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Date:      Wed, 24 Nov 2004 12:27:04 -0500
From:      Charles Swiger <cswiger@mac.com>
To:        John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Cc:        Scott Long <scottl@FreeBSD.org>
Subject:   Re: Transparent bridges (a. k. a. HUB-to-PCI bridges)?
Message-ID:  <0F179BC4-3E3E-11D9-BD47-003065ABFD92@mac.com>
In-Reply-To: <200411241019.25271.jhb@FreeBSD.org>
References:  <200411231226.38172.jkim@niksun.com> <41A49312.5@freebsd.org> <41A49EF1.8030603@mac.com> <200411241019.25271.jhb@FreeBSD.org>

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On Nov 24, 2004, at 10:19 AM, John Baldwin wrote:
>> I've been wrong before, but please double-check diagrams like:
>>
>> http://www.intel.com/design/chipsets/850/pix/850_800.gif
>> http://www.viatech.com/en/products/chipsets/p4-series/pt880/
[ ... ]
> The northbridge is the host-pci bridge.  It contains a virtual PCI-PCI
> bridge/bus that represents AGP.

Agreed, although AGP is something of a special case.

> The chipset uses a propietary interconnect to the southbridge...

Such as VIA's V-link.

> ...such that the devices the north and south bridges connect
> to show up as one pci bus (bus 0).  You could build a system without a
> southbridge (just PCI-X bridges or some such) and it would still have a
> host-pci bridge.

You and Scott are correct.  pciconf claims that something like a 440BX 
northbridge (82443BX) contains both a HOST-PCI and a PCI-PCI bridge, 
whereas the PIIX4 southbridge (82371AB) has a PCI-ISA bridge, as well 
as ATA and the other things I'd mentioned.

I apologize if I confused the person I was trying to answer.

-- 
-Chuck



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