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Socket AM1

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In computer hardware , a CPU socket or CPU slot contains one or more mechanical components providing mechanical and electrical connections between a microprocessor and a printed circuit board (PCB). This allows for placing and replacing the central processing unit (CPU) without soldering.

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52-488: Socket AM1 is a socket designed by AMD , launched in April 2014 for desktop SoCs in the value segment. Socket AM1 is intended for a class of CPUs that contain both an integrated GPU and a chipset, essentially forming a complete SoC implementation, and as such has pins for display, PCI Express , SATA , and other I/O interfaces directly in the socket. AMD's first compatible CPUs, designated as APUs , are 4 socketable chips in

104-620: A compression force once either a handle (PGA type) or a surface plate (LGA type) is put into place. This provides superior mechanical retention while avoiding the risk of bending pins when inserting the chip into the socket . Certain devices use Ball Grid Array (BGA) sockets, although these require soldering and are generally not considered user replaceable. CPU sockets are used on the motherboard in desktop and server computers. Because they allow easy swapping of components, they are also used for prototyping new circuits. Laptops typically use surface-mount CPUs, which take up less space on

156-410: A 0.8 mm pitch. Each row has eight contacts, a gap equivalent to four contacts, then a further 18 contacts. Boards have a thickness of 1.0 mm, excluding the components. A "Half Mini Card" (sometimes abbreviated as HMC) is also specified, having approximately half the physical length of 26.8 mm. There are also half size mini PCIe cards that are 30 x 31.90 mm which is about half the length of

208-609: A failure tolerance in case bad or unreliable lanes are present. The PCI Express standard defines link widths of x1, x2, x4, x8, and x16. Up to and including PCIe 5.0, x12, and x32 links were defined as well but never used. This allows the PCI Express bus to serve both cost-sensitive applications where high throughput is not needed, and performance-critical applications such as 3D graphics, networking ( 10 Gigabit Ethernet or multiport Gigabit Ethernet ), and enterprise storage ( SAS or Fibre Channel ). Slots and connectors are only defined for

260-465: A full size mini PCIe card. PCI Express Mini Card edge connectors provide multiple connections and buses: Despite sharing the Mini PCI Express form factor, an mSATA slot is not necessarily electrically compatible with Mini PCI Express. For this reason, only certain notebooks are compatible with mSATA drives. Most compatible systems are based on Intel's Sandy Bridge processor architecture, using

312-496: A more detailed error detection and reporting mechanism (Advanced Error Reporting, AER), and native hot-swap functionality. More recent revisions of the PCIe standard provide hardware support for I/O virtualization . The PCI Express electrical interface is measured by the number of simultaneous lanes. (A lane is a single send/receive line of data, analogous to a "one-lane road" having one lane of traffic in both directions.) The interface

364-450: A new set of signal integrity challenges. The evolution of the CPU socket amounts to a coevolution of all these technologies in tandem. Modern CPU sockets are almost always designed in conjunction with a heat sink mounting system, or in lower power devices, other thermal considerations. A CPU socket is made of plastic, and often comes with a lever or latch, and with metal contacts for each of

416-406: A parallel interface traveling through conductors of different lengths, on potentially different printed circuit board (PCB) layers, and at possibly different signal velocities . Despite being transmitted simultaneously as a single word , signals on a parallel interface have different travel duration and arrive at their destinations at different times. When the interface clock period is shorter than

468-410: A slot of its physical size or larger (with x16 as the largest used), but may not fit into a smaller PCI Express slot; for example, a x16 card may not fit into a x4 or x8 slot. Some slots use open-ended sockets to permit physically longer cards and negotiate the best available electrical and logical connection. The number of lanes actually connected to a slot may also be fewer than the number supported by

