Intel 1.40 GHz YA80543KC0174M User Manual

Product codes
YA80543KC0174M
Page of 108
Datasheet 
91
A
Signals Reference
This appendix provides an alphabetical listing of all Itanium 2
 
processor system bus signals. The 
tables at the end of this appendix summarize the signals by direction: output, input, and I/O.
For a complete pinout listing including processor specific pins, please refer to 
A.1
Alphabetical Signals Reference
A.1.1
A[49:3]# (I/O)
The Address (A[49:3]#) signals, with byte enables, define a 2
50
 
Byte physical memory address 
space. When ADS# is active, these pins transmit the address of a transaction. These pins are also 
used to transmit other transaction related information such as transaction identifiers and external 
functions in the cycle following ADS# assertion. These signals must connect the appropriate pins 
of all agents on the Itanium 2 processor system bus. The A[49:27]# signals are parity-protected by 
the AP1# parity signal, and the A[26:3]# signals are parity-protected by the AP0# parity signal.
On the active-to-inactive transition of RESET#, the processors sample the A[49:3]# pins to 
determine their power-on configuration.
A.1.2
A20M# (I)
A20M# is ignored in the Itanium 2 processor system environment.
A.1.3
ADS# (I/O) 
The Address Strobe (ADS#) signal is asserted to indicate the validity of the transaction address on 
the A[49:3]#, REQ[5:0]#, AP[1:0]# and RP#pins. All bus agents observe the ADS# activation to 
begin parity checking, protocol checking, address decode, internal snoop, or deferred reply ID 
match operations associated with the new transaction.
A.1.4
AP[1:0]# (I/O)
The Address Parity (AP[1:0]#) signals can be driven by the request initiator along with ADS# and 
A[49:3]#. AP[1]# covers A[49:27]#, and AP[0]# covers A[26:3]#. A correct parity signal is high if 
an even number of covered signals are low and low if an odd number of covered signals are low. 
This allows parity to be high when all the covered signals are high. 
A.1.5
ASZ[1:0]# (I/O)
The ASZ[1:0]# signals are the memory address-space size signals. They are driven by the request 
initiator during the first Request Phase clock on the REQa[4:3]# pins. The ASZ[1:0]# signals are 
valid only when REQa[2:1]# signals equal 01B, 10B, or 11B, indicating a memory access 
transaction. The ASZ[1:0]# decode is defined in 
.