Bus arbitration in a dual-bus architecture where one bus has relatively high latency
US5369748A · kind A · utility
Assignee
Inventors
Key dates
| Filing date | Aug 23, 1991 |
| Grant date | Nov 29, 1994 |
| Priority date | — |
| Expiry date | Aug 23, 2011 |
Classification
- Technology area (CPC G)Physics
- CPC primaryG06F13/4031
- WIPO fieldComputer technology
- WIPO sectorElectrical engineering
Abstract
A dual-bus architecture that includes a high-seed system bus, called the NexBus (20), and a slower peripheral bus, called the alternate bus or AB (25). The NexBus and AB are coupled by control logic (45) which includes an arbiter (50) and an alternate bus interface (ABI) (60). The ABI is treated as a master for both the NexBus and the AB. While it would be possible to have the adapter always request the AB (which also requires the NexBus), that would slow down NexBus operations to the bandwidth of the AB. This problem is avoided by providing two request lines for each adapter, -NREQ (NexBus only) and -AREQ (both buses), having the adapter normally assert -NREQ first. However, if the addressed device is on the AB, the ABI automatically detects this fact and attempts to do a crossing transfer to the AB, even though the request was for the NexBus only. If the ABI is unable to do the crossing transfer because the AB was busy, the ABI automatically causes the NexBus adapter to retry the request using the -AREQ line. Thus the slower AB is only accessed when actually necessary.
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.