520-497: A slot to transmit video signals from the host CPU's integrated graphics instead of PCIe, using a supported add-in. The PCIe transaction-layer protocol can also be used over some other interconnects, which are not electrically PCIe: While in early development, PCIe was initially referred to as HSI (for High Speed Interconnect ), and underwent a name change to 3GIO (for 3rd Generation I/O ) before finally settling on its PCI-SIG name PCI Express . A technical working group named

572-510: A subset of these widths, with link widths in between using the next larger physical slot size. As a point of reference, a PCI-X (133 MHz 64-bit) device and a PCI Express 1.0 device using four lanes (x4) have roughly the same peak single-direction transfer rate of 1064 MB/s. The PCI Express bus has the potential to perform better than the PCI-X bus in cases where multiple devices are transferring data simultaneously, or if communication with

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624-409: A transfer rate of 250 MB/s per lane. The PCI-SIG also expects the norm to evolve to reach 500 MB/s, as in PCI Express 2.0. An example of the uses of Cabled PCI Express is a metal enclosure, containing a number of PCIe slots and PCIe-to-ePCIe adapter circuitry. This device would not be possible had it not been for the ePCIe specification. OCuLink (standing for "optical-copper link", since Cu

676-586: Is embedded within the serial signal itself. As such, typical bandwidth limitations on serial signals are in the multi-gigahertz range. PCI Express is one example of the general trend toward replacing parallel buses with serial interconnects; other examples include Serial ATA (SATA), USB , Serial Attached SCSI (SAS), FireWire (IEEE 1394), and RapidIO . In digital video, examples in common use are DVI , HDMI , and DisplayPort . Multichannel serial design increases flexibility with its ability to allocate fewer lanes for slower devices. A PCI Express card fits into

728-537: Is a high-speed serial computer expansion bus standard, designed to replace the older PCI , PCI-X and AGP bus standards. It is the common motherboard interface for personal computers' graphics cards , capture cards , sound cards , hard disk drive host adapters , SSDs , Wi-Fi , and Ethernet hardware connections. PCIe has numerous improvements over the older standards, including higher maximum system bus throughput, lower I/O pin count and smaller physical footprint, better performance scaling for bus devices,

780-408: Is a standard for connecting graphics processing units (GPUs) to computer power supplies for up to 600 W power delivery. It was introduced in 2022 to supersede the previous 6- and 8-pin power connectors for GPUs. The primary aim was to cater to the increasing power requirements of high-performance GPUs. It was replaced by a minor revision called 12V-2x6, which changed the connector to ensure that

832-470: Is also used in a variety of other standards — most notably the laptop expansion card interface called ExpressCard . It is also used in the storage interfaces of SATA Express , U.2 (SFF-8639) and M.2 . Formal specifications are maintained and developed by the PCI-SIG (PCI Special Interest Group ) — a group of more than 900 companies that also maintains the conventional PCI specifications. Conceptually,

884-429: Is composed of one or more lanes . Low-speed peripherals (such as an 802.11 Wi-Fi card ) use a single-lane (x1) link, while a graphics adapter typically uses a much wider and therefore faster 16-lane (x16) link. A lane is composed of two differential signaling pairs, with one pair for receiving data and the other for transmitting. Thus, each lane is composed of four wires or signal traces . Conceptually, each lane

936-434: Is encapsulated in packets. The work of packetizing and de-packetizing data and status-message traffic is handled by the transaction layer of the PCI Express port (described later). Radical differences in electrical signaling and bus protocol require the use of a different mechanical form factor and expansion connectors (and thus, new motherboards and new adapter boards); PCI slots and PCI Express slots are not interchangeable. At

988-497: Is expressed in transfers per second instead of bits per second because the number of transfers includes the overhead bits, which do not provide additional throughput; PCIe 1.x uses an 8b/10b encoding scheme, resulting in a 20% (= 2/10) overhead on the raw channel bandwidth. So in the PCIe terminology, transfer rate refers to the encoded bit rate: 2.5 GT/s is 2.5 Gbit/s on the encoded serial link. This corresponds to 2.0 Gbit/s of pre-coded data or 250 MB/s, which

