Hardware FAQ Part 1



This FAQ was compiled and written by Willie Lim and Ralph Valentino

with numerous contributions by others.  Acknowledgements are listed at

end of this FAQ.



Copyright notice:



The comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.* Frequently Asked Questions is

distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY

WARRANTY.  No author or distributor accepts responsibility to anyone

for the consequences of using it or for whether it serves any

particular purpose or works at all, unless he says so in writing.

Refer to the GNU General Public License for full details.



Everyone is granted permission to copy, modify and redistribute this

FAQ, but only under the conditions described in the GNU General Public

License.  Among other things, the copyright notice and this notice

must be preserved on all copies.



Where section authors are noted, the copyright is held by that author.

Where no author is noted, the copyright is held by the FAQ editors

Willie Lim (wlim@lehman.com) and Ralph Valentino (ralf@wpi.wpi.edu).





Changes, additions, comments, suggestions and questions to:

Ralph Valentino ralf@wpi.edu



Table of Contents:

S) 1.0 Introduction

 Q) 1.1  What does this FAQ cover?

 Q) 1.2  Where can I find the latest copy of this FAQ?

 Q) 1.3  Is it ok to (sell/buy/job-offer/advertise) things here?

 Q) 1.4  Where should I post?

 Q) 1.5  How come no one answers my questions?

 Q) 1.6  What are the going prices for...?

 Q) 1.7  Who makes/Where can I find [some obscure piece of hardware]?

 Q) 1.8  What is the history of the IBM PC?

S) 2.0 Motherboards

 Q) 2.1  What are the differences between the 80x86 CPUs?

 Q) 2.2  How do I pick the right processor?

 Q) 2.3  What is the difference between the 386SX/386DX and 486SX/486DX?

 Q) 2.4  What is a ZIF socket?

 Q) 2.5  What is over clocking and should I do it?

 Q) 2.6  Which is faster, a DX-50 or DX2-66

 Q) 2.7  *What is the P24T/Overdrive?

 Q) 2.8  What are the differences between the 80x87 co-processors?

 Q) 2.9  Would a math co-processor speed up my machine?

 Q) 2.10  Can I use a x387 with my 486?

 Q) 2.11  Memory terminology, what does it mean?

 Q) 2.12  What happen to my 384k?

 Q) 2.13  How do I tell how big/fast my SIMMs are?

 Q) 2.14  What speed SIMMs do I need?

 Q) 2.15  Will 9 chip and 3 chip SIMMs work together?

 Q) 2.16  What are "single-sided" and "double-sided" 72-pin SIMMs?

 Q) 2.17  Can I use Mac or PS/2 SIMMs in my PC?

 Q) 2.18  What do wait states and burst rates in my BIOS mean?

 Q) 2.19  Cache terminology, what does it mean?

 Q) 2.20  How do I upgrade the size of my cache?

 Q) 2.21  Do I need to fill the "dirty tag" RAM socket on my motherboard?

 Q) 2.22  How fast do my cache RAMs have to be?

 Q) 2.23  Which is the best cache policy, write-through or "write-back?"

 Q) 2.24  What about an n-way set associative cache, isn't it better?

 Q) 2.25  Which is better, ISA/EISA/VLB/PCI/etc?

 Q) 2.26  *What are the (dis)advantages of ISA/VLB/EISA SCSI?

 Q) 2.27  Will an ISA card work in an MCA (PS/2) machine?

 Q) 2.28  What does the "chip set" do?

 Q) 2.29  How do I enter the CMOS configuration menu?

 Q) 2.30  What is bus mastering and how do I know if I have it?

 Q) 2.31  Can I put an ISA cards in EISA or VLB slots?

 Q) 2.32  How should I configure ISA/VLB cards in the EISA config utility?

 Q) 2.33  What is the difference between EISA Standard and Enhanced modes?

 Q) 2.34  Is there any point in putting more than 16M in an ISA machine?

 Q) 2.35  What disadvantages are there to the HiNT EISA chip set?

 Q) 2.36  *Should I change the ISA bus speed?

 Q) 2.37  Why is my PC's clock so inaccurate?

 Q) 2.38  How can I automatically set my PC's clock to the correct time?

 Q) 2.39  What is the battery for and how do I replace it?

 Q) 2.40  Can I use IRQ2 or is it special?

 Q) 2.41  Where do all the IRQ's go?

S) 3.0 IO controllers/interfaces

 Q) 3.1  *How do IDE/MFM/RLL/ESDI/SCSI interfaces work?

 Q) 3.2  +How can I tell if I have MFM/RLL/ESDI/IDE/SCSI?

 Q) 3.3  Do caching controllers really help?

 Q) 3.4  Do IDE controllers use DMA?

 Q) 3.5  Why won't my two IDE drives work together?

 Q) 3.6  Which is better, VLB or ISA IDE?

 Q) 3.7  How do I install a second controller?

 Q) 3.8  Which is better, SCSI or IDE?

 Q) 3.9  Can MFM/RLL/ESDI/IDE and SCSI coexist?

 Q) 3.10  What's the difference between SCSI and SCSI-2? Are they compatible?

 Q) 3.11  Can I share SCSI devices between computers?

 Q) 3.12  What is Thermal Recalibration?

 Q) 3.13  +Can I mount my hard drive sideways/upside down?

 Q) 3.14  How do I swap A: and B:

 Q) 3.15  My floppy drive doesn't work and the light remains on, why?

 Q) 3.16  What is a 16550 and do I need one?

 Q) 3.17  *Are there any >4 serial port cards?

 Q) 3.18  Should I buy an internal or external modem?

 Q) 3.19  What do all of the modem terms mean?

 Q) 3.20  What kinds of sound cards are avalable?

 Q) 3.21  Where can I find EISA/VLB sound and IO cards?

 Q) 3.22  How does the keyboard interface work?

 Q) 3.23  Can I fake a keyboard so my computer will boot without it?

S) 4.0 Storage/Retrieval Devices

 Q) 4.1  Why do I lose x Meg on my hard drive?

 Q) 4.2  *Should I get an IDE/floppy/SCSI/parallel port tape drive?

 Q) 4.3  I have two floppies. Can I add a floppy based tape drive?

 Q) 4.4  How fast is a tape drive? Will a dedicated controller improve this?

 Q) 4.5  What is QIC80, QIC40?

 Q) 4.6  How come I can't fit as much stuff on my tape drive as they claim?

 Q) 4.7  Are Colorado/Conner/Archive/... tapes compatible with each other?

 Q) 4.8  How does the drive/software know how long the tape is?

 Q) 4.9  What are all those QICs?

 Q) 4.10  Which QICs are read/write compatible?

 Q) 4.11  What is the CMOS/jumper setting for my hard drive?

S) 5.0 Video

 Q) 5.1  Can I use two video cards in the same system?

 Q) 5.2  *What kinds of monitors are available?

 Q) 5.3  +How can I get a fixed frequency monitor to work on my PC?

 Q) 5.4  *Can I get an RGB monitor to work with my PC?

 Q) 5.5  *How can I hook more than one monitor to my video card?

 Q) 5.6  *Which video card is best for DOS/Windows/X11/OS2?

 Q) 5.7  *What is the black horizontal line on my monitor?

S) 6.0 Systems

 Q) 6.1  *What should I upgrade first?

 Q) 6.2  Do I need a CPU fan / heat sink

 Q) 6.3  What does the turbo switch do?

 Q) 6.4  How does the front panel LED display measure the system's speed?

 Q) 6.5  Should I turn my computer/monitor off?

 Q) 6.6  Are there any manufacturers/distributers who read the net?

S) 7.0 Diagnostics

 Q) 7.1  What do the POST beeps mean?

 Q) 7.2  What do the POST codes mean?

 Q) 7.3  *I think my cache is bad. What's a good diagnostic?

S) 8.0 Misc

 Q) 8.1  What is the pin out for ...?

 Q) 8.2  *Where are benchmark programs located. What do they mean?

 Q) 8.3  What is Plug and Play?

 Q) 8.4  What size should I set my DOS partitions to be?

 Q) 8.5  Why won't my system boot from the hard drive?

 Q) 8.6  How do I clean my computer?

