted) Read Downstream Primary 1 Read Downstream Secondary 0 (asserted) Read Upstream Primary 1 Read Upstream Secondary 0 Posted Write Downstream Primary 1 Posted Write Downstream Secondary 1 Posted Write Upstream Primary 1 Posted Write Upstream Secondary 0 Delayed Write Downstream Primary 02 Delayed Write Downstream Secondary 1 Delayed Write Upstream Primary 1 Delayed Write Upstream Secondary X = don’t care 2 The parity error was detected on the target (secondary) bus but not on the initiator (primary) bus. Table 5-6 shows assertion of S_PERR_L that is set under the following conditions: ! PI7C8154 is either the target of a write transaction or the initiator of a read transaction on the secondary bus. ! The parity error response bit must be set in the bridge control register of secondary interface. ! PI7C8154 detects a data parity error on the secondary bus or detects P_PERR_L asserted during the completion phase of an upstream delayed write transaction on the target (primary) bus. Table 5-6 ASSERTION OF S_PERR_L S_PERR# Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected Primary/ Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/1 x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x x/1 x/x x/x 1/1 x/1 1 (de-asserted) Read Downstream Primary 0 (asserted) Read Downstream Secondary 1 Read Upstream Primary 1 Read Upstream Secondary 1 Posted Write Downstream Primary 1 Posted Write Downstream Secondary 1 Posted Write Upstream Primary 0 Posted Write Upstream Secondary 1 Delayed Write Downstream Primary 1 Delayed Write Downstream Secondary 02 Delayed Write Upstream Primary 0 Delayed Write Upstream Secondary X = don’t care 2 The parity error was detected on the target (secondary) bus but not on the initiator (primary) bus. Table 5-7 shows assertion of P_SERR_L. This signal is set under the following conditions: ! PI7C8154 has detected P_PERR_L asserted on an upstream posted write transaction or S_PERR_L asserted on a downstream posted write transaction. ! PI7C8154 did not detect the parity error as a target of the posted write transaction. Page 63 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! The parity error response bit on the command register and the parity error response bit on the bridge control register must both be set. ! The SERR_L enable bit must be set in the command register. Table 5-7 ASSERTION OF P_SERR_L FOR DATA PARITY ERRORS P_SERR# Transaction Type Direction Bus Where Error Was Detected Primary / Secondary Parity Error Response Bits x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x 1/1 1/1 x/x x/x x/x x/x x/x 1 (de-asserted) Read Downstream Primary 1 Read Downstream Secondary 1 Read Upstream Primary 1 Read Upstream Secondary 1 Posted Write Downstream Primary 02 (asserted) Posted Write Downstream Secondary 03 Posted Write Upstream Primary 1 Posted Write Upstream Secondary 1 Delayed Write Downstream Primary 1 Delayed Write Downstream Secondary 1 Delayed Write Upstream Primary 1 Delayed Write Upstream Secondary X = don’t care 2 The parity error was detected on the target (secondary) bus but not on the initiator (primary) bus. 3 The parity error was detected on the target (primary) bus but not on the initiator (secondary) bus. 5.4 SYSTEM ERROR (SERR_L) REPORTING PI7C8154 uses the P_SERR_L signal to report conditionally a number of system error conditions in addition to the special case parity error conditions described in Section 5.2.3. Whenever assertion of P_SERR_L is discussed in this document, it is assumed that the following conditions apply: ! For PI7C8154 to assert P_SERR_L for any reason, the SERR_L enable bit must be set in the command register. ! Whenever PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L, PI7C8154 must also set the signaled system error bit in the status register. In compliance with the PCI-to-PCI Bridge Architecture Specification, PI7C8154 asserts P_SERR_L when it detects the secondary SERR_L input, S_SERR_L, asserted and the SERR_L forward enable bit is set in the bridge control register. In addition, PI7C8154 also sets the received system error bit in the secondary status register. PI7C8154 also conditionally asserts P_SERR_L for any of the following reasons: ! Target abort detected during posted write transaction ! Master abort detected during posted write transaction ! Posted write data discarded after 224 (default) attempts to deliver (224 target retries received) Page 64 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! Parity error reported on target bus during posted write transaction (see previous section) ! Delayed write data discarded after 224 (default) attempts to deliver (224 target retries received) ! Delayed read data cannot be transferred from target after 224 (default) attempts (224 target retries received) ! Master timeout on delayed transaction The device-specific P_SERR_L status register reports the reason for the assertion of P_SERR_L. Most of these events have additional device-specific disable bits in the P_SERR_L event disable register that make it possible to mask out P_SERR_L assertion for specific events. The master timeout condition has a SERR_L enable bit for that event in the bridge control register and therefore does not have a device-specific disable bit. 6 EXCLUSIVE ACCESS This chapter describes the use of the LOCK_L signal to implement exclusive access to a target for transactions that cross PI7C8154. 6.1 CONCURRENT LOCKS The primary and secondary bus lock mechanisms operate concurrently except when a locked transaction crosses PI7C8154. A primary master can lock a primary target without affecting the status of the lock on the secondary bus, and vice versa. This means that a primary master can lock a primary target at the same time that a secondary master locks a secondary target. 6.2 ACQUIRING EXCLUSIVE ACCESS ACROSS PI7C8154 For any PCI bus, before acquiring access to the LOCK_L signal and starting a series of locked transactions, the initiator must first check that both of the following conditions are met: ! The PCI bus must be idle. ! The LOCK_L signal must be de-asserted. The initiator leaves the LOCK_L signal de-asserted during the address phase and asserts LOCK_L one clock cycle later. Once a data transfer is completed from the target, the target lock has been achieved. 6.2.1 LOCKED TRANSACTIONS IN DOWNSTREAM DIRECTION Locked transactions can cross PI7C8154 only in the downstream direction, from the primary bus to the secondary bus. Page 65 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION When the target resides on another PCI bus, the master must acquire not only the lock on its own PCI bus but also the lock on every bus between its bus and the target’s bus. When PI7C8154 detects on the primary bus, an initial locked transaction intended for a target on the secondary bus, PI7C8154 samples the address, transaction type, byte enable bits, and parity, as described in Section 2.7.4. It also samples the lock signal. If there is a lock established between 2 ports or the target bus is already locked by another master, then the current lock cycle is retried without forward. Because a target retry is signaled to the initiator, the initiator must relinquish the lock on the primary bus, and therefore the lock is not yet established. The first locked transaction must be a memory read transaction. Subsequent locked transactions can be memory read or memory write transactions. Posted memory write transactions that are a part of the locked transaction sequence are still posted. Memory read transactions that are a part of the locked transaction sequence are not pre-fetched. When the locked delayed memory read request is queued, PI7C8154 does not queue any more transactions until the locked sequence is finished. PI7C8154 signals a target retry to all transactions initiated subsequent to the locked read transaction that are intended for targets on the other side of PI7C8154. PI7C8154 allows any transactions queued before the locked transaction to complete before initiating the locked transaction. When the locked delayed memory read request transaction moves to the head of the delayed transaction queue, PI7C8154 initiates the transaction as a locked read transaction by deasserting LOCK_L on the target bus during the first address phase, and by asserting LOCK_L one cycle later. If LOCK_L is already asserted (used by another initiator), PI7C8154 waits to request access to the secondary bus until LOCK_L is de-asserted when the target bus is idle. Note that the existing lock on the target bus could not have crossed PI7C8154. Otherwise, the pending queued locked transaction would not have been queued. When PI7C8154 is able to complete a data transfer with the locked read transaction, the lock is established on the secondary bus. When the initiator repeats the locked read transaction on the primary bus with the same address, transaction type, and byte enable bits, PI7C8154 transfers the read data back to the initiator, and the lock is then also established on the primary bus. For PI7C8154 to recognize and respond to the initiator, the initiator’s subsequent attempts of the read transaction must use the locked transaction sequence (de-assert LOCK_L during address phase, and assert LOCK_L one cycle later). If the LOCK_L sequence is not used in subsequent attempts, a master timeout condition may result. When a master timeout condition occurs, SERR_L is conditionally asserted (see Section 5.4), the read data and queued read transaction are discarded, and the LOCK_L signal is de-asserted on the target bus. Once the intended target has been locked, any subsequent locked transactions initiated on the initiator bus that are forwarded by PI7C8154 are driven as locked transactions on the target bus. The first transaction to establish LOCK_L must be Memory Read. If the first transaction is not Memory read, the following transactions behave accordingly: ! Type 0 Configuration Read/Write induces master abort ! Type 1 Configuration Read/Write induces master abort Page 66 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! I/O Read induces master abort ! I/O Write induces master abort ! Memory Write induces master abort When PI7C8154 receives a target abort or a master abort in response to the delayed locked read transaction, this status is passed back to the initiator, and no locks are established on either the target or the initiator bus. PI7C8154 resumes forwarding unlocked transactions in both directions. 6.2.2 LOCKED TRANSACTION IN UPSTREAM DIRECTION PI7C8154 ignores upstream lock and transactions. PI7C8154 will pass these transactions as normal transactions without lock established. 6.3 ENDING EXCLUSIVE ACCESS After the lock has been acquired on both initiator and target buses, PI7C8154 must maintain the lock on the target bus for any subsequent locked transactions until the initiator relinquishes the lock. The only time a target-retry causes the lock to be relinquished is on the first transaction of a locked sequence. On subsequent transactions in the sequence, the target retry has no effect on the status of the lock signal. An established target lock is maintained until the initiator relinquishes the lock. PI7C8154 does not know whether the current transaction is the last one in a sequence of locked transactions until the initiator de-asserts the LOCK_L signal at end of the transaction. When the last locked transaction is a delayed transaction, PI7C8154 has already completed the transaction on the target bus. In this example, as soon as PI7C8154 detects that the initiator has relinquished the LOCK_L signal by sampling it in the de-asserted state while FRAME_L is de-asserted, PI7C8154 de-asserts the LOCK_L signal on the target bus as soon as possible. Because of this behavior, LOCK_L may not be de-asserted until several cycles after the last locked transaction has been completed on the target bus. As soon as PI7C8154 has de-asserted LOCK_L to indicate the end of a sequence of locked transactions, it resumes forwarding unlocked transactions. When the last locked transaction is a posted write transaction, PI7C8154 de-asserts LOCK_L on the target bus at the end of the transaction because the lock was relinquished at the end of the write transaction on the initiator bus. When PI7C8154 receives a target abort or a master abort in response to a locked delayed transaction, PI7C8154 returns a target abort or a master abort when the initiator repeats the locked transaction. The initiator must then de-assert LOCK_L at the end of the transaction. PI7C8154 sets the appropriate status bits, flagging the abnormal target termination condition (see Section 2.11). Normal forwarding of unlocked posted and delayed transactions is resumed. Page 67 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION When PI7C8154 receives a target abort or a master abort in response to a locked posted write transaction, PI7C8154 cannot pass back that status to the initiator. PI7C8154 asserts SERR_L on the initiator bus when a target abort or a master abort is received during a locked posted write transaction, if the SERR_L enable bit is set in the command register. Signal SERR_L is asserted for the master abort condition if the master abort mode bit is set in the bridge control register (see Section 5.4). 