Title of article :
Testing Gbps Interfaces without a Gigahertz Tester
Author/Authors :
T.M. Mak، نويسنده , , Intel
Mike Tripp، نويسنده , , Intel
Anne Meixner، نويسنده , , Intel
، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
As device manufacturers scale their silicon technology, and processor speeds rise above 1 GHz, itʹs becoming common for every processor company to tout gigahertz processors. To continually improve system-level performance, system designers have begun increasing I/O performance. Some of these changes are evolutionary; some are revolutionary. The latter necessitate a change in test methodology and in the subsequent DFT. Intelʹs changing its processorsʹ front-side bus from common-clock to source-synchronous (SS) signaling and increasing their bus transfer rate from less than 100 MHz to 800 megatransfers/second (1 MT/s= 1 Mbyte/s/pin). On the chipset side, Intel has upgraded its universal serial bus from 48 Mbps to 400 Mbps and has transitioned to the serial advanced technology attachment (SATA) standard at a 1.25-Gbps data rate. we show how weʹve solved the testing problem of the SS interface and how this self-test scheme is extendable to other high-speed I/O circuits, including high-speed serial (HSS) signaling.
Journal title :
IEEE Design and Test of Computers
Journal title :
IEEE Design and Test of Computers