 Q) 8.7  *What OS's are available for the PC? Which are free?

 Q) 8.8  *How can I transfer files between my PC and a Unix system?

 Q) 8.9  What tape backup software is available?

 Q) 8.10  Why doesn't my new device work as fast as it should?

 Q) 8.11  My drive lists a MTBF of 300,000 hours. Will it really last 34 years?

 Q) 8.12  How do I find pin 1 on my chip/card/cable/connector?

 Q) 8.13  I've run out of power connectors, what can I do?

S) 9.0 References

 Q) 9.1  What other FAQ's are out there?

 Q) 9.2  What do the industry acronyms stand for?

 Q) 9.3  Where can I get the ISA/EISA/VLB/PCI/etc specs?

 Q) 9.4  What books are available for the PC architecture?

 Q) 9.5  What books are available on network programming?

 Q) 9.6  +Which companies have ftp sites?

 Q) 9.7  +Which companies have WWW sites?

 Q) 9.8  What's the phone number for...

S) 10.0 Acknowledgments





* = incomplete

+ = new or significant changes since last post



S) 1.0 Introduction



Q) 1.1  What does this FAQ cover?



This FAQ covers Frequently Asked Questions from all groups in the

comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.* hierarchy.  Software topics are only

included if they are directly related to hardware or hardware

interfacing.



Q) 1.2  Where can I find the latest copy of this FAQ?



If you haven't done so, new users on the net should read

news.announce.newusers. In particular, the following posts are a good

idea:

	A Primer on How to Work With The Usenet Community

	Answers to Frequently Asked Questions About Usenet

	Hints on Writing Style for Usenet

	Introduction to The *.answers Groups



This FAQ is currently posted to news.answers, comp.answers,

comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.cd-rom, comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,

comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.comm, comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc,

comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.networking, comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage,

comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems, and comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.video.

All posts to news.answers are archived and are available via anonymous

FTP, uucp and e-mail from the following locations:



FTP:

	FTP is a way of copying file between networked computers. If

	you need help in using or getting started with FTP, send

	e-mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with

		send usenet/news.answers/ftp-list/faq

	as the body of the message.



	location:  rtfm.mit.edu [18.181.0.24]

	directory: /pub/usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq

	filenames: part1 to part5



	location:  ftp.uu.net [137.39.1.9]

	directory: /archive/usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq

	filenames: part1.Z to part5.Z [use uncompress]



	location:  nic.switch.ch [130.59.1.40]

	directory: info_service/Usenet/periodic-postings

	filenames: [Check info_service/Usenet/00index]





UUCP:

	location:  uunet!/archive/usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq/

	filenames: part1.Z to part5.Z



E-mail:

	Send email to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu containing these lines:

	send usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq/part1

	...

	send usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq/part5



You can find a dozen or more sites in the US, Europe and Japan that

store the FAQ and archives for this various newsgroups by using the

Internet search programs, Archie or Wais.



Q) 1.3  Is it ok to (sell/buy/job-offer/advertise) things here?



No, none of the above fit within the charter of the

comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.* hierarchy, therefore such posts are

considered unacceptable.  For buying/selling things, use groups with

the words 'wanted' or 'forsale', and for job offers, use groups with

the words 'jobs'.  All of these can be found in the misc.* hierarchy.

For commercial advertisements, use only the biz.* hierarchy as per the

guidelines of USENET.  (refer to the news.* groups for more

information).



Q) 1.4  Where should I post?

[From: grohol@alpha.acast.nova.edu (John M. Grohol)]



PC-Clone Hardware Newsgroup Pointer                   By: John M. Grohol



This Pointer will help you find the information you need and get your

questions answered much quicker than if you were to simply crosspost to

every hardware newsgroup in existence. It is provided as a public service.

Post your article in the most appropriate newsgroup according to its topic.

Please do not post your hardware questions to software newsgroups,

and vice-a-versa. "For Sale" articles are never appropriate to

either the hardware or software newsgroups.



Comments & suggestions are always welcome! 



Question on...                       Post to...

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------

Networking/networks                  comp.sys.novell

				     comp.dcom.lans.* (where * equals:

				     ethernet; fddi; misc; token-ring)

				     comp.protocols.tcp-ip.ibmpc

				     comp.os.os2.networking.misc

				     comp.os.os2.networking.tcpip

PC Networking hardware/cards/cables  comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.networking

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------

Laptops & notebooks (over 3 lbs.)    comp.sys.laptops

Palmtops (under 3 lbs.)              comp.sys.palmtops

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------

Servers                              comp.dcom.servers

Modems                               comp.dcom.modems

Printers                             comp.periphs.printers

SCSI devices                         comp.periphs.scsi

Other peripherals                    comp.periphs

PCMCIA devices                       alt.periphs.pcmcia

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------

Dell users & support                 alt.sys.pc-clone.dell

Gateway 2000 users & support         alt.sys.pc-clone.gateway2000

Micron users & support               alt.sys.pc-clone.micron

Zeos users & support                 alt.sys.pc-clone.zeos

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------

Technical topics on PC soundcards    comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard.tech

Advocacy for a particular soundcard  comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard.advocacy

Using soundcards with games          comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard.games

Music & sound using soundcards       comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard.music

Soundcards in general                comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard.misc

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------

Discussion of items, forsale groups  misc.forsale.computers.discussion

Mac-specific sale of items           misc.forsale.computers.mac-specific.*

				     (where * equals: cards.misc;misc; 

				     cards.video;portables;software;

				     systems)

Sale of all computer memory,         misc.forsale.computers.*

   modems, monitors, net-hardware,   (where * equals: memory;modems;

   printers, storage devices         monitors;net-hardware;printers;storage)

Sale of other computer items         misc.forsale.computers.other.*

				     (where * equals: misc;software;systems)

PC-specific sale of items            misc.forsale.computers.pc-specific.*

				     (where * equals: audio;cards.misc;

				     cards.video;misc;motherboards;

				     portables;software;systems)

Commercial sale of hardware          biz.comp.hardware

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------

Monitors/video cards                 comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.video

Modems/fax cards/communication       comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.comm

Hard/floppy/tape drives & media      comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage 

CD-ROM drives & interfaces           comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.cd-rom

Computer vendors & specific systems  comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems

System chips/RAM chips/cache         comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------

Other hardware questions             comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc

-----------------------------------  ----------------------------------



This Pointer is freely distributable to any other mailing list, newsgroup,

     or network service provider as long as it remains fully intact.

	  Copyright 1994 John M. Grohol. All rights reserved.



Send comments/questions/suggestions regarding this newsgroup Pointer

to the author (replying to this message should work). Do *not* include

this Pointer in your reply, or it may not be read.





Q) 1.5  How come no one answers my questions?



If you don't give enough information when asking your question, then

people will not be able to answer it.  If you're not willing to take

the time to look up the necessary information, then why should you

expect people to take the time to answer your question?  For instance,

if you're asking a question about SCSI, it is very important to know

what type of SCSI host adapter (controller) you have.  Some other

important things to mention are which device drivers/tsr's you are

loading, what other similar devices you have in your system, and

exactly what in your setup has changed since it last worked.



Q) 1.6  What are the going prices for...?



If you're looking for new equipment, pick up a copy of Computer

Shopper.  This is the "bible" for buying new equipment.  Skim through

it for the best prices and give these distributers a call.  In most

cases, the advertisements must be placed months in advance; the actual

price may be even lower than the advertised price!  Two other things

to note are the warranty, return policy and location of the company

(companies within the same state as you may be required to add extra

sales taxes).



If you're looking for the expected price of used equipment, then scan

the newsgroup misc.forsale.computers.pc-clone for similar items.  This

will give you the best idea as what to expect.  Don't make assumptions

that the price of used equipment will follow the market trends of new

equipment.  For instance, when new memory prices nearly doubled, the

used prices were barely effected.



Q) 1.7  Who makes/Where can I find [some obscure piece of hardware]?

[From: uwvax!astroatc!nicmad!madnix!zaphod (Ron Bean)]



You can ask on the net, but you'll get a better response if you do

some investigating on your own first. Try calling vendors who

advertise similar or related hardware, they often have things that

aren't in the ads. Vendors who specialize in parts rather than

complete systems are a good bet. You can also ask local dealers to

check their wholesale sources.







