From: John Sigler <linux.kernel@free.fr>
To: Sebastien Dugue <sebastien.dugue@bull.net>
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-pci@atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz
Subject: Re: Is the PCI clock within the spec?
Date: Tue, 04 Dec 2007 14:27:02 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <475555A6.3060202@free.fr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20071204134254.5db8e27d@bull.net>
Hello Sébastien,
Sébastien Dugué wrote:
> John Sigler wrote:
>
>> I have an x86 system, running Linux 2.6.22.1-rt9, in which I plug one
>> or two PCI I/O boards. I had been experiencing complete system lock-ups
>> until I sent the system to the board manufacturer, and he fixed the
>> problem. However, he told me that the PCI clock seemed out of spec,
>> as far as voltage is concerned.
>>
>> (Disclaimer: my knowledge of PCI is 0.)
>>
>> The board manufacturer sent me the plot of (what appears to be) voltage
>> versus time for the PCI clock.
>>
>> http://linux.kernel.free.fr/plot1.jpg
>>
>> The system manufacturer sent me a similar plot.
>>
>> http://linux.kernel.free.fr/plot2.jpg
>
> Why did they send you those plots? What was their point?
The board manufacturer originally thought that the voltage under-
and overshot might be responsible for the system lock-ups we were
experiencing. They sent us the first plot to document the problem.
(In the end, the lock-up was linked to a bug in their DMA engine.)
I asked the system manufacturer whether they could reproduce the
voltage issue, and they sent me the second plot.
>> As far as my understanding goes, the signal should alternate between
>> 0 V and 3.3 V (??).
>
> Yep, that's the idealized 3.3V signaling case. However, it looks like
> the signal is overshooting a bit (-0.8V below 0 and +0.8V over 3.3V from looking
> at the 1st plot) which may be due to incorrect impedance matching on the bus,
> probes artifacts, ...
>
>> In the second plot, it looks like Vmax ~ 4.6V
>> and Vmin ~ -1.4V (Pk-Pk(C1)=6.08V might mean peak-to-peak voltage?)
>
> This one looks a bit high (if they measured the same voltages I wonder
> where they got their scopes calibrated ;-) )
The first plot was obtained on my system. The second plot was obtained
on a different system, presumably identical to mine, but I don't know
for sure.
>> 0) What is this C1 both plots mention?
>
> Scope Channel 1
>
>> 1) Am I reading the plot correctly?
>
> Yep
>
>> 2) Is -1.4V in DC even possible?
>
> Why not!
Errr... I need to think about it :-)
>> 3) 4.6V is 1.3V above 3.3V and -1.4V is -1.4V below 0. (Assuming I read
>> the numbers correctly) Are these values within the PCI spec? Or are
>> these voltages dangerous and / or might cause some problems with some
>> PCI boards?
>
> Well it depends on which of the plot is lying. Looking at the PCI spec
> (4.2.2.1) the Vih max for a device is Vcc-max+0.5 = 3.6 + 0.5 = 4.1V
> the Vil min is -0.5V so in this case it looks a bit high. But I would not
> worry too much, those are only the overshoots, and the circuits have
> clamping diodes on their inputs.
>
> The test waveform voltages for the maximum ratings (4.2.2.3) against which
> every PCI device should be qualified are higher than what you have here: 7.1V
> peak-to-peak.
OK. I suppose I should not worry then :-)
> Hope this helps.
Very much! Thanks.
Regards.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-12-04 13:27 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-12-04 10:57 Is the PCI clock within the spec? John Sigler
2007-12-04 12:42 ` Sébastien Dugué
2007-12-04 13:27 ` John Sigler [this message]
2007-12-04 13:48 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2007-12-04 15:12 ` John Sigler
2007-12-04 15:51 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2007-12-04 21:37 ` David Schwartz
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