- SBus
Infobox Computer Hardware Bus
name = SBus
caption = Four SBus slots
invent-date = 1989
invent-name =Sun Microsystems
super-name = PCI
super-date = 1997
width = 32
numdev = 8 masters, unlimited slaves
speed = 16.6 MHz - 25 MHz
style = pSBus is a
computer bus system that was used in mostSPARC -based computers (including allSPARCstation s) fromSun Microsystems and others during the 1990s. It was introduced by Sun in 1989 to be a high-speed bus counterpart to their high-speed SPARC processors, replacing the earlier (and by this time, outdated)VMEbus used in theirMotorola 68020 - and68030 -based systems and early SPARC boxes. When Sun moved to open the SPARC definition in the early 1990s, SBus was likewise standardized and becameIEEE-1496 . In 1997 Sun started to migrate away from SBus to PCI, and today SBus is no longer used.The industry's first 3rd party SBus cards were announced in 1989 by Antares Microsystems. These were:- the 10Base-2 Ethernet Controller, the SCSI-SNS Host Adapter, the Parallel Port, and the 8-Channel Serial Controller.
A technical guide to the bus was published in 1992 in book form. "SBus Information Applications and Experience" was written by James D. Lyle who founded Troubador Technologies.
At the peak of the market over 250 manufacturers were listed in the SBus Product Directory, which was renamed to the SPARC Product Directory in 1996.
SBus is in many ways a "clean" design. It was targeted only to be used with SPARC processors, so most cross-platform issues were not a consideration. SBus is based on a
big-endian 32-bit address and data bus, can run at speeds ranging from 16.6 MHz to 25 MHz, and is capable of transferring up to 100 MB/s. Devices are each mapped onto a 28-bit address space (256 MB). Only eight masters are supported, although there can be an unlimited number of slaves.When the
64-bit UltraSPARC was introduced, SBus was modified to use clock doubling and transfer two 32-bit data words per cycle to produce a 200 MB/s 64-bit bus. (For contrast, modern 66 MHz/64-bit PCI is 528 MB/s.) This variant of the SBus architecture used the same 96-pin connector as the older one.SBus cards have a very compact form factor; a single-width card is 3 inches wide by 5 inches long and is designed to be mounted parallel to the motherboard. This allowed for three expansion slots in the slim "pizza box" enclosure of the
SPARCstation 1 . The design also allows for double- or triple-width cards that take up two or three slots, as well as double-height (two 3x5 inch boards mounted in a "sandwich" configuration) cards.SBus was a peripheral interconnect only; some Sun systems used MBus, another standardized system, as a CPU-memory bus.
ee also
*
List of device bandwidths External links
* [http://www.sun.com/products-n-solutions/hardware/docs/pdf/805-7410-10.pdf PCI:SBus Comparison] (PDF)
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