Configuration Tips
Consider the following tips when integrating a PCI Express* controller into a motherboard.
Slot insertion guidelines
- A x1 connector can only take a x1 card
- A x16 connector can take a x1 through a x16 card
- A x8 connector with x4 links is physically a x8 connector and can take a x1 through a x8 card
- If a x8 card is inserted in a x8 connector with x4 links, the speed will throttle down to the speeds of a x4 card
Retention brackets
- Not mandatory for the motherboard
- PCI Express slots have a small latch for compatibility with PCI Express cards containing a retention bracket
- Card manufacturers may include in their cards if shock and vibration are considered an issue due to the silicon or fan installed on the card
Operating System/Application Compatibility
Any future improvement of PCI Express will occur in the physical layer. Compatibility with the PCI addressing model (a load-store architecture with a flat address space) is maintained to ensure all applications and drivers operate unchanged. PCI Express configuration uses standard mechanisms as defined in the PCI Plug-and-Play specification.
PCI Express Compatibility
PCI Express maintains backward compatibility with PCI to ensure that existing applications and drivers operate unchanged. The PCI configuration space and the programmability of I/O devices are key concepts that are unchanged within the PCI Express architecture; in fact, all operating systems should be able to boot without modification on a PCI Express-based platform. The run-time software model supported by PCI is a load-store, shared memory model - maintained within the PCI Express architecture in order to enable existing software to execute unchanged. The changes implemented in the PCI Express architecture affect the physical layer only.
Form Factor Compatibility
PCI Express connectors are similar in width to existing PCI connectors. They also share the same PCB dimensions, component height, and support existing ATX and server form factors. The PCI Express add-in cards follow the same height and length requirements as PCI, and utilize the same I/O bracket to secure cards to the chassis.
Related Topics Intel® Developer website for PCI architecture PCI Express* Basics PCI Express technical books
This applies to:
|