Q) 1.8  What is the history of the IBM PC?

[From:]



Around 1978 and '79, the market served by IBM's Data Entry Systems

division began to change.  Instead of terminals and minicomputers or

mainframes, customers began demanding autonomous, low cost,

single-user computers with minimal compute power or connectivity, but

compliance to standards like the ASCII alphabet and the BASIC

programming language.  The closest product in IBM's line was the 5110,

a closed, BASIC-in-ROM machine with a tiny built-in character display.

The 5110 was uncompetitive, and IBM started losing bids from key

customers, mostly government agencies.



Data Entry commissioned a consulting firm (Boca Associates?) to design

a stop-gap machine to fill what was perceived within IBM as a

short-lived, specialized niche.  It was intended that the stop-gap

machine would only be offered for a couple of years until it would be

replaced in "The Product Line" by an internal IBM design.  Some IBM

executives believed the single-user desktop system was a fad which

would die out when the shortcomings of such systems became

appreciated.



The motherboard design was based very closely on a single-board

computer described in a 1978 (?) Intel application note.  (Anybody got

an original copy of this collector's item?  Among other things, Intel

argues that 640KB is more memory than single-user applications will

ever need, because of the efficiency of segmented memory

"management"!)  The expansion slot "bus" is based on an Intel bus

called Multibus 1, which Intel introduced in its microprocessor

software development equipment in the mid '70s.  The Monochrome and

Color Graphics Display Adapters are based on application notes for the

Motorola 6845 video controller chip, except that the strangely

interlaced pixel addresses in the CGA appears to have been extremely

short sighted.  The "event driven" keyboard is an original design, but

the concept is from the Xerox Alto and Star graphics workstations.

The keyboard noise and "feel" are intended to emulate those of the IBM

Selectric typewriter.  The Cassette Interface design is original, but

similar in concept to the one on the Radio Shack TRS-80.



Data Entry Division approached Digital Research Inc. to offer its

popular CP/M-86 operating system on the machine, but DRI rebuffed

them.  IBM's second choice was BASIC-in-ROM vendor Microsoft, which

had no OS product at the time but quickly purchased a crude disk

operating system called 86-DOS from Seattle Computer Products to offer

it to IBM.  Its command interpreter was an imitation of Unix' Bourne

Shell, with the special characters changed to avoid infringing AT&T's

rights.



Data Entry Division began bidding this system in various State

procurements, without any plan to offer it to the public.



It became obvious that the Cassette Interface and optional 360KB

Flexible Disk Drive were inadequate.  The Cassette Interface was

dropped, and an optional Fixed Disk Drive offered on a revised model

known as the IBM Personal Computer XT.  (A fixed, or "hard" disk had

been offered on the PC by special order, with a Xebec controller, but

few were sold.)  The disk controller was designed around the Western

Digital 1010 chip, and its design is taken directly from a WD

application note.



The XT succeeded beyond all expectations.  IBM offered the system to

the public after it became clear that no other division was going to

come up with anything timely.  IBM published complete schematics and

ROM listings, encouraging clones.



In 1984, IBM introduced an upwardly compatible model based on the

Intel 80286.  The expansion slot "bus" was extended to 16-bit data

path width the same way Intel had extended Multibus: by adding data

and address bits, a signal for boards to announce their capability to

perform 16-bit transfers, and byte swapping on the motherboard to

support the 8-bit boards.





S) 2.0 Motherboards



Q) 2.1  What are the differences between the 80x86 CPUs?



This section is posted separately as the "Personal Computer Chiplist"

and archived along side this FAQ.  Refer to section one for

instructions on retrieving this file.



Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems,

	    comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc,comp.sys.intel

Subject: Personal Computer CHIPLIST 7.0 part * of *

From: offerman@einstein.et.tudelft.nl (Aad Offerman)

Summary: This list contains the various CPU's and NPX's and their features,

	 used in the IBM PC, IBM PC/XT, IBM PC/AT, IBM PS/2 and compatbles,

	 and the differences between them.

Archive-name: pc-hardware-faq/chiplist



Q) 2.2  How do I pick the right processor?

[From: jabram@ichips.intel.com (Jeff Abramson)]



This is a hard question.  You have tradeoffs between price,

performance, compatibility, upgradebility, and power consumption.

As a desktop unit owner, you probably have less concerns about

power, but as a laptop owner, this is very important.



The frequency of the CPU defines how fast its internal clock runs.

This defines how fast instructions are executed.  In many ways, this

is meaningless, because a RISC machine (MIPS) running at 100MHz may

in reality be slower than a 50Mhz i486 because a RISC system must

execute more instructions to perform the same function (in some

cases).  Even when comparing processors in the same family, this

info can be misleading.  For example, an Intel486-25 is faster than

an AMD386-40, since the 486 has microarchitectural advancements over

the 386.  The same can be said for the Pentium, where a 66Mhz

Pentium is twice as fast as a 66MHz 486.



For compatibility, keep in mind that the Intel parts are the basis

for all of these processors.  Therefore you always run the risk that

an imitator's part may not be compatible.  AMD chips are compatible

because they are copied.  For some of you, these factors may be

important.



As far as upgradability goes, this depends on both your motherboard

and the processor.  If you purchase a 486DX, then you can upgrade to

a DX2 and double your internal clock simply by buying an overdrive

chip if your motherboard has the ZIF socket.  If it doesn't then you

can replace the CPU with a DX2.  Many new 486 motherboards contain

overdrive sockets for the not-yet-released Pentium chip that is pin

compatible.





Q) 2.3  What is the difference between the 386SX/386DX and 486SX/486DX?



[From: jabram@ichips.intel.com (Jeff Abramson)]



The Intel386DX contains full 32 bit buses for external data,

internal data, and address.  The Intel386SX contains a smaller 16

bit external data bus, and a smaller 24 bit address bus.



The Intel486DX contains a floating point unit, the Intel486SX does

not.  A common rumor is that the 486SX is simply a DX part that has

a failure in the floating point unit, so it has been disabled and

the part has been produces as an SX.  This was true for early

production parts and samples, but not for the mass produces SX parts

that we see today.  



Q) 2.4  What is a ZIF socket?



[From: jabram@ichips.intel.com (Jeff Abramson)]



ZIF stands for Zero Insertion Force, and describes a socket on your

motherboard that supports an upgrade processor (overdrive

processor).  In general, an overdrive upgrade works in conjunction

with your original processor so you cannot remove the original

processor after upgrade.  NOTE: Some motherboards do not have a ZIF

socket so you must replace the existing processor to upgrade.



Q) 2.5  What is over clocking and should I do it?

[From: jabram@ichips.intel.com (Jeff Abramson)]



Overclocking is a term generally used to describe how you have

increased the clock frequency on your board to run your system at a

higher speed.  For example, if you plug a 25MHz i486 into a board

that is configured to run a 33MHz i486, then you are overclocking

your CPU.  Most boards allow you to configure your clocking via

jumpers, and others require a new clock oscillator.



Although users have had success with overclocking, it is a dangerous

practice for two reasons.  First, the chip has been designed to meet

a certain speed.  Therefore, some circuits do not have the margin to

operate at a higher frequency.  The chips coming from a wafer have

various speed specs (statistical distribution), so you may be lucky

and own a CPU that has the circuit margins you need to overclock.

But you don't know - and if you overclock, you may get data failure.

The data failure may be reproducable - and therefore avoidable, but

most likely not.



Second, you have reliability concerns when overclocking.

Overclocking means faster frequency, which means more current and

power.  This can lead to real failures in your CPU.

Electromigration is one such failure where metal lines in your CPU

will actually break or connect if they get too much current.  This

is irreversable, and most likely not covered under warranty.



So when can you overclock?  Really only if you don't care about

burning out your CPU and you don't care if you get wrong data every

now and then.  If you own a machine and you use it just for games,

then overclocking may be something to try - and you simply upgrade

to a new CPU when you burn out the current one.  Otherwise, it's not

worth the small performance gain.





Q) 2.6  Which is faster, a DX-50 or DX2-66



The two processors are relatively close for overall usage.  The DX-50

has more I/O bandwidth and the DX2-66 has more computational power.



