Title: PPGA Form Factor
1PPGA Form Factor
2CPU Slots and Sockets
- The physical connection used to connect the CPU
to the system board - Slots 1 and 2 are proprietary Intel slots
- Slot A is a proprietary AMD slot
- Current CPU sockets are called zero insertion
force (ZIF) sockets and have a small lever on the
side of the socket that lifts the CPU up and out
of the socket
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4CPU Slots and Sockets
5CPU Slots and Sockets
- Slot 1, Slot A, and Slot 2 are designed to
accommodate processors using the SEP or SECC
housings - Celeron processor uses the PPGA form factor and
Socket 370 (Figure 3-11) - Pentium III processor uses two types of form
factors SECC 2 and FC-PGA
6CPU Slots and Sockets
7CPU Voltage Regulator
- Controls amount of voltage on system board
- Dual voltage CPU
- Requires two different voltages, one for internal
processing and the other for external processing - Single voltage CPUs
- Requires one voltage for both internal and
external operations - Some CPUs require that you set the jumpers to
control the voltage others automatically control
the voltage
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9The Chip Set
- Set of chips on the system board that
collectively controls the memory cache, external
buses, and some peripherals
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11Intel Chip Sets
- Intel 440BX chip set
- First PC chip set to offer a memory bus that runs
at 100 MHz - First chip set to use the mobile version of the
Pentium II processor for notebooks - 400 series
- Uses the PCI bus as the interconnection between
slower buses and the system bus - i800 series
- Introduced a new way for I/O buses to relate to
the faster system bus and ultimately to the CPU
12Intel i800 Series
- Interconnection between buses uses a hub
interface architecture (Accelerated Hub
Architecture), whereby all I/O buses connect to a
hub (Hub Interface), which connects to the system
bus - North Bridge
- Portion of the chip set hub that connects faster
I/O buses to the system bus - South Bridge
- Portion of the chip set hub that connects slower
I/O buses to the system bus
13Accelerated Hub Architecture of the Intel i800
Series
14Chip Set Manufacturers
- Intel Corporation
- Cyrix Corporation
- Silicon Integrated Systems Corp. (SiS)
- Ali, Inc.
- Standard Microsystems Corp.
- United Microelectronics Corp.
- VIA Technology, Inc. combined with AMD, Inc.
- VLSI Technology
15Chip Sets that Compete with Intel
- SiS620 (SiS)
- Includes a digital video interface for digital
flat panel display screens - Supports a 100 MHz system bus and an advanced
hard drive interface (Ultra DMA) - Aladdin V (Ali)
- Supports Socket 7 processors and the 100-MHz
system bus speed - Apollo MVP3 (VIA and AMD)
- Supports AGP, a 100-bus speed, and Socket 7
16Advantages of Intel Chip Sets
- More compatible with Pentium family of CPUs
- Huge investment in research and development has
led to invention of - PCI bus
- Universal serial bus
- Advanced graphics port (AGP)
- Accelerated Hub Architecture
17ROM BIOS
- There is one ROM chip on the system board that
contains BIOS, which manages the startup process
(startup BIOS) and many basic functions of the
system (system BIOS) - Identifying name of BIOS manufacturer
- Appears at beginning of boot process
- On top of the chip (larger than most chips)
18ROM BIOS
- Does the BIOS support Plug and Play?
- Does the BIOS support large hard drives?
- Is the BIOS chip a Flash ROM chip?
19Assigning Memory Addresses to ROM BIOS
20Plug and Play BIOS
- Plug and Play
- A technology in which the operating system and
BIOS are designed to automatically configure new
hardware devices to eliminate system resource
conflicts (such as IRQ and port conflicts) - Common in ROM BIOS made after 1994
- ESCD (extended system configuration data)
21BIOS Communicating Well with Hardware and Software
22When BIOS Is Incompatible with Hardware or
Software
- In the past, most users upgraded BIOS because new
hardware was incompatible with it - Sometimes need to upgrade BIOS to accommodate new
software (such as Plug and Play)
23Flash ROM
- EEPROM (electronically erasable programmable
read-only memory) - Allows you to upgrade system BIOS without having
to replace the ROM chip
24General Method for Upgrading Flash ROM
- Set a jumper on the system board telling the BIOS
to expect an upgrade - Copy upgrade BIOS software to a bootable disk
- Boot from the disk and follow menu options to
upgrade the BIOS - Set the jumper back to its original setting,
reboot the system, and verify that all is working
25Sample Web Site for Flash ROM BIOS Upgrades
26RAM (Random Access Memory)
27Types of RAM
- Dynamic RAM (DRAM)
- Most commonly used type of system memory
- Requires refreshing every few milliseconds
- Holds data for a very short time
- Less expensive than static RAM
- Static RAM (SRAM)
- Holds data until power is turned off without need
for refreshing - More expensive than traditional DRAM
28Types of Dynamic Memory
- Parity
- Error-checking scheme in which a ninth (or
parity) bit is added - Value of parity bit is set to either 0 or 1
- Non parity
- ECC (error checking and correction)
- Detects and corrects errors
29Most Popular Types of RAM Modules
30Managing Dynamic Memory
- Most system boards today use 168-pin DIMMs (dual
inline memory modules) - Memory can be managed using technologies that
involve - How much memory is accessed
- How timing the access is managed
- How the system board and the CPU relate to the
memory modules
31Prevalent Memory Technologies
32Kinds of Static Cache Memory
- L1
- Contained on the CPU microchip
- L2
- External to the chip
- Housed either on the system board or inside the
CPU case
33Buses and Expansion Slots
- Earliest PC
- Had only a single and simple bus (8-bit ISA bus)
- Todays PCs
- Have four or five buses, each with different
speeds, access methods, and protocols
34Bus Evolution
- Data path and speed
- Local buses (system buses)
- Work in sync with the CPU and the system clock
- Example memory bus
- Expansion buses
- Work asynchronously with the CPU at a much slower
rate - Example ISA bus
35System-board Buses in Common Use
continued
36System-board Buses in Common Use
37Why So Many Buses?
- Speeds of different hardware components evolve at
different rates - Single speed for all components is no longer
practical
38What a Bus Does
- Draws electrical power
- Carries control signals that coordinate all
activity - Passes memory addresses from one component to
another - Passes data
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