7 PCI BUS ARBITRATION PI7C8154 must arbitrate for use of the primary bus when forwarding upstream transactions. Also, it must arbitrate for use of the secondary bus when forwarding downstream transactions. The arbiter for the primary bus resides external to PI7C8154, typically on the motherboard. For the secondary PCI bus, PI7C8154 implements an internal arbiter. This arbiter can be disabled, and an external arbiter can be used instead. This chapter describes primary and secondary bus arbitration. 7.1 PRIMARY PCI BUS ARBITRATION PI7C8154 implements a request output pin, P_REQ_L, and a grant input pin, P_GNT_L, for primary PCI bus arbitration. PI7C8154 asserts P_REQ_L when forwarding transactions upstream; that is, it acts as initiator on the primary PCI bus. As long as at least one pending transaction resides in the queues in the upstream direction, either posted write data or delayed transaction requests, PI7C8154 keeps P_REQ_L asserted. However, if a target retry, target disconnect, or a target abort is received in response to a transaction initiated by PI7C8154 on the primary PCI bus, PI7C8154 de-asserts P_REQ_L for two PCI clock cycles. For all cycles through the bridge, P_REQ_L is not asserted until the transaction request has been completely queued. When P_GNT_L is asserted LOW by the primary bus arbiter after PI7C8154 has asserted P_REQ_L, PI7C8154 initiates a transaction on the primary bus during the next PCI clock cycle. When P_GNT_L is asserted to PI7C8154 when P_REQ_L is not asserted, PI7C8154 parks P_AD, P_CBE, and P_PAR by driving them to valid logic levels. When the primary bus is parked at PI7C8154 and PI7C8154 has a transaction to initiate on the primary bus, PI7C8154 starts the transaction if P_GNT_L was asserted during the previous cycle. 7.2 SECONDARY PCI BUS ARBITRATION PI7C8154 implements an internal secondary PCI bus arbiter. This arbiter supports eight external masters on the secondary bus in addition to PI7C8154. The internal arbiter can be disabled, and an external arbiter can be used instead for secondary bus arbitration. 7.2.1 SECONDARY BUS ARBITRATION USING THE INTERNAL ARBITER To use the internal arbiter, the secondary bus arbiter enable pin, S_CFN_L, must be tied LOW. PI7C8154 has nine secondary bus request input pins, S_REQ_L[8:0], and has nine Page 68 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION secondary bus output grant pins, S_GNT_L[8:0], to support external secondary bus masters. The secondary bus request and grant signals are connected internally to the arbiter and are not brought out to external pins when S_CFN_L is LOW. The secondary arbiter supports a 2-sets programmable 2-level rotating algorithm with each set taking care of 4 requests / grants. Each set of masters can be assigned to a high priority group and a low priority group. The low priority group as a whole represents one entry in the high priority group; that is, if the high priority group consists of n masters, then in at least every n+1 transactions the highest priority is assigned to the low priority group. Priority rotates evenly among the low priority group. Therefore, members of the high priority group can be serviced n transactions out of n+1, while one member of the low priority group is serviced once every n+1 transactions. Figure 7-1shows an example of an internal arbiter where four masters, including PI7C8154, are in the high priority group, and five masters are in the low priority group. Using this example, if all requests are always asserted, the highest priority rotates among the masters in the following fashion (high priority members are given in italics, low priority members, in boldface type): B, m0, m1, m2, m3, B, m0, m1, m2, m4, B, m0, m1, m2, m5, B, m0, m1, m2, m6 and so on. Figure 7-1 SECONDARY ARBITER EXAMPLE m2 lpg m1 m0 m3 B lpg: B: Mx: m4 m8 low priority group PI7C8154 bus master number m5 m7 m6 Each bus master, including PI7C8154, can be configured to be in either the low priority group or the high priority group by setting the corresponding priority bit in the arbitercontrol register. The arbiter-control register is located at offset 40h. Each master has a corresponding bit. If the bit is set to 1, the master is assigned to the high priority group. If the bit is set to 0, the master is assigned to the low priority group. If all the masters are assigned to one group, the algorithm defaults to a straight rotating priority among all the masters. After reset, all external masters are assigned to the low priority group, and PI7C8154 is assigned to the high priority group. PI7C8154 receives highest priority on the target bus every other transaction, and priority rotates evenly among the other masters. Priorities are re-evaluated every time S_FRAME_L is asserted at the start of each new transaction on the secondary PCI bus. From this point until the time that the next transaction starts, the arbiter asserts the grant signal corresponding to the highest priority request that is asserted. If a grant for a particular request is asserted, and a higher priority request subsequently asserts, the arbiter de-asserts the asserted grant signal and asserts the grant corresponding to the new higher priority request on the next PCI clock cycle. When priorities are re-evaluated, the highest priority is assigned to the next highest priority master relative to the master that initiated the previous transaction. The master that initiated the last transaction now has the lowest priority in its group. Page 69 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION If PI7C8154 detects that an initiator has failed to assert S_FRAME_L after 16 cycles of both grant assertion and a secondary idle bus condition, the arbiter de-asserts the grant. To prevent bus contention, if the secondary PCI bus is idle, the arbiter never asserts one grant signal in the same PCI cycle in which it de-asserts another. It de-asserts one grant and asserts the next grant, no earlier than one PCI clock cycle later. If the secondary PCI bus is busy, that is, S_FRAME_L or S_IRDY_L is asserted, the arbiter can be de-asserted one grant and asserted another grant during the same PCI clock cycle. 7.2.2 PREEMPTION Preemption can be programmed to be either on or off, with the default to on (offset 4Ch, bit 31=0). Time-to-preempt can be programmed to 0, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, or 64 (default is 0) clocks. If the current master occupies the bus and other masters are waiting, the current master will be preempted by removing its grant (GNT_L) after the next master waits for the time-to-preempt. 7.2.3 SECONDARY BUS ARBITRATION USING AN EXTERNAL ARBITER The internal arbiter is disabled when the secondary bus central function control pin, S_CFN_L, is tied HIGH. An external arbiter must then be used. When S_CFN_L is tied HIGH, PI7C8154 reconfigures two pins to be external request and grant pins. The S_GNT_L[0] pin is reconfigured to be the external request pin because it’s an output. The S_REQ_L[0] pin is reconfigured to be the external grant pin because it’s an input. When an external arbiter is used, PI7C8154 uses the S_GNT_L[0] pin to request the secondary bus. When the reconfigured S_REQ_L[0] pin is asserted LOW after PI7C8154 has asserted S_GNT_L[0], PI7C8154 initiates a transaction on the secondary bus one cycle later. If grant is asserted and PI7C8154 has not asserted the request, PI7C8154 parks AD, CBE and PAR pins by driving them to valid logic levels. The unused secondary bus grant outputs, S_GNT_L[8:1] are driven HIGH. The unused secondary bus request inputs, S_REQ_L[8:1], should be pulled HIGH. 7.2.4 BUS PARKING Bus parking refers to driving the AD[31:0], CBE[3:0], and PAR lines to a known value while the bus is idle. In general, the device implementing the bus arbiter is responsible for parking the bus or assigning another device to park the bus. A device parks the bus when the bus is idle, its bus grant is asserted, and the device’s request is not asserted. The AD[31:0] and CBE[3:0] signals should be driven first, with the PAR signal driven one cycle later. The AD[63:32] and CBE[7:4] are not driven and need to be pulled up to a valid logic level through external resistors. PI7C8154 parks the primary bus only when P_GNT_L is asserted, P_REQ_L is de-asserted, and the primary PCI bus is idle. When P_GNT_L is de-asserted, PI7C8154 3-states the P_AD, P_CBE, and P_PAR signals on the next PCI clock cycle. If PI7C8154 is parking the Page 70 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION primary PCI bus and wants to initiate a transaction on that bus, then PI7C8154 can start the transaction on the next PCI clock cycle by asserting P_FRAME_L if P_GNT_L is still asserted. If the internal secondary bus arbiter is enabled, the secondary bus is always parked at the last master that used the PCI bus. That is, PI7C8154 keeps the secondary bus grant asserted to a particular master until a new secondary bus request comes along. After reset, PI7C8154 parks the secondary bus at itself until transactions start occurring on the secondary bus. Offset 48h, bit 1, can be set to 1 to park the secondary bus at PI7C8154. By default, offset 48h, bit 1, is set to 0. If the internal arbiter is disabled, PI7C8154 parks the secondary bus only when the reconfigured grant signal, S_REQ_L[0], is asserted and the secondary bus is idle. 8 GENERAL PURPOSE I/O INTERFACE The PI7C8154 implements a 4-pin general purpose I/O interface. During normal operation, device specific configuration registers control the GPIO interface. The GPIO interface can be used for the following functions: 8.1 ! During secondary interface reset, the GPIO interface can be used to shift in a 16-bit serial stream that serves as a secondary bus clock disable mask. ! Along with the GPIO[3] pin, a live insertion bit can be used to bring the PI7C8154 to a halt through hardware, permitting live insertion of option cards behind the PI7C8154. GPIO CONTROL REGISTERS During normal operation, the following device specific configuration registers control the GPIO interface: ! The GPIO output data register ! The GPIO output enable control register ! The GPIO input data register These registers consist of five 4-bit fields: ! Write-1-to-set output data field ! Write-1-to-clear output data field ! Write-1-to-set signal output enable control field ! Write-1-to-clear signal output enable control field ! Input data field The bottom four bits of the output enable fields control whether each GPIO signal is input only or bi-directional. Each signal is controlled independently by a bit in each output enable Page 71 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION control field. If a 1 is written to the write-1-to-set field, the corresponding pin is activated as an output. If a 1 is written to the write-1-to-clear field, the output driver is tri-stated, and the pin is then input only. Writing zeroes to these registers has no effect. The reset for these signals is input only. The input data field is read only and reflects the current value of the GPIO pins. A type 0 configuration read operation to this address is used to obtain the values of these pins. All pins can be read at any time, whether configured as input only or as bi-directional. The output data fields also use the write-1-to-set and write-1-to-clear mode. If a 1 is written to the write-1-to-set field and the pin is enabled as an output, the corresponding GPIO output is driven HIGH. If a 1 is written to the write-1-to-clear field and the pin is enabled as an output, the corresponding GPIO output is driven LOW. Writing zeros to these registers has no effect. The value written to the output register will be driven only when the GPIO signal is configured as bi-directional. A type 0 configuration write operation is used to program these fields. The rest value for the output is 0. 