PC Cards - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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PC Cards

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Credit card-size expansion boards that fits into a small slot on ... MPEG decoders. CD-ROM controllers. GPS systems. etc. etc. etc. 22/04/2002. ET4508_p11 (KR) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PC Cards


1
PC Cards
  • Provide expandability to notebook/laptop
    computers
  • Credit card-size expansion boards that fits into
    a small slot on notebook/laptop computers
  • Developed by the PCMCIA consortium of gt300
    manufacturers (IBM, Toshiba, Apple)

2
PC Cards
  • Originally designed only for memory cards
  • Available PC Cards today
  • Memory expansion cards
  • Tiny hard disk drives
  • Network interface adapters
  • Wireless modems
  • Sound cards
  • MPEG decoders
  • CD-ROM controllers
  • GPS systems
  • etc. etc. etc.

3
PC Cards
4
Constraints on PC Cards
  • Robustness
  • Low Power operation
  • Power Dissipation
  • Multiple Mating Cycles (10000)
  • Add-in functions rather than Add-On functions!
  • Means PC Cards may be needed for basic computer
    operation

5
Card Types
  • Small form factor 85.6mm x 54.0mm
  • 68-pin connector
  • Three card thicknesses supported
  • Roughly correspond to different PC Card
    Specifications and Card functionality
  • Cards only differ in terms of thickness
  • Thinner cards can be used in a thicker slot
  • Thicker card cannot be used in a thinner slot

6
Card Types
7
PC Cards Card Types
  • Type I up to 3.3mm thick - Memory Cards
  • SRAM, Flash, OTP but NOT DRAM
  • Type II up 5mm thick - I/O devices
  • Data/fax modems, LAN adapters, mass storage
  • most of the available cards today are 5mm cards
  • Type III up 10.5mm thick
  • Hard disks (latest hard disks are type II)
  • Extended cards also available
  • Antennas for wireless applications

8
PC Card Architecture
  • PC Card Standard also defines a software
    architecture
  • Provides Plug and Play capability
  • Software consists of Socket Services and Card
    Services
  • Card and Socket Services allow interoperability
    of PC Cards

9
PC Card Evolution
  • PC Card Release 1.0Memory only
  • PC Card Release 2.XMemory and I/O
  • CardBus32-bit high bandwidth interface (133MB/s)

10
PC Card Standard Release 1.0
  • Interface for Memory Cards only
  • Defines Metaformat or Card Information Structure
    (CIS)

11
PC Card Release 2.0/2.01/2.1
  • I/O interface
  • Dual Voltage (3.3V 5V)
  • Socket Services Specification
  • eXecute In Place (XIP)
  • PC Card ATA
  • Card Services Specification (2.01)

12
PC Card CardBus Standard (1)
  • CardBus adds PCI-like performance
  • 32-bit bus
  • BusMastering interface
  • Low Voltage (3.3V)
  • Power Management (APM)
  • Support for DMA if required
  • Multi-function cards

13
PC Card CardBus Standard (2)
  • Custom Interfaces
  • Zoomed Video (ZV)
  • Extensions for ISDN, Security and Instrumentation
    Cards

14
PC Card Properties
  • Card Information Structure (CIS) - describes the
    characteristics of the card so the host can
    configure it
  • DMA can be supported if the host allows it
  • eXecute In Place - allows OS and Application
    software to run directly from the card
  • LV Operation - physical keying prevents 3.3V
    cards from being damaged in 5V slot

15
PC Card Properties (2)
  • Plug and Play PC Cards can be removed or
    inserted while power is on
  • Power and GND contacts pins are the longest
  • Make contact before signals
  • Power Management - interface to APM through Card
    Services

16
PC Card Properties (3)
  • Zoomed Video (ZV) - connection between PC Card
    and host system that allows card to write data
    directly to VGA Controller
  • Data can be transferred over the ZV bus, not the
    host bus

17
PC Card Software Layers
  • Two software layers that provide the interface
    between the PC Card adapter and the applications
  • Socket ServicesSocket Services layer isolates
    the proprietary aspects of the adapter from the
    software operating above it
  • Card ServicesCommunicates with Socket Services
    and is responsible for assigning hardware
    resources to PC Cards

