Computer busses design and application

As more and more equipment is interface or'bus' driven, either by the use of controllers or directly from PCs, the question of which bus to use is becoming increasingly important both in industry and in the office. 'Computer Busses' has been designed to help choose the best type...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Buchanan, William (-)
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Boca Raton : CRC c2000.
Edición:1st edition
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009627075406719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Front Cover; Computer Busses; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1. Introduction; 1.1 Pre-PC Development; 1.2 8008/8080/8085; 1.3 8086/8088; 1.4 80186/80188; 1.5 80286; 1.6 Post-PC development; 1.7 Exercises; 1.8 Notes from the author; 1.9 DEC; 1.10 Open .v. closed systems; 1.11 RIP, Sinclair Research; 1.12 How to miss a market; Chapter 2. Busses, Interrupts and PC Systems; 2.1 Busses; 2.2 Interrupts; 2.3 Interfacing; 2.4 PC Systems; 2.8 Practical PC system; 2.5 Exercises; 2.6 Notes from the author; Chapter 3. Interfacing Standards; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 PC bus; 3.3 ISA bus
  • 3.4 Other legacy busses3.5 Comparison of different types; 3.6 Exercises; 3.7 Summary of interface bus types; 3.8 The fall of the MCA bus; 3.9 Notes from the author; Chapter 4. PCI Bus; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 PCI operation; 4.3 Bus arbitration; 4.4 Other PCI pins; 4.5 Configuration address space; 4.6 I/O addressing; 4.7 Exercises; 4.8 Example manufacturer and plug-and-play IDs; 4.9 Notes from the author; Chapter 5. Motherboard Design; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 TX motherboard; 5.3 Exercises; 5.4 Notes from the author; Chapter 6. IDE and Mass Storage; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 Tracks and sectors
  • 6.3 Floppy disks6.4 Fixed disks; 6.5 Drive specifications; 6.6 Hard disk and CD-ROM interfaces; 6.7 IDE interface; 6.8 IDE communication; 6.9 Optical storage; 6.10 Magnetic tape; 6.11 Exercises; 6.12 Notes from the author; Chapter 7. SCSl; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 SCSI types; 7.3 SCSI interface; 7.4 SCSI operation; 7.5 SCSI pointers; 7.6 Message system description; 7.7 SCSI commands; 7.8 Status; 7.9 Exercises; 7.10 Notes from the author; Chapter 8. PCMClA; 8.1 Introduction; 8.2 PCMCIA signals; 8.3 PCMCIA registers; 8.4 Exercises; 8.5 Notes from the author; Chapter 9. USB and Firewire
  • 9.1 Introduction9.2 USB; 9.3 Firewire; 9.4 Exercises; 9.5 Notes from the author; Chapter 10. Games Port, Keyboard and Mouse; 10.1 Introduction; 10.2 Games port; 10.3 Keyboard; 10.4 Mouse and keyboard interface; 10.5 Mouse; 10.6 Exercises; 10.7 Notes from the author; Chapter 11. AGP; 11.1 Introduction; 11.2 PCI and AGP; 11.3 Bus transactions; 11.4 Pin description; 11.5 AGP master configuration; 11.6 Bus commands; 11.7 Addressing modes and bus operations; 11.8 Register description; 11.9 Exercises; 11.10 Notes from the author; Chapter 12. Fibre Channel; 12.1 Introduction; 12.2 Comparison
  • 12.3 Fibre channel standards12.4 Cables, hubs, adapters and connectors; 12.5 Storage Devices and storage area networks; 12.6 Networks; 12.7 Exercises; 12.8 Notes from the author; Chapter 13. RS-232; 13.1 Introduction; 13.2 Electrical characteristics; 13.3 Communications between two nodes; 13.4 Programming RS-232; 13.5 RS-232 programs; 13.6 Exercises; 13.7 Notes from the author; Chapter 14. RS-422, RS-423 and RS-485; 14.1 Introduction; 14.2 RS-485 (ISO 8482); 14.3 Line drivers; 14.4 RS-232/485 converter; 14.5 Exercises; 14.6 Note from the author; Chapter 15. Modems; 15.1 Introduction
  • 15.2 RS-232 communications