8.2 SECONDARY CLOCK CONTROL The PI7C8154 uses the GPIO pins and the MSK_IN signal to input a 16-bit serial data stream. This data stream is shifted into the secondary clock control register and is used for selectively disabling secondary clock outputs. The serial data stream is shifted in as soon as P_RESET_L is detected deasserted and the secondary reset signal, S_RESET_L, is detected asserted. The deassertion of S_RESET_L is delayed until the PI7C8154 completes shifting in the clock mask data, which takes 23 clock cycles. After that, the GPIO pins can be used as general-purpose I/O pins. An external shift register should be used to load and shift the data. The GPIO pins are used for shift register control and serial data input. Table 8-1 shows the operation of the GPIO pins. Table 8-1 GPIO OPERATION GPIO Pin Operation Shift register clock output at 33MHz max frequency Not used Shift register control 0: Load 1: Shift Not used GPIO[0] GPIO[1] GPIO[2] GPIO[3] The data is input through the dedicated input signal, MSK_IN. The shift register circuitry is not necessary for correct operation of PI7C8154. The shift register can be eliminated, and MSK_IN can be tied LOW to enable all secondary clock outputs or tied HIGH to force all secondary clock outputs HIGH. Table 8-2 shows the format of the serial stream. Table 8-2 GPIO SERIAL DATA FORMAT Bit [1:0] [3:2] Description Slot 0 PRSNT#[1:0] or device 0 Slot 1 PRSNT#[1:0] or device 1 S_CLKOUT 0 1 Page 72 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit [5:4] [7:6] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] Description Slot 2 PRSNT#[1:0] or device 2 Slot 3 PRSNT#[1:0] or device 3 Device 4 Device 5 Device 6 Device 7 Device 8 PI7C8154 S_CLKIN Reserved Reserved S_CLKOUT 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 NA NA The first 8 bits contain the PRSNT_L[1:0] signal values for four slots, and these bits control the S_CLKOUT[3:0] outputs. If one or both of the PRSNT_L[1:0] signals are 0, that indicates that a card is present in the slot and therefore the secondary clock for that slot is not masked. If these clocks are connected to devices and not to slots, one or both of the bits should be tied low to enable the clock. The next 5 bits are the clock mask for devices; each bit enables or disables the clock for one device. These bits control the S_CLKOUT[8:4] outputs: 0 enables the clock, and 1 disables the clock. Bit 13 is the clock enable bit for S_CLKOUT[9], which is connected to PI7C8154’s S_CLKIN input. If desired, the assignment of S_CLKOUT outputs to slots, devices, and PI7C8154’s S_CLKIN input can be rearranged from the assignment shown here. However, it is important that the serial data stream format match the assignment of S_CLKOUT. The 8 least significant bits are connected to the PRSNT_L pins for the slots. The next 5 bits are tied high to disable their respective secondary clocks because those clocks are not connected to anything. The next bit is tied LOW because that secondary clock output is connected to the PI7C8154 S_CLKIN input. When the secondary reset signal, S_RESET_L, is detected asserted and the primary reset signal, P_RESET_L, is detected deasserted, PI7C8154 drives GPIO[2] LOW for one cycle to load the clock mask inputs into the shift register. On the next cycle, PI7C8154 drives GPIO[2] HIGH to perform a shift operation. This shifts the clock mask into MSK_IN; the most significant bit is shifted in first, and the least significant bit is shifted in last. After the shift operation is complete, PI7C8154 tri-states the GPIO signals and deasserts S_RESET_L. PI7C8154 then ignores MSK_IN. Control of the GPIO signal now reverts to PI7C8154 GPIO control registers. The clock disable mask can be modified subsequently through a configuration write command to the secondary clock control register in devicespecific configuration space. 8.3 LIVE INSERTION The GPIO[3] pin can be used, along with a live insertion mode bit, to disable transaction forwarding. To enable live insertion mode, the live insertion mode bit in the chip control register must be set to 1, and the output enable control for GPIO[3] must be set to input only in the GPIO output enable control register. When live insertion mode is enabled, whenever GPIO[3] is driven to a value of 1, the I/O enable, the memory enable, and the master enable bits are Page 73 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION internally masked to 0. This means that, as a target, PI7C8154 no longer accepts any I/O or memory transactions, on either interface. When read, the register bits still reflect the value originally written by a configuration write command; when GPIO[3] is deasserted, the internal enable bits return to their original value (as they appear when read from the command register). When this mode is enabled, as a master, PI7C8154 completes any posted write or delayed request transactions that have already been queued. Delayed completion transactions are not returned to the master in this mode because PI7C8154 is not responding to any I/O or memory transactions during this time. PI7C8154 continues to accept Type 0 configuration transactions in live insertion mode. Once live insertion mode brings PI7C8154 to a halt and queued transactions are completed, the secondary reset bit in the bridge control register can be used to assert S_RESET_L, if desired, to reset and tri-state secondary bus devices, and to enable any live insertion hardware. 9 CLOCKS This chapter provides information about the clocks. 9.1 PRIMARY AND SECONDARY CLOCK INPUTS PI7C8154 implements a primary clock input for the PCI interface. The primary interface is synchronized to the primary clock input, P_CLK, and the secondary interface is synchronized to the secondary clock. The secondary clock operates at either the same frequency as the primary clock or at half of the frequency of the primary clock. PI7C8154 operates at a maximum frequency of 66 MHz. 9.2 SECONDARY CLOCK OUTPUTS PI7C8154 has 10 secondary clock outputs, S_CLKOUT[9:0] that can be used as clock inputs for up to nine external secondary bus devices. The S_CLKOUT[9:0] outputs are derived from P_CLK. The secondary clock edges are delayed from P_CLK edges by a minimum of 0ns. These are the rules for using secondary clocks: 10 ! Each secondary clock output is limited to no more than one load. ! One of the secondary clocks must be used for the S_CLKIN. PCI POWER MANAGEMENT PI7C8154 incorporates functionality that meets the requirements of the PCI Power Management Specification, Revision 1.0. These features include: ! PCI Power Management registers using the Enhanced Capabilities Port (ECP) address mechanism ! Support for D0, D3HOT and D3COLD power management states Page 74 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION ! Support for D0, D1, D2, D3HOT, and D3COLD power management states for devices behind the bridge ! Support of the B2 secondary bus power state when in the D3HOT power management state Table 10-1 shows the states and related actions that PI7C8154 performs during power management transitions. (No other transactions are permitted.) Table 10-1 POWER MANAGEMENT TRANSITIONS Current Status D0 Next State D3COLD D0 D3HOT D0 D2 D0 D1 D3HOT D0 D3COLD D3COLD D3COLD D0 Action Power has been removed from PI7C8154. A power-up reset must be performed to bring PI7C8154 to D0. If enabled to do so by the BPCCE pin, PI7C8154 will disable the secondary clocks and drive them LOW. Unimplemented. PI7C8154 will ignore the write to the power state bits. Power state will remain at D0. Unimplemented. PI7C8154 will ignore the write to the power state bits. Power state will remain at D0. PI7C8154 enables secondary clock outputs and performs an internal chip reset. Signal S_RST_L will not be asserted. All registers will be returned to the reset values and buffers will be cleared. Power has been removed from PI7C8154. A power-up reset must be performed to bring PI7C8154 to D0. Power-up reset. PI7C8154 performs the standard power-up reset functions as described in Section 11. PME_L signals are routed from downstream devices around PCI-to-PCI bridges. PME_L signals do not pass through PCI-to-PCI bridges. 11 RESET This chapter describes the primary interface, secondary interface, and chip reset mechanisms. 11.1 PRIMARY INTERFACE RESET PI7C8154 has a reset input, P_RESET_L. When P_RESET_L is asserted, the following events occur: ! PI7C8154 immediately tri-states all primary PCI interface signals. S_AD[31:0] and S_CBE[3:0] are driven LOW on the secondary interface and other control signals are tri-stated. ! PI7C8154 performs a chip reset. ! Registers that have default values are reset. ! PI7C8154 samples P_REQ64_L to determine whether the 64-bit extension is enabled on the primary. Page 75 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION P_RESET_L asserting and de-asserting edges can be asynchronous to P_CLK and S_CLKOUT. PI7C8154 is not accessible during P_RESET_L. After P_RESET_L is deasserted, PI7C8154 remains inaccessible for 16 PCI clocks before the first configuration transaction can be accepted. 11.2 SECONDARY INTERFACE RESET PI7C8154 is responsible for driving the secondary bus reset signals, S_RESET_L. PI7C8154 asserts S_RESET_L when any of the following conditions are met: Signal P_RESET_L is asserted. Signal S_RESET_L remains asserted as long as P_RESET_L is asserted and does not de-assert until P_RESET_L is de-asserted. The secondary reset bit in the bridge control register is set. Signal S_RESET_L remains asserted until a configuration write operation clears the secondary reset bit. The chip reset bit in the diagnostic control register is set. S_RESET_L remains asserted until a configuration write operation clears the secondary reset bit. The S_RESET_L in asserting and de-asserting edges can be asynchronous to P_CLK. When S_RESET_L is asserted, all secondary PCI interface control signals, including the secondary grant outputs, are immediately tri-stated. Signals S_AD[31:0], S_CBE[3:0], S_PAR are driven low for the duration of S_RESET_L assertion. S_REQ64_L is asserted LOW to indicate 64-bit extension support on the secondary. All posted write and delayed transaction data buffers are reset. Therefore, any transactions residing inside the buffers at the time of secondary reset are discarded. When S_RESET_L is asserted by means of the secondary reset bit, PI7C8154 remains accessible during secondary interface reset and continues to respond to accesses to its configuration space from the primary interface. 