A Signals Reference
| This appendix provides an alphabetical listing of all Itanium 2 processor system bus signals. The |
| tables at the end of this appendix summarize the signals by direction: output, input, and I/O. |
| For a complete pinout listing including processor specific pins, please refer to Chapter 3, “Pinout |
| Specifications.” |
A.1 | Alphabetical Signals Reference |
A.1.1 | A[49:3]# (I/O) |
| The Address (A[49:3]#) signals, with byte enables, define a 250 Byte physical memory address |
| space. When ADS# is active, these pins transmit the address of a transaction. These pins are also |
| used to transmit other transaction related information such as transaction identifiers and external |
| functions in the cycle following ADS# assertion. These signals must connect the appropriate pins |
| of all agents on the Itanium 2 processor system bus. The A[49:27]# signals are |
| the AP1# parity signal, and the A[26:3]# signals are |
| On the |
| determine their |
A.1.2 | A20M# (I) |
| A20M# is ignored in the Itanium 2 processor system environment. |
A.1.3 | ADS# (I/O) |
| The Address Strobe (ADS#) signal is asserted to indicate the validity of the transaction address on |
| the A[49:3]#, REQ[5:0]#, AP[1:0]# and RP#pins. All bus agents observe the ADS# activation to |
| begin parity checking, protocol checking, address decode, internal snoop, or deferred reply ID |
| match operations associated with the new transaction. |
A.1.4 | AP[1:0]# (I/O) |
| The Address Parity (AP[1:0]#) signals can be driven by the request initiator along with ADS# and |
| A[49:3]#. AP[1]# covers A[49:27]#, and AP[0]# covers A[26:3]#. A correct parity signal is high if |
| an even number of covered signals are low and low if an odd number of covered signals are low. |
| This allows parity to be high when all the covered signals are high. |
A.1.5 | ASZ[1:0]# (I/O) |
| The ASZ[1:0]# signals are the memory |
initiator during the first Request Phase clock on the REQa[4:3]# pins. The ASZ[1:0]# signals are valid only when REQa[2:1]# signals equal 01B, 10B, or 11B, indicating a memory access transaction. The ASZ[1:0]# decode is defined in Table
Datasheet | 91 |