asynchronous system trap (AST)

A software-simulated interrupt to a user-defined routine. ASTs enable a user process to be notified asynchronously, with respect to that process, of the occurrence of a specific event. If a user process has defined an AST routine for an event, the system interrupts the process and executes the AST routine when that event occurs. When the AST rou- tine exits, the system resumes execution of the process at the point where it was inter- rupted.

bandwidth

Bandwidth is often used to express the rate of data transfer in a bus or an I/O channel.

barrier transaction

A transaction on the external interface as a result of an MB (memory barrier) instruc- tion.

Bcache

See second-level cache.

bidirectional

Flowing in two directions. The buses are bidirectional; they carry both input and output signals.

BiSI

Built-in self-initialization.

BiST

Built-in self-test.

bit

Binary digit. The smallest unit of data in a binary notation system, designated as 0 or 1.

bit time

The total time that a signal conveys a single valid piece of information (specified in ns). All data and commands are associated with a clock and the receiver’s latch on both the rise and fall of the clock. Bit times are a multiple of the 21264/EV68A clocks. Systems must produce a bit time identical to 21264/EV68A’s bit time. The bit time is one-half the period of the forwarding clock.

BIU

Bus interface unit. See Cbox.

Block exchange

Memory feature that improves bus bandwidth by paralleling a cache victim write-back with a cache miss fill.

board-level cache

See second-level cache.

Glossary–2

21264/EV68A Hardware Reference Manual

Page 328
Image 328
Compaq EV68A specifications Biu