PCI Express goes everywhere
EE Times (07/18/2008 3:00 PM EDT)
PCI Express HAS become the leading chip interconnect, dominating in servers, storage systems and PCs. PC economies of scale have spurred processor and ASIC suppliers to integrate PCIe interfaces. In turn, those chips are driving PCI Express into embedded systems and networking.
The Linley Group estimates last year's market for PCI Express connectivity products, primarily bridges and switches, at $55 million. Most of the revenue was from the server and storage segments.
We expect the connectivity market to exceed $195 million by 2011. Much of the growth will come from communications and embedded. A breakout of this market is detailed in The Linley Group report "A Guide to High-Speed Interconnects."
PCIe has evolved from the 2.5-Gbit/second serial data rate of the original spec (Gen1) to 5 Gbits/s in v2.0 (Gen2). Multigigabit-rate requirements for networking and the adoption of blade servers are driving the need for Gen2.
Requirements in server, storage, embedded and networking applications differ, however, from the standard PCIe configuration in PCs. PC applications focus on low cost, with four-layer boards and small trace lengths.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Multi-Channel Flex DMA IP Core for PCI Express
- PCIe - PCI Express Controller
- PCI Express PIPE PHY Transceiver
- Scalable Switch Intel® FPGA IP for PCI Express
- Multichannel DMA Intel FPGA IP for PCI Express*
Related White Papers
- How HyperTransport and PCI Express complement each other
- Advanced switching boosts PCI Express
- Compatibility issue slows PCI Express
- With StarFabric as an on-ramp, the PCI Express Advanced Switching is ready
Latest White Papers
- Transition Fixes in 3nm Multi-Voltage SoC Design
- CXL Topology-Aware and Expander-Driven Prefetching: Unlocking SSD Performance
- Breaking the Memory Bandwidth Boundary. GDDR7 IP Design Challenges & Solutions
- Automating NoC Design to Tackle Rising SoC Complexity
- Memory Prefetching Evaluation of Scientific Applications on a Modern HPC Arm-Based Processor