11.3 CHIP RESET The chip reset bit in the diagnostic control register can be used to reset the PI7C8154 and the secondary bus. When the chip reset bit is set, all registers and chip state are reset and all signals are tristated. S_RESET_L is asserted and the secondary reset bit is automatically set. S_RESET_L remains asserted until a configuration write operation clears the secondary reset bit. Within 20 PCI clock cycles after completion of the configuration write operation, PI7C8154’s reset bit automatically clears and PI7C8154 is ready for configuration. During reset, PI7C8154 is inaccessible. 12 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS PCI configuration defines a 64 DWORD space to define various attributes of PI7C8154 as shown below. Page 76 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1 CONFIGURATION REGISTER Table 12-1 CONFIGURATION SPACE MAP 31-24 23-16 15-8 7-0 Device ID Primary Status Vendor ID Primary Command Class Code Revision ID Reserved Header Type Primary Latency Timer Cache Line Size Reserved Reserved Secondary Latency Subordinate Bus Secondary Bus Primary Bus Number Timer Number Number Secondary Status I/O Limit Address I/O Base Address Memory Limit Address Memory Base Address Prefetchable Memory Limit Address Prefetchable Memory Base Address Prefetchable Memory Base Address Upper 32-bit Prefetchable Memory Limit Address Upper 32-bit I/O Limit Address Upper 16-bit I/O Base Address Upper 16-bit Reserved Capability Pointer Reserved Bridge Control Interrupt Reserved Arbiter Control Diagnostic / Chip Control Reserved Reserved Extended Chip Control Secondary Bus Arbiter Preemption Control 18h 1Ch 20h 24h 28h 2Ch 30h 34h 38h 3Ch 40h 44h 48h Reserved 4Ch Upstream Memory Limit Address Upstream Memory Base Address Upstream Memory Base Address Upper 32-bits Upstream Memory Limit Address Upper 32-bit Reserved GPIO Data and Control P_SERR_L Event Disable Reserved P_SERR_L Status Secondary Clock Control Reserved Reserved Port Option Retry Counter Reserved Primary Master Timeout Counter Secondary Master Timeout Counter Reserved Chassis Number Slot Number Next Pointer Capability ID Reserved Power Management Capabilities Next Item Pointer Capability ID Data PPB Support Extensions Power Management Data Reserved 12.1.1 DWORD Address 00h 04h 08h 0Ch 10h 14h 50h 54h 58h 5Ch – 60h 64h 68h 6Ch - 70h 74h 78h 7Ch 80h 84h – ACh B0h B4h – D8h DCh E0h E4h - EFh SIGNAL TYPES Signal Type R/O R/W R/WC R/WR R/WS Description Read Only Read / Write Read / Write 1 to Clear Read / Write 1 to Reset (about 20 clocks) Read / Write 1 to Set Page 77 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.2 VENDOR ID REGISTER – OFFSET 00h Bit 15:0 12.1.3 Type R/O Description Identifies Pericom as vendor of this device. Hardwired as 12D8h. DEVICE ID REGISTER – OFFSET 00h Bit 31:16 12.1.4 Function Vendor ID Function Device ID Type R/O Description Identifies this device as the PI7C8154. Hardwired as 8154h. COMMAND REGISTER – OFFSET 04h Bit Function Type 0 I/O Space Enable R/W Description Controls response to I/O access on the primary interface 0: ignore I/O transactions on the primary interface 1: enable response to I/O transactions on the primary interface Reset to 0 Controls response to memory accesses on the primary interface 1 Memory Space Enable 0: ignore memory transactions on the primary interface R/W 1: enable response to memory transactions on the primary interface Reset to 0 Controls ability to operate as a bus master on the primary interface 2 3 4 Bus Master Enable Special Cycle Enable Memory Write And Invalidate Enable 0: do not initiate memory or I/O transactions on the primary interface and disable response to memory and I/O transactions on the secondary interface R/W 1: enables PI7C8154 to operate as a master on the primary interfaces for memory and I/O transactions forwarded from the secondary interface Reset to 0 No special cycles defined. Bit is defined as read only and returns 0 when read PI7C8154 does not generate Memory Write and Invalidate except forwarding a transaction for another master. Bit is implemented as read only and returns 0 when read. Controls response to VGA compatible palette accesses R/O R/O 0: ignore VGA palette accesses on the primary 5 VGA Palette Snoop Enable 6 Parity Error Response R/W 1: enable positive decoding response to VGA palette writes on the primary interface with I/O address bits AD[9:0] equal to 3C6h, 3C8h, and 3C9h (inclusive of ISA alias; AD[15:10] are not decoded and may be any value) Controls response to parity errors 0: 7C8152 may ignore any parity errors that it detects and continue normal operation R/W 1: 7C8152 must take its normal action when a parity error is detected Reset to 0 Page 78 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit Function Type 7 Wait Cycle Control R/O Description Controls the ability to perform address / data stepping 0: disable address/data stepping (affects primary and secondary) 1: enable address/data stepping (affects primary and secondary) Reset to 0 Controls the enable for the P_SERR_L pin 8 P_SERR_L enable 0: disable the P_SERR_L driver R/W 1: enable the P_SERR_L driver Reset to 0 Controls 7C8152’s ability to generate fast back-to-back transactions to different devices on the primary interface. 9 Fast Back-toBack Enable R/W 0: no fast back-to-back transactions 1: enable fast back-to-back transactions 15:10 12.1.5 Reserved Reset to 0 Returns 000000 when read R/O STATUS REGISTER – OFFSET 04h Bit 19:16 20 Function Reserved Capabilities List Type R/O R/O 21 66MHz Capable R/O 22 23 Reserved Fast Back-toBack Capable R/O R/O 24 Data Parity Error Detected R/WC 26:25 DEVSEL_L timing R/O Description Reset to 0 Set to 1 to enable support for the capability list (offset 34h is the pointer to the data structure) Reset to 1 Set to 1 to enable 66MHz operation on the primary interface Reset to 1 Reset to 0 Set to 1 to indicate PI7C8154 is capable of decoding fast back-toback transactions on the primary interface to different targets Reset to 1 Set to 1 when P_PERR_L is asserted and bit 6 of command register is set Reset to 0 DEVSEL_L timing (medium decoding) 00: fast DEVSEL_L decoding 01: medium DEVSEL_L decoding 10: slow DEVSEL_L decoding 11: reserved 27 Signaled Target Abort R/WC 28 Received Target Abort R/WC Reset to 01 Set to 1 (by a target device) whenever a target abort cycle occurs Reset to 0 Set to 1 (by a master device) whenever transactions are terminated with target aborts Reset to 0 Page 79 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit 29 Function Received Master Abort Type R/WC 30 Signaled System Error R/WC 31 Detected Parity Error R/WC Description Set to 1 (by a master) when transactions are terminated with Master Abort Reset to 0 Set to 1 when P_SERR_L is asserted Reset to 0 Set to 1 when address or data parity error is detected on the primary interface Reset to 0 12.1.6 REVISION ID REGISTER – OFFSET 08h Bit 7:0 12.1.7 Type R/O Description Indicates revision number of device. Hardwired to 01h CLASS CODE REGISTER – OFFSET 08h Bit 15:8 23:16 31:24 12.1.8 Function Revision Function Programming Interface Sub-Class Code Base Class Code Type R/O R/O R/O Description Read as 0 to indicate no programming interfaces have been defined for PCI-to-PCI bridges Read as 04h to indicate device is PCI-to-PCI bridge Read as 06h to indicate device is a bridge device CACHE LINE SIZE REGISTER – OFFSET 0Ch Bit 7:0 Function Cache Line Size Type R/W Description Designates the cache line size for the system and is used when terminating memory write and invalidate transactions and when prefetching memory read transactions. Only cache line sizes (in units of 4-byte) which are a power of two are valid (only one bit can be set in this register; only 00h, 01h, 02h, 04h, 08h, and 10h are valid values). Reset to 0 12.1.9 PRIMARY LATENCY TIMER REGISTER – OFFSET 0Ch Bit 15:8 Function Primary Latency timer Type R/W Description This register sets the value for the Master Latency Timer, which starts counting when the master asserts FRAME_L. Reset to 0 12.1.10 HEADER TYPE REGISTER – OFFSET 0Ch Bit 23:16 Function Header Type Type R/O Description Read as 01h to indicate that the register layout conforms to the standard PCI-to-PCI bridge layout. Page 80 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.11 PRIMARY BUS NUMBER REGISTSER – OFFSET 18h Bit 7:0 Function Primary Bus Number Type R/W Description Indicates the number of the PCI bus to which the primary interface is connected. The value is set in software during configuration. Reset to 0 12.1.12 SECONDARY BUS NUMBER REGISTER – OFFSET 18h Bit 15:8 Function Secondary Bus Number Type R/W Description Indicates the number of the PCI bus to which the secondary interface is connected. The value is set in software during configuration. Reset to 0 12.1.13 SUBORDINATE BUS NUMBER REGISTER – OFFSET 18h Bit 23:16 Function Subordinate Bus Number Type R/W Description Indicates the number of the PCI bus with the highest number that is subordinate to the bridge. The value is set in software during configuration. Reset to 0 12.1.14 SECONDARY LATENCY TIMER REGISTER – OFFSET 18h Bit 31:24 Function Secondary Latency Timer Type R/W Description Designated in units of PCI bus clocks. Latency timer checks for master accesses on the secondary bus interfaces that remain unclaimed by any target. Reset to 0 12.1.15 I/O BASE ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 1Ch Bit 3:0 7:4 Function 32-bit Indicator I/O Base Address [15:12] Type R/O R/W Description Read as 01h to indicate 32-bit I/O addressing Defines the bottom address of the I/O address range for the bridge to determine when to forward I/O transactions from one interface to the other. The upper 4 bits correspond to address bits [15:12] and are writable. The lower 12 bits corresponding to address bits [11:0] are assumed to be 0. The upper 16 bits corresponding to address bits [31:16] are defined in the I/O base address upper 16 bits address register Reset to 0 12.1.16 I/O LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 1Ch Bit 11:8 Function 32-bit Indicator Type R/O Description Read as 01h to indicate 32-bit I/O addressing Page 81 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit 15:12 Function I/O Limit Address [15:12] Type R/W Description Defines the top address of the I/O address range for the bridge to determine when to forward I/O transactions from one interface to the other. The upper 4 bits correspond to address bits [15:12] and are writable. The lower 12 bits corresponding to address bits [11:0] are assumed to be FFFh. The upper 16 bits corresponding to address bits [31:16] are defined in the I/O limit address upper 16 bits address register Reset to 0 12.1.17 SECONDARY STATUS REGISTER – OFFSET 1Ch Bit 20:16 21 Function Reserved 66MHz Capable Type R/O R/O 22 Reserved R/O 23 Fast Back-toBack Capable R/O 24 Data Parity Error Detected Description Reset to 0 Set to 1 to enable 66MHz operation on the secondary interface Reset to 1 Reset to 0 Set to 1 to indicate PI7C8154 is capable of decoding fast back-toback transactions on the secondary interface to different targets R/WC Reset to 1 Set to 1 when S_PERR_L is asserted and bit 6 of command register is set Reset to 0 DEVSEL_L timing (medium decoding) 26:25 27 28 29 30 31 DEVSEL_L timing Signaled Target Abort Received Target Abort Received Master Abort 00: fast DEVSEL_L decoding 01: medium DEVSEL_L decoding 10: slow DEVSEL_L decoding 11: reserved R/O R/WC Reset to 01 Set to 1 (by a target device) whenever a target abort cycle occurs on its secondary interface Reset to 0 R/WC R/WC Set to 1 (by a master device) whenever transactions on its secondary interface are terminated with target abort Reset to 0 Set to 1 (by a master) when transactions on its secondary interface are terminated with Master Abort Reset to 0 Set to 1 when S_SERR_L is asserted Received System Error R/WC Detected Parity Error R/WC Reset to 0 Set to 1 when address or data parity error is detected on the secondary interface Reset to 0 12.1.18 MEMORY BASE ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 20h Bit Function Type Description Page 82 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit 