Intel Xeon Wolfdale E3210 P4X-UPE3210-316-6M1333 Data Sheet

Product codes
P4X-UPE3210-316-6M1333
Page of 326
Datasheet
273
Functional Description
Every data bit appears in either exactly 3 or exactly 5 check bit and syndrome bit 
equations. Every check bit appears en exactly 1 syndrome bit equation. This leads to 
six cases.
1. If the data comes back exactly as it was written, then the calculated check byte will 
match the stored check byte, and the syndrome will be all 0s. 
2. If exactly one check bit is flipped between the time it is written and the time it is 
read back, then the syndrome will contain exactly one 1. Since the check byte is 
not returned to the requesting agent, no action is necessary.
3. If exactly one data bit is flipped between the time it is written and the time it is 
read back, then the syndrome will contain either exactly three 1s or exactly five 1s. 
The syndrome can then be decoded as a pointer to the bit that flipped using the 
same check byte generation table in reverse. If the syndrome contains 1s that 
match the locations of all three or all five Xs in a given row, then that is the bit 
which should be flipped before the QWord is returned to the requesting agent.
4. If exactly two bits flipped, there will be a nonzero even number of 1s in the 
syndrome. It cannot be determined which bits flipped based on that syndrome, but 
a multi-bit error will be recorded along with the address at which the error 
occurred. In addition, bits 0 and 31 of each DWord are forced to 0 in the returned 
data in case this read was a TLB fetch. This ensures that the table entry is invalid, 
such that additional data corruption can be avoided.
5. If an even number of bits greater than two flipped, there will be an even number of 
1s in the syndrome, but that even number could be zero, such that detection of this 
scenario is not ensured. If the syndrome contains a nonzero number of 1s, it 
cannot be distinguished from scenario 4 above.
6. It is possible for an odd number of bits greater than one to flip between the time 
the data is written and the time it is read back. This scenario will always be 
detected, but the resulting syndrome could appear to be a multi-bit error treated 
similarly to scenario 4, or it could be misinterpreted as a single bit error 
indistinguishable from scenario 2. The data cannot be corrected, though if it 
appears to be a single-bit error, the algorithm will flip the bit that corresponds to 
the syndrome generated, thus an additional bit may be corrupted.
Fortunately, soft error rates are low enough that it is extremely unlikely that there 
would be more than one soft error in the same QWord, so scenarios 5 and 6 are very 
rare.
64
54
13
55
C8
56
1A
57
85
58
F4
59
7
60
29
61
46
62
31
63
Table 22.
Syndrome Bit Values
Syndrome
Byte