Q) 2.7  *What is the P24T/Overdrive?

Q) 2.8  What are the differences between the 80x87 co-processors?



See reference in: "What are the differences between the 80x86 CPUs?"



Q) 2.9  Would a math co-processor speed up my machine?



[From: jruchak@mtmis1.mis.semi.harris.com (John Anthony Ruchak)]



If you do a lot of number-crunching with CAD/CAM applications,

spreadsheets, and the like, a math co-processor is likely to increase

performance.  If on the other hand, your primary work is word

processing, a math co-processor will have barely any effect at all.

Also, a math co-processor will not provide any benefit if your CPU

already has one built-in (486/586-DX chips).  In addition, a math

co-processor is not likely to improve the over-all performance of

Microsoft Windows, except when you are running the afore-mentioned

number-crunching programs.



Q) 2.10  Can I use a x387 with my 486?



[From: Shaun Burnett (burnesa@cat.com)]



No, they are not pin compatible.  The 486DX and above contain an

on-chip floating point unit. Therefore, a 387 (SX or DX) math

coprocessor is not needed.  All software written for a 387 coprocessor

will run on your 486.

 

If you want a math coprocessor for a 486SX, you need to purchase the

487SX or a 486 Overdrive processor.

 

While we're talking about math coprocessors, I'll make a brief note

about the Weitek.  Some motherboards may have a socket for a Weitek

math coprocessor.  These coprocessors are not compatible with the

Intel 387 math coprocessor and should only be used if your software

requires it.  The Weitek 3167 replaced the Weitek 1167 and is for the

386 while the Weitek 4167 is for a 486.



Q) 2.11  Memory terminology, what does it mean?

[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



Read/write memory in computers is implemented using Random Access Memory

chips (RAMs).  RAMs are also used to store the displayed image in a video

board, to buffer frames in a network controller or sectors in a disk

controller, etc.  RAMs are sold by their size (in bits), word width (how

many bits can you access in one cycle), and access time (how fast you

can read a location), among other characteristics.





SRAMs and DRAMs

---------------

RAMs can be classified into two types: "static" and "dynamic."



In a static RAM, each bit is represented by the state of a circuit

with two stable states.  Such a "bistable" circuit can be built with four

transistors (for maximum density) or six (for highest speed and lowest

power).  Static RAMs (SRAMs) are available in many configurations.

(Almost) all SRAMs have one pin per address line, and all of them

are able to store data for as long as power is applied, without any

external circuit activity.



In a dynamic RAM (DRAM), each bit is represented by the charge on a

*very* small (30-50 femptofarads) capacitor, which is built into a

single, specialized transistor.  DRAM storage cells take only about

a quarter of the silicon area that SRAM cells take, and silicon

area translates into cost.

The cells in a DRAM are organized into rows and columns.  To access

a bit, you first select its row, and then you select its column.

Unfortunately, the charge leaks off the capacitor over time,

so each cell must be periodically "refreshed" by reading it and

writing it back.  This happens automatically whenever a row is accessed.

After you're finished accessing a row, you have to give the DRAM time

to copy the row of bits back to the cells: the "precharge" time.



Because the row and column addresses are not needed at the same

time, they share the same pins.  This makes the DRAM package smaller

and cheaper, but it makes the problem of distributing the signals

in the memory array difficult, because the timing becomes so

critical.  Signal integrity in the memory array is one of the

things that differentiate a lousy motherboard from a high quality

one.



SIMMs and SIPPs

---------------

Through the 1970s, RAMs were shipped in tubes, and the board makers

soldered them into boards or plugged them into sockets on boards.

This became a problem when end-users started installing their own

RAMs, because the leads ("pins") were too delicate.  Also, the

individual dual in-line package (DIP) sockets took up too much board

area.

In the early 1980s, DRAM manufacturers began offering DRAMs on tiny

circuit boards which snap into special sockets, and by the late '80s

these "single in-line memory modules" (SIMMs) had become the most popular

DRAM packaging.  Board vendors who didn't trust the new SIMM sockets

used modules with pins: single inline pinned packages (SIPPs),

which plug into sockets with more traditional pin receptacles.



PC-compatibles store each byte in main memory with an associated

check bit, or "parity bit."  That's why you add memory in multiples

of nine bits.  The most common SIMMs present nine bits of data at

each cycle (we say they're "nine bits wide") and have thirty contact

pads, or "leads."  (The leads are commonly called "pins" in the trade,

although "pads" is a more appropriate term.  SIMMs don't *have* pins!)



At the high end of the PC market, "36 bit wide" SIMMs with 72 pads

are gaining popularity.  Because of their wide data path, 36-bit SIMMs

give the motherboard designer more configuration options (you can

upgrade in smaller chunks) and allow bandwidth-enhancing tricks

(i.e. interleaving) which were once reserved for larger machines.

Another advantage of 72-lead SIMMs is that four of the leads are used

to tell the motherboard how fast the RAMs are, so it can configure

itself automatically.  (I do not know whether the current crop of

motherboards takes advantage of this feature.)



"3-chip" and "9-chip" SIMMs



In 1988 and '89, when 1 megabit (1Mb) DRAMs were new, manufacturers

had to pack nine RAMs onto a 1 megabyte (1MB) SIMM.  Now (1993) 4Mb DRAMs

are the most cost-effective size.  So a 1MB SIMM can be built with

two 4Mb DRAMs (configured 1M x4) plus a 1Mb (x1) for the check-bit.



VRAMs

-----

In graphics-capable video boards, the displayed image is almost

always stored in DRAMs.  Access to this data must be shared between

the hardware which continuously copies it to the display device (this

process is called "display refresh" or "video refresh") and

the CPU.  Most boards do it by time-sharing ordinary, single-port

DRAMs.  But the faster, more expensive boards use specialized DRAMs

which are equipped with a second data port whose function is tailored

to the display refresh operation.  These "Video DRAMs" (VRAMs) 

have a few extra pins and command a price premium.  They nearly double

the bandwidth available to the CPU or graphics engine.



(As far as I know, the first dual-ported DRAMs were built by Four-

Phase Systems Inc., in 1970, for use in their "IV-70" minicomputers, which

had integrated video.  The major DRAM vendors started offering VRAMs

in about 1983 [Texas Instruments was first], and workstation vendors

snapped them up.  They made it to the PC trade in the late '80s.)



Speed

-----

DRAMs are characterized by the time it takes to read a word,

measured from the row address becoming valid to the data coming out.

This parameter is called Row Access Time, or tRAC.  There are many

other timing parameters to a DRAM, but they scale with tRAC

remarkably well.  tRAC is measured in nanoseconds (ns).

A nanosecond is one billionth (10 e-9) of a second.



It's so difficult to control the semiconductor fabrication processes,

that the parts don't all come out the same.  Instead, their performance

varies widely, depending on many factors.  A RAM design which would

yield 50 ns tRAC parts if the fab were always tuned perfectly, instead 

yields a distribution of parts from 80 to 50.  When the plant is new,

it may turn out mostly nominal 70 ns parts, which may actually deliver 

tRAC between 60.1 ns and 70.0 ns, at 70 or 85 degrees Celcius and

4.5 volts power supply.  As it gets tuned up, it may turn out mostly 60 

ns parts and a few 50s and 70s.  When it wears out it may get less 

accurate and start yielding more 70s again.



RAM vendors have to test each part off the line to see how fast it is.  

An accurate, at-speed DRAM tester can cost several million dollars, and 

testing can be a quarter of the cost of the parts.  The finished parts 

are not marked until they are tested and their speed is known.







Q) 2.12  What happen to my 384k?



The memory between 640k and 1Meg is used for the BIOS, the video

aperture, and a number of other things.  With the proper memory

manager, DOS can take advantage of it.  Many systems, however, won't

identify its existence on boot.  This does not mean it isn't there.



Q) 2.13  How do I tell how big/fast my SIMMs are?



Individual DRAMs are marked with their speed after they are tested.

The mark is usually a suffix to the part number, representing tens of

nanoseconds.  Thus, a 511024-7 on a SIMM is very likely a 70 ns DRAM.

