Micro Channel Architecture (MCA Bus)
The terms Micro Channel, Micro Channel architecture, or just MCA, all refer to the same thing: a kind of expansion bus used
in PCs. MCA was a distinct break from previous bus architectures such
as Industry Standard Architecture. The pin connections in MCA are
smaller than other bus interfaces. For this and other reasons, MCA does
not support other bus architectures. Although MCA offers a number of
improvements over other bus architectures, its proprietary, nonstandard
aspects did not encourage other manufacturers to adopt it.
It
has influenced other bus designs and it is still in use in PS/2s and in
some minicomputer systems. The MCA bus was IBM's attempt to replace the
ISA bus with something "bigger and better". When the 80386DX was
introduced in the mid-80s with its 32-bit data bus, IBM decided to
create a bus to match this width. MCA is 32 bits wide, and offers
several significant improvements over ISA. The MCA bus has some pretty
impressive features considering that it was introduced in 1987, a full
seven years before the PCI bus made similar features common on the Pc.
In some ways it was ahead of its time, because back then the ISA bus
really wasn't a major performance limiting factor:
32 Bit Bus Width:
The MCA bus features a full 32 bit bus width, the same width as the
VESA and PCI local buses. It had far superior throughput to the ISA bus.
Bus Mastering: The MCA bus supported bus mastering adapters for greater efficiency, including proper bus arbitration.
Plug and Play:
MCA automatically configured adapter cards, so there was no need to
fiddle with jumpers. This was eight years before Windows 95 brought PnP
into the mainstream!
MCA
had a great deal of potential. Unfortunately, IBM made two decisions
that would doom MCA to utter failure in the marketplace. First, they
made MCA incompatible with ISA, this means ISA cards will not work at
all in an MCA system, one of the few categories of PCs for which this is
true. The PC
market is very sensitive to backwards-compatibility issues, as
evidenced by the number of older standards that persist to this day.
Second, IBM decided to make the MCA bus proprietary. It in fact did this
with ISA as well, however in 1981 IBM could afford to flex its muscles
in this manner, while by this time the clone makers were starting to
come into their own and weren't interested in bending to IBM's wishes.
These
two factors, combined with the increased cost of MCA systems, led to
the demise of the MCA bus. With the PS/2 now discontinued, MCA is dead
on the PC platform, though it is still used by IBM on some of its RISC
6000 UNIX servers. It is one of the classical examples in the field of
computing of how non-technical issues often dominate over technical
ones. But one of MCA's disadvantages is that it has poor DMA controller
circuitry.
Features of Micro Channel Architecture
• I/O data transfers of 8-, 16-, 24-, or 32-bits within a 64KB address space (16-bit address width).
•
Memory data transfers of 8-, 16-, 24-, or 32-bits within a 16MB (24-bit
address width) or 4GB (32-bit address width) address space.
• An arbitration procedure that enables up to 15 devices and the system master to bid for control of the channel.
• A basic transfer procedure that allows data transfers between masters and slaves.
• A direct memory
access (DMA) procedure that supports multiple DMA channels.
Additionally, this procedure allows a device to transfer data in bursts.
•
An optional streaming data procedure that provides a faster
data-transfer rate than the basic transfer procedure and allows 64-bit
data transfers.
• Address- and data-parity enable and detect procedures.
• Interrupt sharing on all levels.
• A flexible system-configuration procedure that uses programmable registers.
• An adapter interface to the channel using:
• A 16-bit connector with a 24-bit address bus and a 16-bit data bus
• A 32-bit connector with a 32-bit address bus and a 32-bit data bus
• An optional matched-memory extension
• An optional video extension.
• Support for audio signal transfer (audio voltage-sum node).
• Support for both synchronous and asynchronous data transfer.
• An exception condition reporting procedure.
• Improved electromagnetic characteristics.
Chapter : Introduction to Computer
Chapter : Introduction to Computer
- Computer Fundamental
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