3:0 Function Reserved Type R/O 15:4 Memory Base Address [15:4] R/W Description Lower four bits of register are read only and return 0. Reset to 0 Defines the bottom address of an address range for the bridge to determine when to forward memory transactions from one interface to the other. The upper 12 bits correspond to address bits [31:20] and are writable. The lower 20 bits corresponding to address bits [19:0] are assumed to be 0. Reset to 0 12.1.19 12.1.20 MEMORY LIMIT REGISTER – OFFSET 20h Bit 19:16 Function Reserved Type R/O 31:20 Memory Limit Address [31:20] R/W Description Lower four bits of register are read only and return 0. Reset to 0 Defines the top address of an address range for the bridge to determine when to forward memory transactions from one interface to the other. The upper 12 bits correspond to address bits [31:20] and are writable. The lower 20 bits corresponding to address bits [19:0] are assumed to be FFFFFh. PEFETCHABLE MEMORY BASE ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 24h Bit 3:0 Function 64-bit addressing Type R/O Description Indicates 64-bit addressing 0000: 32-bit addressing 0001: 64-bit addressing 15:4 12.1.21 Prefetchable Memory Base Address [31:20] R/W Reset to 1 Defines the bottom address of an address range for the bridge to determine when to forward memory read and write transactions from one interface to the other. The upper 12 bits correspond to address bits [31:20] and are writable. The lower 20 bits are assumed to be 0. PREFETCHABLE MEMORY LIMIT ADDRESS REGISTER – OFFSET 24h Bit 19:16 Function 64-bit addressing Type R/O Description Indicates 64-bit addressing 0000: 32-bit addressing 0001: 64-bit addressing 31:20 Prefetchable Memory Limit Address [31:20] R/W Reset to 1 Defines the top address of an address range for the bridge to determine when to forward memory read and write transactions from one interface to the other. The upper 12 bits correspond to address bits [31:20] and are writable. The lower 20 bits are assumed to be FFFFFh. Page 83 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.22 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY BASE ADDRESS UPPER 32-BITS REGISTER – OFFSET 28h Bit 31:0 Function Prefetchable Memory Base Address, Upper 32-bits [63:32] Type R/W Description Defines the upper 32-bits of a 64-bit bottom address of an address range for the bridge to determine when to forward memory read and write transactions from one interface to the other. Reset to 0 12.1.23 PREFETCHABLE MEMORY LIMIT ADDRESS UPPER 32-BITS REGISTER – OFFSET 2Ch Bit 31:0 Function Prefetchable Memory Limit Address, Upper 32-bits [63:32] Type R/W Description Defines the upper 32-bits of a 64-bit top address of an address range for the bridge to determine when to forward memory read and write transactions from one interface to the other. Reset to 0 12.1.24 I/O BASE ADDRESS UPPER 16-BITS REGISTER – OFFSET 30h Bit 15:0 Function I/O Base Address, Upper 16-bits [31:16] Type R/W Description Defines the upper 16-bits of a 32-bit bottom address of an address range for the bridge to determine when to forward I/O transactions from one interface to the other. Reset to 0 12.1.25 I/O LIMIT ADDRESS UPPER 16-BITS REGISTER – OFFSET 30h Bit 31:16 Function I/O Limit Address, Upper 16-bits [31:16] Type R/W Description Defines the upper 16-bits of a 32-bit top address of an address range for the bridge to determine when to forward I/O transactions from one interface to the other. Reset to 0 12.1.26 ECP POINTER REGISTER – OFFSET 34h Bit 7:0 Function Enhanced Capabilities Port Pointer Type R/O Description Enhanced capabilities port offset pointer. Read as DCh to indicate that the first item resides at that configuration offset. Page 84 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.27 INTERRUPT LINE REGISTER – OFFSET 3Ch Bit 7:0 12.1.28 Type R/W Description For POST to program to FFh, indicating that the PI7C8154 does not implement an interrupt pin. INTERRUPT PIN REGISTER – OFFSET 3Ch Bit 15:8 12.1.29 Function Interrupt Line Function Interrupt Pin Type R/O Description Interrupt pin not supported on the PI7C8154 BRIDGE CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 3Ch Bit 16 Function Parity Error Response Type R/W Description Controls the bridge’s response to parity errors on the secondary interface. 0: ignore address and data parity errors on the secondary interface 1: enable parity error reporting and detection on the secondary interface 17 S_SERR_L enable R/W Reset to 0 Controls the forwarding of S_SERR_L to the primary interface. 0: disable the forwarding of S_SERR_L to primary interface 1: enable the forwarding of S_SERR_L to primary interface 18 ISA enable R/W Reset to 0 Modifies the bridge’s response to ISA I/O addresses, applying only to those addresses falling within the I/O base and limit address registers and within the first 64KB of PCI I/O space. 0: forward all I/O addresses in the range defined by the I/O base and I/O limit registers 1: blocks forwarding of ISA I/O addresses in the range defined by the I/O base and I/O limit registers that are in the first 64KB of I/O space that address the last 768 bytes in each 1KB block. Secondary I/O transactions are forwarded upstream if the address falls within the last 768 bytes in each 1KB block 19 VGA enable R/W Reset to 0 Controls the bridge’s response to VGA compatible addresses. 0: does not forward VGA compatible memory and I/O addresses from primary to secondary 1: forward VGA compatible memory and I/O addresses from primary to secondary regardless of other settings 20 Reserved R/O Reset to 0 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0 Page 85 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit 21 Function Master Abort Mode Type R/W Description Control’s bridge’s behavior responding to master aborts on secondary interface. 0: does not report master aborts (returns FFFF_FFFFh on reads and discards data on writes) 1: reports master aborts by signaling target abort if possible or by the assertion of P_SERR_L if enabled 22 Secondary Interface Reset R/W Reset to 0 Controls the assertion of S_RESET_L signal pin on the secondary interface 0: does not force the assertion of S_RESET_L pin 1: forces the assertion of S_RESET_L 23 Fast Back-toBack Enable R/W Reset to 0 Controls bridge’s ability to generate fast back-to-back transactions on the secondary interface. 0: does not allow fast back-to-back transactions on the secondary 1: enables fast back-to-back transactions on the secondary 24 Primary Master Timeout R/W Reset to 0 Determines the maximum number of PCI clock cycles the PI7C8154 waits for an initiator on the primary interface to repeat a delayed transaction request. 0: Primary discard timer counts 215 PCI clock cycles. 1: Primary discard timer counts 210 PCI clock cycles. 25 Secondary Master Timeout R/W Reset to 0 Determines the maximum number of PCI clock cycles the PI7C8154 waits for an initiator on the primary interface to repeat a delayed transaction request. 0: Primary discard timer counts 215 PCI clock cycles. 1: Primary discard timer counts 210 PCI clock cycles. 26 Master Timeout Status R/WC Reset to 0 This bit is set to 1 when either the primary master timeout counter or secondary master timeout counter expires. 27 Discard Timer P_SERR_L enable R/W Reset to 0 This bit is set to 1 and P_SERR_L is asserted when either the primary discard timer or the secondary discard timer expire. 0: P_SERR_L is not asserted on the primary interface as a result of the expiration of either the Primary Discard Timer or the Secondary Discard Timer. 1: P_SERR_L is asserted on the primary interface as a result of the expiration of either the Primary Discard Timer or the Secondary Discard Timer. 31-28 Reserved R/O Reset to 0 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0. Page 86 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.30 DIAGNOSTIC / CHIP CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 40h Bit 0 1 Function Reserved Memory Write Disconnect Control Type R/O R/W Description Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0 Controls when the bridge (as a target) disconnects memory write transactions. 0: memory write disconnects at 4KB aligned address boundary 1: memory write disconnects at cache line aligned address boundary 3:2 4 Reserved Secondary Bus Prefetch Disable R/O R/W Reset to 0 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0. Controls the bridge’s ability to prefetch during upstream memory read transactions 0: PI7C8154 prefetches and does not forward byte enable bits during upstream memory read transactions. 1: PI7C8154 requests only 1 DWORD from the target and forwards read byte enable bits during upstream memory reads. 5 Live Insertion Mode R/W Reset to 0 Enables control of transaction forwarding 0: GPIO[3] has no effect on the I/O, memory, and master enable bits 1: If GPIO[3] is set to input only, this bit enables GPIO[3] to mask the I/O enable, memory enable, and master enable bits to 0. These bits are masked when GPIO[3] is driven HIGH. As a result, PI7C8154 stops accepting I/O and memory transactions. 7:6 8 Reserved Chip Reset R/O R/WR Reset to 0 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0 Controls the chip and secondary bus reset. 0: PI7C8154 is ready for operation 10:9 Test Mode For All Counters at Primary and Secondary R/O 1: Causes PI7C8154 to perform a chip reset Controls the testability of the bridge’s internal counters. The bits are used for chip test only. 00: all 32-bits of PMWQ_TIMEOUT_COUNTER, DTR_TIMEOUT_COUNTER and all 16-bits of DTC_TIMEOUT are exercised. 01: byte 1 of PMWQ_TIMEOUT_COUNTER, DTR_TIMEOUT_COUNTER and byte 1 of DTC_TIMEOUT are exercised. 10: byte 2 of PMWQ_TIMEOUT_COUNTER, DTR_TIMEOUT_COUNTER is exercised. 11: byte 3 of PMWQ_TIMEOUT_COUNTER, DTR_TIMEOUT_COUNTER is exercised. 15:11 Reserved R/O Reset to 00 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0. Page 87 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.31 ARBITER CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 40h Bit 24:16 Function Arbiter Control Type R/W Description Each bit controls whether a secondary bus master is assigned to the high priority group or the low priority group. Bits [24:16] correspond to request inputs S_REQ[8:0] 0: low priority 1: high priority 25 Priority of Secondary Interface R/W Reset to 0 Controls whether the secondary interface of the bridge is in the high priority group or the low priority group. 0: low priority 1: high priority 31:26 12.1.32 Reserved Reset to 1 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0. R/O EXTENDED CHIP CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 48h Bit Function Type 0 Memory Read Flow Through Disable R/W Description Controls ability to do memory read flow through 0: Enable flow through during a memory read transaction 1: Disables flow through during a memory read transaction Reset to 0 Controls bus arbiter’s park function 0: Park to last master 1 Park R/W 1: Park to the bridge 15:2 Reserved R/O Reset to 0 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0 Page 88 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.33 SECONDARY BUS ARBITER PREEMPTION CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 4Ch Bit Function Type Description Controls the number of clock cycles after frame is asserted before preemption is enabled. 1xxx: Preemption off 0000: Preemption enabled after 0 clock cycles after FRAME asserted 0001: Preemption enabled after 1 clock cycle after FRAME asserted 31:28 Secondary bus arbiter preemption contorl 0010: Preemption enabled after 2 clock cycles after FRAME asserted R/W 0011: Preemption enabled after 4 clock cycles after FRAME asserted 0100: Preemption enabled after 8 clock cycles after FRAME asserted 0101: Preemption enabled after 16 clock cycles after FRAME asserted 0110: Preemption enabled after 32 clock cycles after FRAME asserted 0111: Preemption enabled after 64 clock cycles after FRAME asserted 12.1.34 P_SERR_L EVENT DISABLE REGISTER – OFFSET 64h Bit 0 Function Reserved Type R/O 1 Posted Write Parity Error R/W Description Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0 Controls PI7C8154’s ability to assert P_SERR_L when it is unable to transfer any read data from the target after 224 attempts. 