(vendor numbering scheme table to be added)



Q) 2.14  What speed SIMMs do I need?



[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



There is no reliable formula for deriving the required RAM speed from

the clock rate or wait states on the motherboard.  Do not buy a

motherboard that doesn't come with a manual that clearly specifies

what speed SIMMs are required at each clock rate.  You can always

substitute *faster* SIMMs for the ones that were called out in the

manual.  If you are investing in a substantial quantity of RAM,

consider buying faster than you need on the chance you can keep it

when you get a faster CPU.



That said, most 25 MHz and slower motherboards work fine with 80 ns

parts, most 33 MHz boards and some 40 MHz boards were designed for

70 ns parts, and some 40 MHz boards and everything faster require

60 ns or faster.  Some motherboards allow programming extra wait states

to allow for slower parts, but some of these designs do not really relax

all the critical timing requirements by doing that.  It's much

safer to use DRAMs that are fast enough for the no-wait or one-wait

cycles at the top end of the motherboard's capabilities.



Q) 2.15  Will 9 chip and 3 chip SIMMs work together?



[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



Almost always.  But there are exceptions.



1.  Some motherboards do not supply enough refresh address bits for a

4Mb x1 or a 1Mb x4 DRAM.  These old motherboards will not work with 4

MB 9-chip SIMMs or 1 MB 3-chip SIMMS.



2.  Some EL CHEAPO motherboards do not have proper terminations on the

lines which drive the DRAM array.  These boards may show only marginal

compatibility with various SIMMs, not working with all prefectly good

SIMMs you try, favoring SIMMs with parameters skewed towards one end

or another of the allowed ranges.  In some cases, most of the SIMMs

you happen to try might be 9-chip modules, and in other cases they

might be 3-chip modules.  A random selection of a dozen SIMMs might

lead you to conclude the motherboard doesn't "work" with 3-chip

modules, or with a "mixture" of 3-chip and 9-chip modules.



You might find the real solution is to use SIMMs one speed faster

than the manual calls for, because the particular motherboard design

just cuts too many things too close.



Q) 2.16  What are "single-sided" and "double-sided" 72-pin SIMMs?



[From: uwvax!astroatc!nicmad!madnix!zaphod (Ron Bean)]

 

   All 72-pin SIMMs are 32 bits wide (36 with parity), but

double-sided SIMMs have four RAS (Row Address Strobe) lines instead of

two. This can be thought of as two single-sided SIMMs wired in

parallel. But since there is only one set of data lines, you can only

access one "side" at a time.

 

   Usually, 1Mb, 4Mb, and 16Mb 72-pin SIMMs are single-sided, and 2Mb,

8Mb, and 32Mb SIMMs are double-sided. This only refers to how the

chips are wired-- SIMMs that are electrically "single-sided" may have

chips on both sides of the board.

 

   Most 486 motherboards use memory in banks of 32 bits (plus parity),

and may treat a double-sided SIMM as "two banks" (see your

motherboard's manual for details). Some can take four SIMMs if they're

single-sided, but only two if they're double-sided. Others can take

four of either type.

 

   Pentium (and some 486) motherboards use pairs of 72-pin SIMMs for

64-bit memory. Since double-sided SIMMs can only access 32 bits at a

time, you still need to use them in pairs to make 64 bits.



Q) 2.17  Can I use Mac or PS/2 SIMMs in my PC?



Yes, just about all SIMMs are compatible, be they from another

personal computer, a mainframe, or even a laser printer, though are a

few some odd systems out there.  There are three significant issues:

speed, parity and number of pins (data width).  Speed is obvious,

check the rating, ie: 70ns, to make sure they meet the minimum

requirements of your system.  Parity either exists or doesn't exist

and can be identified by an extra bit per byte, ie: 9 bits or 36 bits.

If your system does not require parity, you can still use SIMMs with

parity.  If, however, your system does require parity, you can't use

SIMMs without parity.  For this case, many PC's have an option to

disable the parity requirement via a jumper or BIOS setting; refer to

your motherboard manual.  The final issue is the number of pins on the

SIMM; the two most common are 30 pins (8 or 9 bit SIMMs) and 72 pins

(32 or 36 bit SIMMs); the second is physically larger thus the one can

not be used in the other.  A few motherboards have both types of

sockets.



Q) 2.18  What do wait states and burst rates in my BIOS mean?



[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



Modern motherboards are equipped with variable clocks and features

for tuning board performance at each speed.  The BIOS knows how to

program the register bits which control these options.



1.  Wait states may be adjustable to allow for slower DRAMs or

cache RAMs.  If you don't have a motherboard manual, or it doesn't

say, then you will just have to experiment.

2.  Sometimes a wait or two on a write is required with write-through

cache.  The programming allows for slower DRAMs.  The extra wait

state may cost you enough time that you would do better running at a

slower clock rate where the wait state is not required.

3.  Burst rates refer to the number of wait states inserted for

each longword access in the cache fill cycle.



Bob Nichols (rnichols@ihlpm.ih.att.com) adds:

These numbers refer to the number of clock cycles for each access of a

"burst mode" memory read.  The fastest a 486 can access memory is 2 clock

cycles for the first word and 1 cycle for each subsequent word, so

"2-1-1-1" corresponds to "zero wait states."  Anything else is slower.



How fast you can go depends on the external clock speed of your CPU, the

access time of your cache SRAMs, and the design of the cache controller.

It can also be affected by the amount of cache equipped, since "x-1-1-1"

is generally dependent on having 2 banks of cache SRAMs so that the

accesses can be interleaved.  With a 50MHz bus (486DX-50), few

motherboards can manage "2-1-1-1" no matter how fast the SRAMs are.  At

33MHz or less (486DX-33, 486DX2-66), many motherboards can achieve

"2-1-1-1" if the cache SRAMs are fast enough and there are 2 banks

equipped (cache sizes of 64KB or 256KB, typically).



Q) 2.19  Cache terminology, what does it mean?

[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



Why cache improves performance

------------------------------

Today's microprocessors ("uPs") need a faster memory than can be made

with economical DRAMs.  So we provide a fast SRAM buffer

between the DRAM and the uP.  The most popular way to set it up is

by constructing a "direct mapped cache," which is the only setup

I'll describe here.





Generic motherboard cache architecture

--------------------------------------

The direct mapped cache has three big features:

1. a "data store" made with fast SRAMs,

2  a "tag store" made with even faster SRAMs, and

3. a comparator.



The data store is the chunk of RAM you see in the motherboard price

lists.  It holds "blocks" or "lines" of data recently used by the CPU.

Lines are almost always 16 bytes.  The address feeding the cache is

simply the least significant part of the address feeding main memory.

Each memory location can be cached in only one location in the data

store.



There are two "policies" for managing the data store.  Under the

"write-back" (or "copy-back") policy, the master copy of the data is

in cache, and main memory locations may be "stale" at times.  Under

"write-through", writes go immediately to main memory as well as to

cache and memory is never "stale."



The tag store mantains one "word" of information about each line of

data in the data store.

In a "write-back" or "copy-back" cache, the tag word contains two items:

1.  the part of the main memory address that was *not*

    fed to the data store, and

2.  a "dirty" bit.



A write-through cache doesn't need a dirty bit.  The tag store is

addressed with the most significant address bits that are being fed to

the data store.  The tag is only concerned with the address bits that

are used to select a line.  With a 16 byte line, address bits 0

through 3 are irrelevant to the tag.



An example: The motherboard has 32 MB main memory and 256 KB cache.

To specify a byte in main memory, 25 bits of address are required: A0

through A24.  To specify a byte in data store, 18 bits (A0 through

A17) are required.  Lines in cache are 16 bytes on 16 byte boundaries,

so only A3 through A17 are required to specify a line.  The tag word

for this system would represent A18 through A24 (plus dirty bit).  The

tag store in this system would be addressed by A3 through A17,

therefore the tag store would require 16 K tag words seven bits wide.

The dirty bit is written at different times than the rest of the tag,

so it might be housed separately, and this tag store might be built in

three 16K x4 SRAMs.



What happens when it runs

-------------------------

Each motherboard memory cycle begins when the uP puts out a memory

address.  The data store begins fetching, and simultaneously the

tag begins fetching.  When the tag word is ready, the Comparator

compares the tag word to the current address.