18
PC Card Layers
19
CardBus Performance
  • PC Card-16 8-/16-bit interface at ISA bus speeds
    (8MHz) using ISA-like protocol
  • CardBus - 32-bit multiplexed address/data
  • Operates at PCI local-bus speeds
  • Up to 33 MHz
  • Peak bandwidth of 132MB/sec
  • CardBus uses the synchronous burst-transfer
    methods of PCI, and a very similar bus protocol
    to PCI

20
CardBus Enhancements
  • Performance
  • Configuration Approach
  • Hot-plug capability
  • Low-power operation
  • Mechanical form-factor

21
CardBus Bus Mastering
  • PC Card-16 cards can only work as Slaves to
    System resident masters
  • CardBus devices can act as system-bus masters
  • They can take control of the system bus (or
    buses) to carry out data transfers

22
PC Card Configuration
  • In the CardBus standard dynamic system
    reconfiguration is a primary functional
    requirement
  • Hardware like modem cards can be shared by simply
    porting them from one system to another
  • Supports configuration at boot time and/or
    dynamically during run-time
  • Plug and Play support using CIS
  • (Re)Allocation of system resources when cards are
    added or removed

23
CardBus Power Reduction
  • Operation at low voltage
  • Software control of the clock
  • From a CardBus adapter to an attached CardBus
    card
  • Provides PCI-like power-management
  • Simplifies operation in PCI environment
  • CardBus allows for two lower voltage operating
    modes for the future

24
CardBus Clock Management
  • CardBus includes a "CCLKRUN" signal
  • It has an associated protocol for controlling
    clocking to a card
  • Allows a PCI-to-CardBus bridge to gate the clock,
    which the bridge supplies to the PC Card
  • Allows the card to indicate when it is prepared
    for clocking to stop

25
CardBus Mechanical Enhancements
  • CardBus cards share PC Card-16's small, thin
    mechanical card design, as well as a similar
    68-pin connector
  • CardBus connector design encloses the standard
    68-pin PC Card connector in a ground shield
  • If used with controlled edge-rate buffers, the
    shield ensures that ground-bounce does not
    corrupt signals, even at 33 MHz

26
PCI CardBus Connectivity
27
Zoomed Video
  • Connects a video-data stream from a PC Card
    source directly to a host computer's video
    adapter
  • Dedicated data path from a system's PC Card
    socket to the video adapter
  • Side-band path bypasses the CardBus bridge in
    going from the card socket to the video
    controller
  • Through-the-controller path - card video data
    goes through the CardBus bridge on its way to the
    video controller
  • In systems that implement ZV, CardBus provides a
    high-speed general-purpose interface, while ZV
    serves as a low-cost video input path

28
PCI-CardBus Bridge (1)
  • PCI-to-CardBus "bridge" IC - point of attachment
    of the PC Card to the system's PCI bus
  • Provides a way of managing the attachment and
    detachment of Cards
  • (i.e., bus-isolation buffers and card/socket
    "status-change" notification circuitry)
  • Maps several address windows from the card into
    the host system's memory and/or I/O spaces
  • Allows the host system to access configuration
    registers on the card

29
PCI-CardBus Bridge (2)
  • CardBus Bridge is a PCI bus agent so it can
    become Bus Master
  • This allows CardBus Bridge to transfer data to
    system memory without CPU intervention
  • CardBus supports PCI's PnP auto-configuration.
  • Interrupt levels and DMA channels can be
    controlled on a system-wide basis

30
PC Cards in a PC
  • For the PC, the PC Card just looks like extra
    memory or I/O
  • PC Card Specification allows PC Cards to have
    64Mbyte of Common Memory and 64Mbyte of Attribute
    memory 128Mbyte altogether

31
Using PC Cards in a PC
  • Define an address area in the memory or I/O
    address space of the host system usually called
    a window
  • Map a memory or I/O segment of the PC Card into
    the window you have defined
  • Access to memory or I/O addresses in the window
    of the hosts address space is redirected to the
    PC Card rather than the hosts own memory or I/O
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