0: P_SERR_L is asserted if this event occurs and the SERR_L enable bit in the command register is set. 1: P_SERR_L is not asserted if this event occurs. Reset to 0 Controls PI7C8154’s ability to assert P_SERR_L when it is unable to transfer delayed write data after 224 attempts. 2 Posted Write Non-Delivery R/W 0: P_SERR_L is asserted if this event occurs and the SERR_L enable bit in the command register is set 1: P_SERR_L is not asserted if this event occurs Reset to 0 Controls PI7C8154’s ability to assert P_SERR_L when it receives a target abort when attempting to deliver posted write data. 3 Target Abort During Posted Write R/W 0: P_SERR_L is asserted if this event occurs and the SERR_L enable bit in the command register is set 1: P_SERR_L is not asserted if this event occurs Reset to 0 Page 89 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit Function Type 4 Master Abort On Posted Write R/W Description Controls PI7C8154’s ability to assert P_SERR_L when it receives a master abort when attempting to deliver posted write data. 0: P_SERR_L is asserted if this event occurs and the SERR_L enable bit in the command register is set 1: P_SERR_L is not asserted if this event occurs Reset to 0 Controls PI7C8154’s ability to assert P_SERR_L when it is unable to transfer delayed write data after 224 attempts. 5 Delayed Write Non-Delivery R/W 0: P_SERR_L is asserted if this event occurs and the SERR_L enable bit in the command register is set 1: P_SERR_L is not asserted if this event occurs Reset to 0 Controls PI7C8154’s ability to assert P_SERR_L when it is unable to transfer any read data from the target after 224 attempts. 6 Delayed Read – No Data From Target R/W 0: P_SERR_L is asserted if this event occurs and the SERR_L enable bit in the command register is set 1: P_SERR_L is not asserted if this event occurs 7 12.1.35 Reserved Reset to 0 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0 R/O GPIO DATA REGISTER – OFFSET 64h Bit Function Type 11:8 GPIO output write-1-to-clear R/WC 15:12 GPIO output write-1-to-set R/WS Description Setting any of these bits to 1 drives the corresponding bits LOW on the GPIO[3:0] bus if it is programmed as bi-directional. Data is driven on the PCI clock cycle following completion of the configuration write to this register. The bit positions corresponding to the GPIO pins that are programmed as input only are not driven. Writing 0 to theses bits has no effect and will return the last written value when read. Bits [11:8] correspond to GPIO [3:0]. Reset to 0 Setting any of these bits to 1 drives the corresponding bits HIGH on the GPIO[3:0] bus if it is programmed as bi-directional. Data is driven on the PCI clock cycle following completion of the configuration write to this register. The bit positions corresponding to the GPIO pins that are programmed as input only are not driven. Writing 0 to theses bits has no effect and will return the last written value when read. Bits [15:12] correspond to GPIO [3:0]. Reset to 0 12.1.36 GPIO CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 64h Bit Function Type 19:16 GPIO output enable write-1to-clear R/WC Description Setting any of these bits to 1 configures the corresponding bits on the GPIO[3:0] bus as input only. As a result, the output driver is tristated. Writing 0 to theses bits has no effect and will return the last written value when read. Bits [19:16] correspond to GPIO [3:0]. Reset to 0 Page 90 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit Function Type 23:20 GPIO output enable write-1to-set R/WS Description Setting any of these bits to 1 configures the corresponding bits on the GPIO[3:0] bus as bi-directional; the output driver is enabled and drives the value set in the output data register (offset 65h). Writing 0 to theses bits has no effect and will return the last written value when read. Bits [23:20] correspond to GPIO [3:0]. Reset to 0 12.1.37 SECONDARY CLOCK CONTROL REGISTER – OFFSET 68h Bit Function Type 1:0 S_CLKOUT[0] disable R/W Description S_CLKOUT[0] (slot 0) Enable 00: 01: 10: 11: enable S_CLKOUT[0] enable S_CLKOUT[0] enable S_CLKOUT[0] disable S_CLKOUT[0] and driven HIGH Reset to 00 S_CLKOUT[1] (slot 1) Enable 3:2 S_CLKOUT[1] disable R/W 00: 01: 10: 11: enable S_CLKOUT[1] enable S_CLKOUT[1] enable S_CLKOUT[1] disable S_CLKOUT[1] and driven HIGH Reset to 00 S_CLKOUT[2] (slot 2) Enable 5:4 S_CLKOUT[2] disable R/W 00: 01: 10: 11: enable S_CLKOUT[2] enable S_CLKOUT[2] enable S_CLKOUT[2] disable S_CLKOUT[2] and driven HIGH Reset to 00 S_CLKOUT[3] (slot 3) Enable 7:6 S_CLKOUT[3] disable R/W 00: 01: 10: 11: enable S_CLKOUT[3] enable S_CLKOUT[3] enable S_CLKOUT[3] disable S_CLKOUT[3] and driven HIGH Reset to 00 S_CLKOUT[4] (device 1) Enable 8 S_CLKOUT[4] disable R/W 0: enable S_CLKOUT[4] 1: disable S_CLKOUT[4] and driven HIGH Reset to 0 S_CLKOUT[5] (device 2) Enable 9 S_CLKOUT[5] disable R/W 0: enable S_CLKOUT[5] 1: disable S_CLKOUT[5] and driven HIGH Reset to 0 S_CLKOUT[6] (device 3) Enable 10 S_CLKOUT[6] disable R/W 0: enable S_CLKOUT[6] 1: disable S_CLKOUT[6] and driven HIGH Reset to 0 Page 91 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Bit Function Type 11 S_CLKOUT[7] disable R/W Description S_CLKOUT[7] (device 4) Enable 0: enable S_CLKOUT[7] 1: disable S_CLKOUT[7] and driven HIGH Reset to 0 S_CLKOUT[8] (device 5) Enable 12 S_CLKOUT[8] disable R/W 0: enable S_CLKOUT[8] 1: disable S_CLKOUT[8] and driven HIGH Reset to 0 S_CLKOUT[9] (PI7C8154) Enable 0: enable S_CLKOUT[4] 1: disable S_CLKOUT[4] and driven HIGH 12.1.38 13 S_CLKOUT[9] disable R/W 15:14 Reserved RO This bit is initialized upon secondary reset by shifting in a serial data stream. The bit is assigned to correspond to the PI7C8154 secondary clock input (S_CLKIN). Reset to 0 Reserved. Reset to 1 P_SERR_L STATUS REGISTER – OFFSET 68h Bit Function Type 16 Address Parity Error R/WC 17 18 Posted Write Data Parity Error Posted Write Non-delivery R/WC R/WC 19 Target Abort during Posted Write R/WC 20 Master Abort during Posted Write R/WC Delayed Write Non-delivery R/WC 21 22 Delayed Read – No Data from Target R/WC 23 Delayed Transaction Master Timeout R/WC Description 1: Signal P_SERR_L was asserted because an address parity error was detected on P or S bus. Reset to 0 1: Signal P_SERR_L was asserted because a posted write data parity error was detected on the target bus. Reset to 0 1: Signal P_SERR_L was asserted because the bridge was unable to deliver post memory write data to the target after 224 attempts. Reset to 0 1: Signal P_SERR_L was asserted because the bridge received a target abort when delivering post memory write data. Reset to 0. 1: Signal P_SERR_L was asserted because the bridge received a master abort when attempting to deliver post memory write data Reset to 0. 1: Signal P_SERR_L was asserted because the bridge was unable to deliver delayed write data after 224 attempts. Reset to 0 1: Signal P_SERR_L was asserted because the bridge was unable to read any data from the target after 224 attempts. Reset to 0. 1: Signal P_SERR_L was asserted because a master did not repeat a read or write transaction before master timeout. Reset to 0. Page 92 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.39 PORT OPTION REGISTER – OFFSET 74h Bit 0 Function Reserved 1 Primary Memory Read Command Alias Enable 2 3 4 8:5 9 Type R/O R/W Reset to 0 Reserved R/W Secondary Memory Read Command Alias Enable R/W Enable Long Request 0: exact matching for non-posted memory write retry cycles from initiator on the primary interface 1: alias MEMRL or MEMRM to MEMR for memory read retry cycles from the initiator on the primary interface Primary Memory Write Command Alias Enable Secondary Memory Write Command Alias Enable Reserved Description Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0. Controls PI7C8154’s detection mechanism for matching memory read retry cycles from the initiator on the primary interface Reset to 0 Controls PI7C8154’s detection mechanism for matching memory read retry cycles from the initiator on the secondary 0: exact matching for memory read retry cycles from initiator on the secondary interface 1: alias MEMRL or MEMRM to MEMR for memory read retry cycles from initiator on the secondary interface Reset to 0 Reserved R/W R/O Reset to 0 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0. Controls PI7C8154’s ability to enable long requests for lock cycles 0: normal lock operation R/W 1: enable long request for lock cycle Reset to 0 Control’s PI7C8154’s ability to enable the secondary bus to hold requests longer. 10 Enable Secondary To Hold Request Longer R/W 0: internal secondary master will release REQ_L after FRAME_L assertion 1: internal secondary master will hold REQ_L until there is no transactions pending in FIFO or until terminated by target Reset to 1 Control’s PI7C8154’s ability to hold requests longer at the Primary Port. 11 15:12 Enable Primary To Hold Request Longer R/W Reserved R/O 0: internal Primary master will release REQ_L after FRAME_L assertion 1: internal Primary master will hold REQ_L until there is no transactions pending in FIFO or until terminated by target Reset to 1 Reserved. Returns 0 when read. Reset to 0. Page 93 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.40 12.1.41 RETRY COUNTER REGISTER – OFFSET 78h Bit Function Type 31:0 Retry Counter R/W Description Holds the maximum number of attempts that PI7C8154 will try before reporting retry timeout. Retry count set at 224 PCI clocks. Default is 0100 0000h. PRIMARY MASTER TIMEOUT COUNTER – OFFSET 80h Bit Function Type 15:0 Primary Timeout R/W Description Primary timeout occurs after 215 PCI clocks. Reset to 8000h. 12.1.42 12.1.43 SECONDARY MASTER TIMEOUT COUNTER – OFFSET 82h Bit Function Type 31:16 Secondary Timeout R/W 7:0 Function Enhanced Capabilities ID Type R/O Description Read as 01h to indicate that these are power management enhanced capability registers. NEXT ITEM POINTER REGISTER – OFFSET DDh Bit 15:8 12.1.45 Reset to 8000h. CAPABILITY ID REGISTER – OFFSET DCh Bit 12.1.44 Description Secondary timeout occurs after 215 PCI clocks. Function Next Item Pointer Type R/O Description Read as B0h. Points to slot number register. POWER MANAGEMENT CAPABILITIES REGISTER – OFFSET DEh Bit 19 Function Power Management Revision PME_L Clock R/O 20 Auxiliary Power R/O 18:16 21 24:22 25 26 31:27 Device Specific Initialization Reserved D1 Power State Support D2 Power State Support PME_L Support Type R/O R/O R/O R/O R/O R/O Description Read as 001 to indicate the device is compliant to Revision 1.0 of PCI Power Management Interface Specifications. Read as 0 to indicate PI7C8154 does not support the PME_L pin. Read as 0 to indicate PI7C8154 does not support the PME_L pin or an auxiliary power source. Read as 0 to indicate PI7C8154 does not have device specific initialization requirements. Read as 0 Read as 0 to indicate PI7C8154 does not support the D1 power management state. Read as 0 to indicate PI7C8154 does not support the D2 power management state. Read as 0 to indicate PI7C8154 does not support the PME_L pin. Page 94 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 12.1.46 POWER MANAGEMENT DATA REGISTER – OFFSET E0h Bit Function Type 1:0 Power State R/W Description Indicates the current power state of PI7C8154. If an unimplemented power state is written to this register, PI7C8154 completes the write transaction, ignores the write data, and does not change the value of the field. Writing a value of D0 when the previous state was D3 cause a chip reset without asserting S_RESET_L 00: D0 state 01: D1 state (not implemented) 10: D2 state (not implemented) 11: D3 state 7:2 8 12:9 14:13 15 12.1.47 12.1.48 Reserved PME_L Enable Data Select Data Scale PME status Reset to 0 Read as 0 Read as 0 as PI7C8154 does not support the PME_L pin. Read as 0 as the data register is not implemented. Read as 0 as the data register is not implemented. Read as 0 as the PME_L pin is not implemented. R/O R/O R/O R/O R/O PPB SUPPORT EXTENSIONS REGISTER – OFFSET E2h Bit 21:16 Function Reserved Type R/O 22 B2_B3 R/O 23 Bus Power/Clock Control Enable R/O Description Reserved. Reset to 0 B2_B3 Support for D3HOT: When BPCCE is read as 1, this bit is driven as a logic level 1 to indicate that the secondary bus clock outputs will be stopped and driven LOW when the device is placed in D3HOT. This bit is undefined when BPCCE is read as 0. Bus Power / Clock Control Enable: When the BPCCE pin is tied HIGH, this bit is read as a 1 to indicate that the bus power/clock control mechanism is enabled. When the BPCCE pin is tied LOW, this bit is read as a 0 to indicate that the bus power / clock control mechanism is disabled. DATA REGISTER – OFFSET E3h Bit Function Type 31:24 Data R/O Description Data Register: Register is not implemented and is read as 00h. Reset to 0. 