If they match, a cache hit is declared and the uP reads or writes

the data store location.  If the hit is a write, the copy-back

cache marks the line "dirty" by setting its dirty-bit in the line's

tag word.  The write-through motherboard simultaneously stores the

write data in data store and begins a DRAM write cycle.  The uP

moves on.



If the tag word doesn't match, what a bummer, it's a cache miss.

If the line in cache is dirty, double bummer, the line must be

copied back to main memory before anything else can happen.  All

16 bytes are copied back, even if the hit was a one-byte write.

This data transfer is called a "dirty write flush."



On a read-miss, the motherboard has to copy a line from main memory

to cache (and update the tag, the whole operation is called a "cache

fill"), and the uP can stop waiting as soon as the bytes it wants

go by.  On a write-miss, the caches I've worked with ignore the

event (that's an oversimplification) and the main memory performs

a write cycle.  I've heard of systems that fill on a write-miss,

that is they replace the cache line whenever it misses, read or

write, dirty or not.  I've never seen such a system.



Terms

-----

The 486, the 68020, and their descendants have caches on chip.

We call the on-chip cache "primary" and the cache on the

motherboard "secondary."  The 386 has no cache, therefore the cache

on a 386 motherboard is "primary."  I like to call the DRAM array

"core" for brevity.  Motherboard = "mb."  Megabyte = "MB."



Problems

--------

I added "core" and I had to disable my secondary cache to

get the board running.  Or, I added core and performance took a dive.

Disabling secondary cache improved it, but still real slow.

What happened?



 Whenever you are adding memory and you cross a power-of-2

address boundary, another address bit becomes interesting to the

tag.  That is, the tag does not care when you add your 8th MB

(MB) but it cares a lot about the new address bit 24 when you add

your 9th MB, or your 17th (bit 25).  Evidently, at the low-price

end of the mb market there are boards with not enough tag RAM

sockets to support all the core they can hold.  Most of these EL

CHEAPO mbs don't even try to use cache in the region beyond the

tag's coverage.  Some of them don't have the logic to stay out or

the BIOS doesn't know to enable it.  These boards just don't run

right.



Do not buy a mb if you are not sure it can cache all of core.  The

worst case is with core fully stuffed with whatever the board claims

to hold, and the smallest cache configuration.  Some motherboards

ask you to add cache when you add core, so that they don't have to

provide for that worst case tag width.  These motherboards may ask

you to move some jumpers in the tag area.  The jumpers control

which address bits the tag looks at.  Do not buy a motherboard if

you don't know how to set all the jumpers.







Q) 2.20  How do I upgrade the size of my cache?



Look in your motherboard manual.  Each motherboard is different.

You will have to add or replace cache RAMs and move jumpers.



Q) 2.21  Do I need to fill the "dirty tag" RAM socket on my motherboard?



[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



Perhaps you don't *have* to for the board to run, but the missing RAM

will cost you performance.  Most "write-back" mbs cope with the

missing RAM by treating all lines as dirty.  You get a lot of

unneccessary write cycles; you might even do better with

write-through.



Your bargain-basement no-documentation no-brand mb might not have the

pullup resistor on that socket, and it might run for a second, ten

minutes, or ten years with that pin not driven.  I think it's a

pointless risk to leave the socket empty.



Q) 2.22  How fast do my cache RAMs have to be?



[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



Only the person who designed your mb knows for sure.  There is

no simple formula related to clock rate.  However, most people tell

me their 33 MHz mbs' manuals call for 25 ns data store and 20 ns

tag store, and their 40 and 50 MHz mbs want 20 ns data store and

15 or 12 ns tag.  Tqhe tag has to be faster than data store to make

time for the comparator to work.  Do not buy a motherboard if you do

not know what speed and size of cache RAMs it requires in all its

speeds and configurations.



If you're not sure, it doesn't hurt to use faster RAMs than your

manual calls for.  If your manual says 20 ns for location x and you

happen to have 15 ns parts, it's ok to "mix" the speeds.  It's ok to

"mix" RAMs from more than one manufacturer.  However, the faster RAMs

will not buy you more performance.



Q) 2.23  Which is the best cache policy, write-through or "write-back?"



[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



For most applications, copy-back gives better performance than

write-through.  The amount of win will depend on your application and

may not be significant.  Write-through is simpler, but not by much any

more.



Q) 2.24  What about an n-way set associative cache, isn't it better?



[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



At the high end of the mb market, caches are available with more than

one set.  In these caches, the data store is broken into two or four

parts, or sets, with a separate tag for each.  On a miss, clever

algorithms (such as Least Recently Used) can be used to pick which set

will be filled, because each set has a candidate location.  The result

is a higher hit rate than a direct mapped (single set) cache the same

size can offer.



The primary cache on the 486 is four-way set associative.



Q) 2.25  Which is better, ISA/EISA/VLB/PCI/etc?

[From: ralf@wpi.wpi.edu (Ralph Valentino)]



Here is a quick overview of the various bus architectures available

for the PC and some of the strengths and weaknesses of each.  Some

terms are described in more detail at the bottom.



XT bus:

	8 data bits, 20 address bits

	4.77 MHz

   Comments: Obsolete, very similar to ISA bus, many XT cards will

	     work in ISA slots.

	

ISA bus: Industry Standard Architecture bus (aka. AT bus)

	8/16 data bits, 24 address bits (16Meg addressable)

	8-8.33MHz, asynchronous

	5.55M/s burst

	bus master support

	edge triggered TTL interrupts (IRQs) - no sharing

	low cost

   Comments: ideal for low to mid bandwidth cards, though lack of

	     IRQs can quickly become annoying.

	

MCA bus: Micro Channel Architecture bus

	16/32 data bit, 32 address bits

	80M/s burst, synchronous

	full bus master capability

	good bus arbitration

	auto configurable

	IBM proprietary (not ISA/EISA/VLB compatible)

   Comments: Since MCA was proprietary, EISA was formed to compete with

	     it.  EISA gained much more acceptance; MCA is all but dead.

	

EISA bus: Enhanced Industry Standard Architecture bus

	32 data bits, 32 address bits

	8-8.33MHz, synchronous

	32M/s burst (sustained)

	full bus master capability

	good bus arbitration

	auto configurable

	sharable IRQs, DMA channels

	backward compatible with ISA

	some acceptance outside of the PC architecture

	high cost

   Comments: EISA is great for high bandwidth bus mastering cards

	     such as SCSI host adaptors, but its high cost limits

	     its usefulness for other types of cards.



P-EISA: Pragmatic EISA (also Super-ISA)

	(see the description of the HiNT chipset elsewhere in this FAQ)



VLB: VESA Local Bus

	32 data bits, 32 address bits

	25-40MHz, asynchronous

	130M/s burst (sustained is closer to 32M/s)

	bus master capability

	will coexist with ISA/EISA

	slot limited to 2 or 3 cards typical

	backward compatible with ISA

	moderate cost

   Comments: VLB is great for video cards, but its lack of a good bus

	     arbiter limits its usefulness for bus mastering cards and

	     its moderate cost limits its usefulness for low to mid 

	     bandwidth cards.  Since it can coexist with EISA/ISA, a

	     combination of all three types of cards usually works best.

	     

PCI:  Peripheral Component Interconnect local bus

	32 data bits (64 bit option), 32 address bits (64 bit option)

	up to 33MHz, synchronous

	132M/s burst (sustained) (264M/s with 64 bit option)

	full bus master capability

	good bus arbitration

	slot limited to 3 or 4 cards typical

	auto configurable

	will coexist with ISA/EISA/MCA as well as another PCI bus

	strong acceptance outside of the PC architecture

	moderate cost

   Comments: The newest of the buses, combining the speed of VLB with

	     the advanced arbitration of EISA.  Great for both video

	     cards and bus mastering SCSI/network cards.



			=Terms=



Auto configurable:  Allows software to identify the board's

requirements and resolve any potential resource conflicts

(IRQ/DMA/address/BIOS/etc).



Bus master support:  Capable of First Party DMA transfers.



Full bus master capability:  Can support any First Party cycle from any

device, including another CPU.



