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User’s Manual
IBM PowerPC 750GX and 750GL RISC Microprocessor
Signal Descriptions
Page 262 of 377
gx_07.fm.(1.2)
March 27, 2006
7.2.5 Address Transfer Termination Signals
The address transfer termination signals are used to indicate either that the address phase of the transaction 
has completed successfully or must be repeated, and when it should be terminated. For detailed information 
about how these signals interact, see Chapter 8, Bus Interface Operation, on page 279.
7.2.5.1 Address Acknowledge (AACK)—Input
The address acknowledge (AACK) signal is an input-only signal on the 750GX. 
State 
Asserted
Indicates that the address tenure of a transaction should be terminated. On 
the following cycle, the 750GX, as address-bus master, will release the 
address and attribute signals to high impedance, and sample ARTRY to 
determine a qualified ARTRY condition. Note that the address tenure will not 
be terminated until the assertion of AACK, even if the associated data tenure 
has completed. As snooper, the 750GX requires an assertion of AACK for 
every assertion of TS that it detects.
Negated
During ABB, indicates that the address tenure must remain active, and that 
the address and attribute signals remain driven.
Timing 
Assertion/
Negation
May occur as early as the bus clock cycle after TS is asserted. Assertion can 
be delayed to allow adequate address access time for slow devices. For 
example, if an implementation supports slow snooping devices, an external 
arbiter can postpone the assertion of AACK.
Note:  If configured for 1x or 1.5x clock modes, the 750GX requires AACK to 
be asserted no sooner than the second cycle following the assertion of TS 
(one address wait state) in order to generate a snoop response (via ARTRY).