13 BRIDGE BEHAVIOR A PCI cycle is initiated by asserting the FRAME_L signal. In a bridge, there are a number of possibilities. Those possibilities are summarized in the table below: Page 95 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 13.1 BRIDGE ACTIONS FOR VARIOUS CYCLE TYPES Initiator Master on Primary Target Target on Primary Master on Primary Target on Secondary Master on Primary Target not on Primary nor Secondary Port Target on the same Secondary Port Target on Primary or the other Secondary Port Master on Secondary Master on Secondary Master on Secondary Target not on Primary nor the other Secondary Port Response PI7C8154 does not respond. It detects this situation by decoding the address as well as monitoring the P_DEVSEL_L for other fast and medium devices on the Primary Port. PI7C8154 asserts P_DEVSEL_L, terminates the cycle normally if it is able to be posted, otherwise return with a retry. It then passes the cycle to the appropriate port. When the cycle is complete on the target port, it will wait for the initiator to repeat the same cycle and end with normal termination. PI7C8154 does not respond and the cycle will terminate as master abort. PI7C8154 does not respond. PI7C8154 asserts S_DEVSEL_L, terminates the cycle normally if it is able to be posted, otherwise returns with a retry. It then passes the cycle to the appropriate port. When cycle is complete on the target port, it will wait for the initiator to repeat the same cycle and end with normal termination. PI7C8154 does not respond. 13.2 ABNORMAL TERMINATION (INITIATED BY BRIDGE MASTER) 13.2.1 MASTER ABORT Master abort indicates that when PI7C8154 acts as a master and receives no response (i.e., no target asserts DEVSEL_L or S_DEVSEL_L) from a target, the bridge deasserts FRAME_L and then de-asserts IRDY_L. 13.2.2 PARITY AND ERROR REPORTING Parity must be checked for all addresses and write data. Parity is defined on the P_PAR, P_PAR64, S_PAR, and S_PAR64 signals. Parity should be even (i. e. an even number of‘1’s) across AD, CBE, and PAR. Parity information on PAR is valid the cycle after AD and CBE are valid. For reads, even parity must be generated using the initiators CBE signals combined with the read data. Again, the PAR signal corresponds to read data from the previous data phase cycle. Page 96 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 13.2.3 REPORTING PARITY ERRORS For all address phases, if a parity error is detected, the error should be reported on the P_SERR_L signal by asserting P_SERR_L for one cycle and then tri-stating two cycles after the bad address. P_SERR_L can only be asserted if bit 6 and 8 in the Command Register are both set to 1. For write data phases, a parity error should be reported by asserting the P_PERR_L signal two cycles after the data phase and should remain asserted for one cycle when bit 6 in the Command register is set to a 1. The target reports any type of data parity errors during write cycles, while the master reports data parity errors during read cycles. Detection of an address parity error will cause the PCI-to-PCI Bridge target to not claim the bus (P_DEVSEL_L remains inactive) and the cycle will then terminate with a Master Abort. When the bridge is acting as master, a data parity error during a read cycle results in the bridge master initiating a Master Abort. 13.2.4 SECONDARY IDSEL MAPPING When PI7C8154 detects a Type 1 configuration transaction for a device connected to the secondary, it translates the Type 1 transaction to Type 0 transaction on the downstream interface. Type 1 configuration format uses a 5-bit field at P_AD[15:11] as a device number. This is translated to S_AD[31:16] by PI7C8154. 14 IEEE 1149.1 COMPATIBLE JTAG CONTROLLER An IEEE 1149.1 compatible Test Access Port (TAP) controller and associated TAP pins are provided to support boundary scan in PI7C8154 for board-level continuity test and diagnostics. The TAP pins assigned are TCK, TDI, TDO, TMS and TRST_L. All digital input, output, input/output pins are tested except TAP pins. The IEEE 1149.1 Test Logic consists of a TAP controller, an instruction register, and a group of test data registers including Bypass and Boundary Scan registers. The TAP controller is a synchronous 16-state machine driven by the Test Clock (TCK) and the Test Mode Select (TMS) pins. An independent power on reset circuit is provided to ensure the machine is in TEST_LOGIC_RESET state at power-up. The JTAG signal lines are not active when the PCI resource is operating PCI bus cycles. PI7C8154 implements 3 basic instructions: BYPASS, SAMPLE/PRELOAD, and EXTEST. 14.1 BOUNDARY SCAN ARCHITECTURE Boundary-scan test logic consists of a boundary-scan register and support logic. These are accessed through a Test Access Port (TAP). The TAP provides a simple serial interface that allows all processor signal pins to be driven and/or sampled, thereby providing direct control and monitoring of processor pins at the system level. This mode of operation is valuable for design debugging and fault diagnosis since it permits examination of connections not normally accessible to the test system. The following subsections describe the boundary-scan test logic elements: TAP pins, instruction register, Page 97 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION test data registers and TAP controller. Figure 14-1 illustrates how these pieces fit together to form the JTAG unit. Figure 14-1 TEST ACCESS PORT BLOCK DIAGRAM 14.1.1 TAP PINS The PI7C8154’s TAP pins form a serial port composed of four input connections (TMS, TCK, TRST_L and TDI) and one output connection (TDO). These pins are described in Table 14-1. The TAP pins provide access to the instruction register and the test data registers. 14.1.2 INSTRUCTION REGISTER The Instruction Register (IR) holds instruction codes. These codes are shifted in through the Test Data Input (TDI) pin. The instruction codes are used to select the specific test operation to be performed and the test data register to be accessed. The instruction register is a parallel-loadable, master/slave-configured 5-bit wide, serial-shift register with latched outputs. Data is shifted into and out of the IR serially through the TDI pin clocked by the rising edge of TCK. The shifted-in instruction becomes active upon latching from the master stage to the slave stage. At that time the IR outputs along with the TAP finite state machine outputs are decoded to select and control the test data register selected by that instruction. Upon latching, all actions caused by any previous instructions terminate. The instruction determines the test to be performed, the test data register to be accessed, or both. The IR is two bits wide. When the IR is selected, the most significant bit is connected to TDI, and the least significant bit is connected to TDO. The value presented on the TDI pin is shifted into the IR on each rising edge of TCK. The TAP controller captures fixed parallel data (1101 binary). When a new instruction is shifted in through TDI, the value 1101(binary) Page 98 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION is always shifted out through TDO, least significant bit first. This helps identify instructions in a long chain of serial data from several devices. Upon activation of the TRST_L reset pin, the latched instruction asynchronously changes to the id code instruction. When the TAP controller moves into the test state other than by reset activation, the opcode changes as TDI shifts, and becomes active on the falling edge of TCK. 14.2 BOUNDARY SCAN INSTRUCTION SET The PI7C8154 supports three mandatory boundary-scan instructions (BYPASS, SAMPLE and EXTEST). Table 14-1 shown below lists the PI7C8154’s boundary-scan instruction codes. Table 14-1 TAP PINS Instruction Requisite EXTEST IEEE 1149.1 Required 14.3 / Opcode (binary) Description 00000 EXTEST initiates testing of external circuitry, typically boardlevel interconnects and off chip circuitry. EXTEST connects the boundary-scan register between TDI and TDO. When EXTEST is selected, all output signal pin values are driven by values shifted into the boundary-scan register and may change only of the falling edge of TCK. Also, when EXTEST is selected, all system input pin states must be loaded into the boundary-scan register on the rising-edge of TCK. SAMPLE performs two functions: ! A snapshot of the sample instruction is captured on the rising edge of TCK without interfering with normal operation. The instruction causes boundary-scan register cells associated with outputs to sample the value being driven. ! On the falling edge of TCK, the data held in the boundaryscan cells is transferred to the slave register cells. Typically, the slave latched data is applied to the system outputs via the EXTEST instruction. Enable internal SCAN test CLAMP instruction allows the state of the signals driven from component pins to be determined from the boundary-scan register while the bypass register is selected as the serial path between TDI and TDO. The signal driven from the component pins will not change while the CLAMP instruction is selected. BYPASS instruction selects the one-bit bypass register between TDI and TDO pins. 0 (binary) is the only instruction that accesses the bypass register. While this instruction is in effect, all other test data registers have no effect on system operation. Test data registers with both test and system functionality performs their system functions when this instruction is selected. SAMPLE IEEE 1149.1 Required 0001 INTSCAN CLAMP 00010 00100 BYPASS 11111 TAP TEST DATA REGISTERS The PI7C8154 contains two test data registers (bypass and boundary-scan). Each test data register selected by the TAP controller is connected serially between TDI and TDO. TDI is connected to the test data register’s most significant bit. TDO is connected to the least significant bit. Data is shifted one bit position within the register towards TDO on each rising edge of TCK. While any register is selected, data is transferred from TDI to TDO without inversion. The following sections describe each of the test data registers. Page 99 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 14.4 BYPASS REGISTER The required bypass register, a one-bit shift register, provides the shortest path between TDI and TDO when a bypass instruction is in effect. This allows rapid movement of test data to and from other components on the board. This path can be selected when no test operation is being performed on the PI7C8154. 