Good bus arbitration:  Fair bus access during conflicts, no need to

back off unless another device needs the bus.  This prevents CPU

starvation while allowing a single device to use 100% of the available

bandwidth.  Other buses let a card hold the bus until it decides to

release it and attempts to prevent starvation by having an active card

voluntarily release the bus periodically ("bus on time") and remain

off the bus for a period of time ("bus off time") to give other

devices, including the CPU, a chance even if they don't want it.



16Meg addressable:  This limits first party DMA transfers to the lower

16 Meg of address space.  There are various software methods to

overcome this problem when more than 16 Megs of main memory are

available.  This has no effect on the ability of the processor to

reach all of main memory.



Backward compatible with ISA:  Allows you to place an ISA card in the

slot of a more advanced bus.  Note, however, that the ISA card does

not get any benefit from being in an advanced slot, instead, the slot

reverts to an ISA slot.  Other slots are unaffected.







Q) 2.26  *What are the (dis)advantages of ISA/VLB/EISA SCSI?



Q) 2.27  Will an ISA card work in an MCA (PS/2) machine?



No, they will not.  MCA, unlike EISA and VLB, is not backward

compatible with ISA.



Q) 2.28  What does the "chip set" do?

[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



The motherboard "chip set" contains all the logic that's not in

the microprocessor ("uP") and its coprocessor, or the memory.

These functions always include:

 *  Address decoding and "memory mapping"

 *  keyboard interface controller (which includes reset generator)

 *  Direct Memory Access (DMA) channels

 *  interrupt controller

 *  bus controller(s)

 *  battery-powered "real time" clock/calendar circuit

 *  crystal-controlled clock oscillator(s)

 *  main memory controller

 

They almost always include:

 *  controller for cache external to the uP

 *  "turbo" switch logic

 *  programmable "wait state" logic



and some of them include:

 *  controller(s) for PCMCIA slots

 *  "green" power-conservation logic

 *  video display logic for CRT, LCD, or both

 *  serial ports, parallel ports, floppy, SCSI and/or IDE, etc. controllers

 *  network interface controllers (for Ethernet)



Some people consider the BIOS ROM part of the "chip set."



Sometimes part of an EISA or VLB bus controller is implemented

in an optional, socketed integrated circuit.  A motherboard like that

can be sold with the socket empty, and you have to go back and

buy the "bus mastering option" later when you find out you need it.



"Chip sets" are usually a set of highly integrated, special purpose

integrated circuits.  The keyboard interface controller is usually

in a 40-pin dual-inline pin (DIP) package compatible with the Intel

8048 single-chip microcomputer which was used for that function in the

IBMPC-AT.  The rest of the logic often fits in a single IC.  In the trade,

you may see this single IC referred to as "the chipset," even though

the keyboard interface and other logic is external.  The Asian data sheets

often call the high-integration chips "LSIs."



The word "ChipSet" is a trademark of Chips and Technologies

Inc. (San Jose, California), which introduced a 5-chip set of LSIs

for AT-clone motherboards in early 1985.  CTI may also own "chipset"

and "Chipset"; I don't know.

CTI was very successful at promoting the term "ChipSet," but less

successful at associating it in the public mind with their particular

brand.  People use the word to refer to any high integration chip

used in PCs.  For example, you'll hear people talk about the "ET4000

video chipset."  The ET4000 is a single chip which integrates most

of an SVGA controller.  The word "ASIC" (application-specific integrated

circuit) would be more appropriate.



Single, high-integration ICs are not very good at driving heavily

loaded signals, like the ones in the memory array and the expansion

slots.  Better motherboards use buffer chips external to the LSI

for this electrical function.  It may not show up in "WinMark"

comparisons, but it shows in electrical compatibility.  Well-buffered

motherboards are less likely to require SIMM "cherry-picking,"

and are more likely to work at high ambient temperatures.

The 74F245, which costs about 15 cents in high volume, is often used for

this electrical buffering.







Q) 2.29  How do I enter the CMOS configuration menu?



[From: burnesa@cat.com (Shaun Burnet)]



	AMI BIOS        Del key during the POST

	Award BIOS      Ctrl-Alt-Esc

	DTK BIOS        Esc key during the POST

	IBM PS/2 BIOS   Ctrl-Alt-Ins after Ctrl-Alt-Del

	Phoenix BIOS    Ctrl-Alt-Esc or Ctrl-Alt-S



Q) 2.30  What is bus mastering and how do I know if I have it?



Bus mastering is the ability of an expansion (ISA/EISA/VLB/MCA/etc)

card to directly read and write to main memory.  This allows the CPU

do delegate I/O work out to the cards, freeing it to do other things.

For all of the above busses, bus mastering capability is assumed.

Unless specifically stated otherwise, you should assume each slot has

this capability.  For cards, this is not assumed.  If you want a bus

mastering card, you should specifically request it and expect to pay

more.  Note that some cards (RLL/MFM/IDE/com) are not available in bus

mastering versions.



Q) 2.31  Can I put an ISA cards in EISA or VLB slots?



Yes, you can put ISA cards in both EISA slots and VLB slots, as both

buses were specifically designed to be 100% ISA compatible.  ISA cards

will not directly effect the performance of EISA/VLB cards; a well

balanced system will have both.  Note, however, that the total

bandwidth of the bus will be split between all cards, so there is a

strong advantage to using EISA/VLB cards for the high bandwidth

devices (disk/video).



Q) 2.32  How should I configure ISA/VLB cards in the EISA config utility?



Only EISA cards matter in the ECU; ISA and VLB entries are only place

markers.  While this is a good way to keep track of IRQ, DMA and BIOS

conflictions, ISA and VLB need not be placed in the configuration at

all, nor should it be assumed that the settings for them match the

actual card settings.  If you wish to add them, you can use the

"Generic ISA Card" configuration file for either.  Do not expect card

vendors to supply them.



Q) 2.33  What is the difference between EISA Standard and Enhanced modes?



Many EISA cards support both Standard (ISA) and Enhanced (EISA) modes.

In Standard mode, the card will appear to be an ISA card to the OS; it

will generate edge triggered interrupts and only accept ISA addressing

(for bus mastering cards), for instance.  An important thing to note

is that the card may still do EISA specific things like 32-bit data

bus mastering and EISA configuration setup as this functionality is

hidden from the OS.



Q) 2.34  Is there any point in putting more than 16M in an ISA machine?



[From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]



Sure.  Even inferior operating systems can use it for something.

The question is how much performance it buys.  In ISA, the DMA

channels and bus-mastering IO cards can only address the first 16 MB.  

Therefore the device drivers have to copy data up and down or just

not use the space.  I am told the Linux SCSI drivers know how to

do this.  I don't know about OS/2 or MSWindows.



Q) 2.35  What disadvantages are there to the HiNT EISA chip set?

[From: ralf@wpi.wpi.edu (Ralph Valentino)]



The HiNT Caesar Chip Set (CS8001 & CS8002) can come in three different

configurations.  All three of these configurations have EISA style

connectors and are (sometimes incorrectly) sold as EISA motherboards.

The differences should be carefully noted, though.



The rarest of these configuration uses a combination of the first HiNT

chip (CS8001) and the Intel chip set.  This configuration can support

the full EISA functionality: 32 address bits, 32 data bits, level

sensitive (sharable) interrupts, full EISA DMA, watch dog (sanity)

timer, and so forth.



The second configuration is called Super-ISA, which uses both of the

HiNT chips.  This configuration is very common in low-end models.  It

supports a very limited functionality: 24 address bits, 32 data bits,

edge triggered (non-sharable) interrupts, ISA (16 data, 24 address)

DMA, and no watch dog timer.  Some EISA boards, such as the Adaptec

1742A EISA Fast SCSI-2 host adapter, can be configured to work in this

mode by hacking their EISA configuration file (.CFG) to turn off these

features.  Other EISA cards require these features and are therefore

unusable in these systems.



The final configuration is called Pragmatic EISA, or P-EISA.  Like

Super-ISA, both HiNT chips are used but external support logic

(buffers and such) are added to provide a somewhat increased

functionality: 32 address bits, 32 data bits, edge triggered

(non-sharable) interrupts, ISA (16 data, 24 address) DMA, and no watch

dog timer.  The full 32 bits for address and data allow bus mastering

devices access to the complete range of main memory.  As with

Super-ISA, there may be incompatibilities with some EISA cards.