14.5 BOUNDARY-SCAN REGISTER The boundary-scan register contains a cell for each pin as well as control cells for I/O and the high-impedance pin. Table 14-2 shows the bit order of the PI7C8154 boundary-scan register. All table cells that contain “Control” select the direction of bi-directional pins or high-impedance output pins. When a “1” is loaded into the control cell, the associated pin(s) are high-impedance or selected as output. The boundary-scan register is a required set of serial-shiftable register cells, configured in master/slave stages and connected between each of the PI7C8154’s pins and on-chip system logic. The VDD, GND, and JTAG pins are NOT in the boundary-scan chain. The boundary-scan register cells are dedicated logic and do not have any system function. Data may be loaded into the boundary-scan register master cells from the device input pins and output pin-drivers in parallel by the mandatory SAMPLE and EXTEST instructions. Parallel loading takes place on the rising edge of TCK. Data may be scanned into the boundary-scan register serially via the TDI serial input pin, clocked by the rising edge of TCK. When the required data has been loaded into the mastercell stages, it can be driven into the system logic at input pins or onto the output pins on the falling edge of TCK state. Data may also be shifted out of the boundary-scan register by means of the TDO serial output pin at the falling edge of TCK. 14.6 TAP CONTROLLER The TAP (Test Access Port) controller is a 4-state synchronous finite state machine that controls the sequence of test logic operations. The TAP can be controlled via a bus master. The bus master can be either automatic test equipment or a component (i.e., PLD) that interfaces to the TAP. The TAP controller changes state only in response to a rising edge of TCK. The value of the test mode state (TMS) input signal at a rising edge of TCK controls the sequence of state changes. The TAP controller is initialized after power-up by applying a low to the TRST_L pin. In addition, the TAP controller can be initialized by applying a high signal level on the TMS input for a minimum of five TCK periods. For greater detail on the behavior of the TAP controller, test logic in each controller state and the state machine and public instructions, refer to the IEEE 1149.1 Standard Test Access Port and Boundary-Scan Architecture document (available from the IEEE). Page 100 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Table 14-2 JTAG BOUNDARY REGISTER ORDER Boundary-Scan Register Number 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 Pin Name Ball Location Type S_PAR64 S_AD[32] S_AD[33] S_AD[34] S_AD[35] S_AD[36] S_AD[37] S_AD[38] S_AD[39] S_AD[40] S_AD[41] S_AD[42] S_AD[43] S_AD[44] S_AD[45] S_AD[46] S_AD[47] S_AD[48] S_AD[49] S_AD[50] S_AD[51] S_AD[52] S_AD[53] S_AD[54] S_AD[55] S_AD[56] S_AD[57] S_AD[58] S_AD[59] S_AD[60] S_AD[61] S_AD[62] S_AD[63] S_CBE[4] S_CBE[5] S_CBE[6] S_CBE[7] S_REQ64_L S_ACK64_L S_AD[0] S_AD[1] S_AD[2] S_AD[3] S_AD[4] S_AD[5] S_AD[6] S_AD[7] S_CBE[0] S_AD[8] S_AD[9] S_M66EN S_AD[10] S_AD[11] S_AD[12] S_AD[13] S_AD[14] S_AD[15] S_CBE[1] * S_PAR N21 M21 M23 M22 L22 L21 L23 K21 K22 K23 J22 J20 J23 H21 H22 H23 G21 G22 G20 F22 F23 F21 E23 E21 D22 E20 D21 C22 C23 C21 D20 A21 C20 D19 A20 C19 A19 B19 C18 A18 B18 A17 D17 B17 C17 B16 C16 A15 B15 C15 A14 B14 C14 D13 A13 B13 C13 C12 BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR CONTROL BIDIR B12 Page 101 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Boundary-Scan Register Number 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 Pin Name Ball Location Type S_SERR_L S_PERR_L S_LOCK_L S_STOP_L S_DEVSEL_L S_TRDY_L S_IRDY_L * S_FRAME_L S_CBE[2] S_AD[16] S_AD[17] S_AD[18] S_AD[19] S_AD[20] S_AD[21] S_AD[22] S_AD[23] S_CBE[3] S_AD[24] S_AD[25] S_AD[26] S_AD[27] S_AD[28] S_AD[29] S_AD[30] * S_AD[31] S_REQ_L[0] S_REQ_L[1] S_REQ_L[2] S_REQ_L[3] S_REQ_L[4] S_REQ_L[5] S_REQ_L[6] S_REQ_L[7] S_REQ_L[8] S_GNT_L[0] S_GNT_L[1] S_GNT_L[2] S_GNT_L[3] * S_GNT_L[4] S_GNT_L[5] S_GNT_L[6] S_GNT_L[7] S_GNT_L[8] S_RESET_L S_CLKIN S_CFN_L GPIO[3] GPIO[2] GPIO[1] GPIO[0] S_CLKOUT[0] * S_CLKOUT[1] S_CLKOUT[2] S_CLKOUT[3] S_CLKOUT[4] S_CLKOUT[5] S_CLKOUT[6] B11 C11 A11 C10 B10 A10 C9 INPUT BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR CONTROL BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR CONTROL BIDIR INPUT INPUT INPUT INPUT INPUT INPUT INPUT INPUT INPUT BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR CONTROL BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR INPUT INPUT BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR OUTPUT CONTROL OUTPUT OUTPUT OUTPUT OUTPUT OUTPUT OUTPUT B9 D9 A9 C8 B8 A8 B7 D7 A7 A6 C6 B5 C5 B4 A4 C4 B3 A3 C3 D4 C1 C2 D3 E4 D1 D2 E3 E1 E2 F3 F1 F2 G1 G4 G2 G3 H1 H2 J4 K1 K2 K3 L4 L1 L2 L3 M3 M1 M2 N3 N1 Page 102 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Boundary-Scan Register Number 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 Pin Name Ball Location Type S_CLKOUT[7] S_CLKOUT[8] S_CLKOUT[9] P_RESET_L P_GNT_L BPCCE P_CLK * P_REQ_L P_AD[31] P_AD[30] P_AD[29] P_AD[28] P_AD[27] P_AD[26] P_AD[25] P_AD[24] P_CBE[3] P_IDSEL] P_AD[23] P_AD[22] P_AD[21] P_AD[20] P_AD[19] P_AD[18] P_AD[17] P_AD[16] * P_CBE[2] P_FRAME_L P_IRDY_L P_TRDY_L P_DEVSEL_L P_STOP_L P_LOCK_L * P_PERR_L P_SERR_L P_PAR P_CBE[1] P_AD[15] P_AD[14] P_AD[13] P_AD[12] P_AD[11] P_AD[10] P_M66EN P_AD[9] P_AD[8] P_CBE[0] P_AD[7] P_AD[6] P_AD[5] P_AD[4] P_AD[3] P_AD[2] P_AD[1] P_AD[0] P_ACK64_L P_REQ64_L P_CBE[7] P_CBE[6] P3 P2 P1 R3 R2 R4 T3 OUTPUT OUTPUT OUTPUT INPUT INPUT INPUT INPUT CONTROL BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR INPUT BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR CONTROL BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR INPUT CONTROL BIDIR OUTPUT BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR INPUT BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR U3 U2 U4 U1 V2 V1 V3 W2 W1 Y2 Y1 W4 Y3 AA1 AA3 Y4 AB3 AA4 Y5 AB4 AA5 AC5 AB5 AA6 AC6 AB6 AC7 Y7 AB7 AA7 AB8 AA8 AC9 AB9 AA9 AC10 AB10 AA10 Y11 AC11 AB11 AA11 AA12 AB12 AB13 AA13 Y13 AA14 AB14 AC14 AA15 AB15 Page 103 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION Boundary-Scan Register Number 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 Pin Name Ball Location Type P_CBE[5] P_CBE[4] P_AD[63] P_AD[62] P_AD[61] P_AD[60] P_AD[59] P_AD[58] P_AD[57] P_AD[56] P_AD[55] P_AD[54] P_AD[53] P_AD[52] P_AD[51] P_AD[50] P_AD[49] P_AD[48] P_AD[47] P_AD[46] P_AD[45] P_AD[44] P_AD[43] P_AD[42] P_AD[41] P_AD[40] P_AD[39] P_AD[38] P_AD[37] P_AD[36] P_AD[35] P_AD[34] * P_AD[33] P_AD[32] P_PAR64 CONFIG66 MSK_IN Y15 AC15 AA16 AB16 AA17 AB17 Y17 AB18 AC18 AA18 AC19 AA19 AB20 Y19 AA20 AB21 AC21 AA21 Y20 AA23 Y21 W20 Y23 W21 W23 W22 V21 V23 V22 U23 U20 U22 BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR CONTROL BIDIR BIDIR BIDIR INPUT INPUT T23 T22 T21 R22 R21 15 ELECTRICAL AND TIMING SPECIFICATIONS 15.1 MAXIMUM RATINGS (Above which the useful life may be impaired. For user guidelines, not tested). Storage Temperature Ambient Temperature with Power Applied Supply Voltage to Ground Potentials (AVCC and VDD only] Voltage at Input Pins Junction Temperature, TJ -65°C to 150°C 0°C to 85°C -0.3V to 3.6V -0.5V to 5.5V 125°C Note: Stresses greater than those listed under MAXIMUM RATINGS may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at these or any conditions above those indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods of time may affect reliability. Page 104 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 15.2 DC SPECIFICATIONS Symbol VDD VIH VIL VOH VOL VOH5V VOL5V IIL CIN CCLK CIDSEL LPIN Parameter Supply Voltage Input HIGH Voltage Input LOW Voltage Output HIGH Voltage Output LOW Voltage 5V Signaling Output HIGH Voltage 5V Signaling Output LOW Voltage Input Leakage Current Input Pin Capacitance CLK Pin Capacitance IDSEL Pin Capacitance Pin Inductance Condition Iout = -500µA Iout = 1500µA Iout = -2 mA Min. 3 0.5 VDD -0.5 0.9VDD Max. 3.6 VDD + 0.5 0.3 VDD 0.1 VDD 2.4 Units V V V V V 1 1 V Iout = 6 mA 0.5 V 0 < Vin < VDD ±10 10 12 8 20 µA pF pF pF nH 5 Notes Notes: 1. VDD is in reference to the VDD of the input device. 15.3 AC SPECIFICATIONS Figure 15-1 PCI SIGNAL TIMING MEASUREMENT CONDITIONS Symbol Tsu Tsu(ptp) Th Tval Tval(ptp) Ton Toff Parameter Input setup time to CLK – bused signals 1,2,3 Input setup time to CLK – point-to-point 1,2,3 Input signal hold time from CLK 1,2 CLK to signal valid delay – bused signals 1,2,3 CLK to signal valid delay – point-to-point 1,2,3 Float to active delay 1,2 Active to float delay 1,2 66 MHz Min. Max. 3 5 0 2 6 2 6 2 14 33 MHz Min. Max. 7 10, 124 0 2 11 2 12 2 28 Units ns 1. See Figure 15-1 PCI Signal Timing Measurement Conditions. 2. All primary interface signals are synchronized to P_CLK. All secondary interface signals are synchronized to S_CLKOUT. 3. Point-to-point signals are P_REQ_L, S_REQ_L[7:0], P_GNT_L, S_GNT_L[7:0], HSLED, HS_SW_L, HS_EN, and ENUM_L. Bused signals are P_AD, P_BDE_L, P_PAR, Page 105 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION P_PERR_L, P_SERR_L, P_FRAME_L, P_IRDY_L, P_TRDY_L, P_LOCK_L, P_DEVSEL_L, P_STOP_L, P_IDSEL, P_PAR64, P_REQ64_L, P_ACK64_L, S_AD, S_CBE_L, S_PAR, S_PERR_L, S_SERR_L, S_FRAME_L, S_IRDY_L, S_TRDY_L, S_LOCK_L, S_DEVSEL_L, S_STOP_L, S_PA64, S_REQ64_L, and S_ACK64_L. 4. REQ_L signals have a setup of 10 and GNT_L signals have a setup of 12. 15.4 66MHZ PCI SIGNALING TIMING Symbol TSKEW TDELAY TCYCLE THIGH TLOW 15.5 20pF load Min. 0 3.3 15 6 6 Max. 0.250 5.0 30 Units Min. 0 3.3 30 11 11 Max. 0.250 5.0 Units Min. 1 100 100 20 Max. 40 40 25 Units us us ns ns us cycles Min. 2 2 7 0 30 15 0 Max. 12 28 13.5 ∞ 8 - Units ns ns ns ns nx ns ns ns ns ns ns Parameter SKEW among S_CLKOUT[9:0] DELAY between PCLK and S_CLKOUT[9:0] P_CLK, S_CLKOUT[9:0] cycle time P_CLK, S_CLKOUT[9:0] HIGH time P_CLK, S_CLKOUT[9:0] LOW time Condition 20pF load ns RESET TIMING Symbol TRST TRST-CLK TRST-OFF TSRST TSRST-ON TDRST 15.7 Condition 33MHZ PCI SIGNALING TIMING Symbol TSKEW TDELAY TCYCLE THIGH TLOW 15.6 Parameter SKEW among S_CLKOUT[9:0] DELAY between PCLK and S_CLKOUT[9:0] P_CLK, S_CLKOUT[9:0] cycle time P_CLK, S_CLKOUT[9:0] HIGH time P_CLK, S_CLKOUT[9:0] LOW time Parameter P_RESET_L active time after power stable P_RESET_L active time after P_CLK stable P_RESET_L active-to-output float delay S_RESET_L active after P_RESET_L assertion S_RESET_L active time after S_CLKIN stable S_RESET_L deassertion after P_RESET_L deassertion GPIO TIMING (66MHZ AND 33MHZ) Symbol TVGPIO TGON TGOFF TGSU TGH TGCVAL TGCYC TGSVAL TMSU TMH Parameter S_CLKIN to GPIO output valid GPIO float to output valid GPIO active to float delay GPIO-to-S_CLKIN setup time GPIO hold time after S_CLKIN S_CLKIN-to-GPIO shift clock output valid GPIO[0] cycle time GPIO[0] to GPIO[2] shift control output valid MSK_IN setup time to GPIO[0] MSK_IN hold time after GPIO[0] Page 106 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 15.8 JTAG TIMING Symbol TIF TJP TJHT TJLT TJRT TJFT TJE TJH TJD TJFD 1. 2. 3. 15.9 Parameter TCK frequency TCK period TCK HIGH time TCK LOW time TCK rise time1 TCK fall time2 TDI, TMS setup time to TCK rising edge TDI, TMS hold time from TCK rising edge TDO valid delay from TCK falling edge3 TDO float delay from TCK falling edge Min. 0 100 45 45 10 25 - Max. 10 ∞ 10 10 30 30 Units MHz ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns Measured between 0.8V and 2.0V. Measured between 2.0V and 0.8V. C1 = 50pF POWER CONSUMPTION Parameter Power Consumption at 66MHz Supply Current, ICC Typical 1.6 440 Units W mA Page 107 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION 16 PACKAGE INFORMATION 16.1 304-BALL PBGA PACKAGE DIAGRAM Figure 16-1 304-BALL PBGA PACKAGE OUTLINE Thermal characteristics can be found on the web: http://www.pericom.com/packaging/mechanicals.php 16.2 ORDERING INFORMATION Part Number PI7C8154NA PI7C8154NA-33 Speed 66MHz 33MHz Pin – Package 304 – PBGA 304 – PBGA Temperature 0°C to 85°C 0°C to 85°C Page 108 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION NOTES: Page 109 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02 PI7C8154 2-PORT PCI-TO-PCI BRIDGE ADVANCE INFORMATION NOTES: Page 110 of 110 May 29, 2003 – Revision 1.02