Q) 2.36  *Should I change the ISA bus speed?



Q) 2.37  Why is my PC's clock so inaccurate?

[From: uwvax!astroatc!nicmad!madnix!zaphod (Ron Bean)]

 

Usually this means that the clock crystal is not adjusted properly, or

that it needs a new battery. The interrupt-based "DOS time" can also

be affected by programs that disable interrupts for too long.

 

   If your clock is just running at the wrong speed, you can

compensate for it in software by measuring the drift rate and applying

a correction factor. In the long run, this can be *very* accurate. One

such program for DOS is adclk100.zip. An alternative is to run a

program that periodically sets your clock to another one that's known

to be accurate (see the question on setting your clock).

 

   If your clock is more erratic (eg, it stops when the machine is

turned off, or the date gets scrambled), try replacing the battery

(but remember to write down your CMOS settings first!).  The CMOS RAM

takes considerably less power than the clock, so it may keep working

even though the battery is too weak to run the clock (see the question

on replacing the battery for details).

 

   A typical cheap quartz watch is rated at +/- 15 sec per month (3

minutes per year) which is about 5.7 ppm (parts per million).  Dallas

Semiconductor rates their encapsulated clock modules for +/- 1 min per

month, or 22.8 ppm. Clocks with external crystals can be "fine-tuned"

with a trimmer capacitor-- if the motherboard designer included one

(Note: there may be more than one crystal on the motherboard). The

crystal's frequency will change slightly over time as the crystal

"ages".

 

   The original IBM AT used the Motorola MC146818, which is a

real-time clock plus 50 bytes of CMOS RAM. This chip is discussed in

the book "The Undocumented PC", from Addison-Welsey. The Dallas

Semiconductor DS1285 is a drop-in replacement for the MC146818, and

the DS1287 is the same chip encapsulated with its own battery and

clock crystal. Other variants include larger amounts of CMOS RAM. Most

software accesses the clock through the BIOS.

 

   Before the AT, there were various types of aftermarket clock cards,

and some of them may still be available (even though every PC sold in

the last several years "already has a clock").

 

   Given the number of times this comes up on the net, there should be

a market for accurate clock cards. On the other hand, most people

don't seem to care whether their computers have anything close to the

correct time. If your machine doesn't keep time correctly, and you

think it should, you might consider complaining to the manufacturer

about it.







Q) 2.38  How can I automatically set my PC's clock to the correct time?

[From: uwvax!astroatc!nicmad!madnix!zaphod (Ron Bean)]



If you're on the internet, you can use ntp (network time protocol) to

set your clock to another machine that's known to be accurate (see RFC

1129, Internet Time Synchronization).

 

   ACTS, the Automated Computer Time Service, is available by modem at

(303)494-4774 (note this is NOT a toll-free call). There are programs

that will dial this number and set your clock automatically. This

service is run by NIST (the National Institute of Standards and

Technology, formerly the National Bureau of Standards).

 

   In Germany, the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB)

broadcasts a coded time signal on 77.5 kHz from a transmitter near

Frankfurt, and inexpensive receivers are available that can plug into

a serial port (this signal should cover most of Europe). In the US,

NIST runs a similar station (WWVB) on 60 kHz, but the data is encoded

differently and receivers are expensive and hard to find.

 

   Other coded time signals are available from WWV and WWVH on 2.5, 5,

10, 15, and 20 MHz (shortwave), and from the GOES and GPS

satellites. CHU Canada on 3.33, 7.335, and 14.670 MHz broadcasts time

codes using Bell 103 FSK (300 baud modem tones) during seconds 31

through 39 of each minute. If you don't have a shortwave receiver, the

WWV audio time announcement can be heard by dialing (303)499-7111

(again, this is NOT a toll-free call).

 

   NIST publishes a 30-page booklet (NIST Special Publication 432)

that explains all of their time services in detail. They also have a

partial list of companies that make receivers, but it appears to be

somewhat out of date. Both are available from:

 

	  NIST/Radio Station WWV

	  2000 East County Road 58

	  Fort Collins, CO  80524-9499

 

   You may have heard about Heathkit's "Most Accurate Clock", which

decodes the time signal from WWV and has a serial port.  Heath no

longer sells kits, but they still sell the factory-built version of

the clock (it's not cheap, though). Their address is P.O. Box 1288,

Benton Harbor, MI 49023.







Q) 2.39  What is the battery for and how do I replace it?



[From: uwvax!astroatc!nicmad!madnix!zaphod (Ron Bean)]



   The battery maintains power to the CMOS RAM and the real-time clock

when your PC is turned off. You may have a small lithium "coin"

battery soldered to the motherboard, or a larger external one plugged

into a connector. Some motherboards have a jumper to select either

type, and a few have a NiCd battery that recharges automatically, or a

lithium battery encapsulated in the clock chip.

 

   NOTE: Always write down your CMOS settings before you mess with the

battery! In fact, you should write them down now anyway, in case the

battery fails later.

 

   The batteries that are soldered in or encapsulated with the clock

chip are supposed to last 10 years or more, but your mileage may

vary. Some people find that the external type has to be replaced every

couple of years. Self-recharging NiCds that get power from a disk

drive cable are available as aftermarket items.  A few people have

tried to save money by substituting 4 alkaline AA batteries for the

expensive external lithium battery, but they have to be replaced more

often.

 

   If you need to replace a soldered-in battery, have a repair shop

install a socket (you shouldn't attempt this yourself, unless you're

experienced at soldering on expensive multi-layer circuit boards). If

the battery is encapsulated in the chip, there is no way to replace it

without replacing the chip-- again, consult a repair shop if it's not

socketed. These chips can be "turned off" via software to extend

battery life during storage, and are shipped from the factory that

way.



Q) 2.40  Can I use IRQ2 or is it special?



IRQ2 is used to cascade the second interrupt controller on AT

machines.  This has one and only one side effect: from a software

point of view, IRQ2 = IRQ9.  You can freely use IRQ2 on any hardware

device, provided you are not already using IRQ9.  Your associated

software driver can be set to IRQ2 or IRQ9, which ever it happens to

prefer.  Note that many video cards have an IRQ2 enable jumper for

very, very old backward compatibility reasons; you should disable this

before attempting to use the IRQ for something else.  There are no

unexpected side effects.



Q) 2.41  Where do all the IRQ's go?

[From: wlim@lehman.com (Willie Lim)]



Default settings.



 IRQ   DMA  IO BASE   Card or Device

	    ADDRESS

	    (HEX)

 ===   ===  ========  ===============

  0     *      *      timer (reserved)

  1     *      *      keyboard (reserved)

  2     *      *      interrupt 8-15 (cascade)

  2     *     330     MPU-401 Emulation (PAS 16)      

  3     *     2F8     COM2:

  3     *     2E8     COM4:

  3     *     300     3Com Etherlink II, II/TP, II/16, II/16TP, 16/16TP

  3     *     300     Novell NE2000

  3     *     300     SMC/Western Digital 8003EP, 8013EWC, 8013WB

  4     *     3F8     COM1:

  4     *     3E8     COM3:

  5     *     278     LPT2:

  5     *     368     Ungermann-Bass Ethernet NIUpc (long), NIUpc/EOTP (short)

  5     *     ???     DEC etherWORKS LC, Turbo, Turbo/TP

  5     1     220     Sound Blaster Emulation (PAS 16)

  5     5     A20     Proteon P1390

  6     *      *      floppy disk controller

  7     *     378     LPT1: (PRN:)

  7     3      *      Pro Audio Spectrum 16 (PAS 16)  

  8     *      *      clock (reserved)

  9     *      *      reserved

  9     5     300     Boca Ethernet (BEN100, BEN102, BEN300)  

 10     *      *      unassigned

 11     *      *      unassigned

 12     *      *      unassigned

 13     *      *      math co-processor

 14     *      *      hard-disk

 15     *      *      secondary disk controller



===============

Ralph Valentino  (ralf@wpi.wpi.edu)

Hardware Engineer,  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute


Continued in part 2.