1040-494: Is referred to as throughput in PCIe. In 2005, PCI-SIG introduced PCIe 1.1. This updated specification includes clarifications and several improvements, but is fully compatible with PCI Express 1.0a. No changes were made to the data rate. PCI-SIG announced the availability of the PCI Express Base 2.0 specification on 15 January 2007. The PCIe 2.0 standard doubles the transfer rate compared with PCIe 1.0 to 5   GT/s and

1092-505: Is the chemical symbol for copper ) is an extension for the "cable version of PCI Express". Version 1.0 of OCuLink, released in Oct 2015, supports up to 4 PCIe 3.0 lanes (3.9 GB/s) over copper cabling; a fiber optic version may appear in the future. The most recent version of OCuLink, OCuLink-2, supports up to 16 GB/s (PCIe 4.0 x8) while the maximum bandwidth of a USB 4 cable is 10GB/s. While initially intended for use in laptops for

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1144-408: Is used as a full-duplex byte stream , transporting data packets in eight-bit "byte" format simultaneously in both directions between endpoints of a link. Physical PCI Express links may contain 1, 4, 8 or 16 lanes. Lane counts are written with an "x" prefix (for example, "x8" represents an eight-lane card or slot), with x16 being the largest size in common use. Lane sizes are also referred to via

1196-658: The Kabini family of the Jaguar microarchitecture , marketed under the Athlon and Sempron names and announced on April 9, 2014. Socket AM1 was initially branded as Socket FS1b before its release. The brand names are Athlon and Sempron . The underlying microarchitectures are Jaguar and Puma . All products are SoCs , this means the Chipset is on the die of the APU and not on the motherboard. While

1248-554: The Arapaho Work Group (AWG) drew up the standard. For initial drafts, the AWG consisted only of Intel engineers; subsequently, the AWG expanded to include industry partners. Since, PCIe has undergone several large and smaller revisions, improving on performance and other features. In 2003, PCI-SIG introduced PCIe 1.0a, with a per-lane data rate of 250 MB/s and a transfer rate of 2.5 gigatransfers per second (GT/s). Transfer rate

1300-687: The Asus Eee PC , the Apple MacBook Air , and the Dell mini9 and mini10) use a variant of the PCI Express Mini Card as an SSD . This variant uses the reserved and several non-reserved pins to implement SATA and IDE interface passthrough, keeping only USB, ground lines, and sometimes the core PCIe x1 bus intact. This makes the "miniPCIe" flash and solid-state drives sold for netbooks largely incompatible with true PCI Express Mini implementations. Also,

1352-591: The root complex (host). Because of its shared bus topology, access to the older PCI bus is arbitrated (in the case of multiple masters), and limited to one master at a time, in a single direction. Furthermore, the older PCI clocking scheme limits the bus clock to the slowest peripheral on the bus (regardless of the devices involved in the bus transaction). In contrast, a PCI Express bus link supports full-duplex communication between any two endpoints, with no inherent limitation on concurrent access across multiple endpoints. In terms of bus protocol, PCI Express communication

1404-668: The AMD mobile CPUs are available in a 722-pin package Socket FS1 , it is not clear whether these notebook CPUs are compatible with Socket AM1 or vice versa. Its mobile counterpart is Socket FT3 (BGA-769). At least one board is supported by coreboot . CPU socket Common sockets have retention clips that apply a constant force, which must be overcome when a device is inserted. For chips with many pins, zero insertion force (ZIF) sockets are preferred. Common sockets include Pin Grid Array (PGA) or Land Grid Array (LGA). These designs apply

1456-688: The Huron River platform. Notebooks such as Lenovo's ThinkPad T, W and X series, released in March–April 2011, have support for an mSATA SSD card in their WWAN card slot. The ThinkPad Edge E220s/E420s, and the Lenovo IdeaPad Y460/Y560/Y570/Y580 also support mSATA. On the contrary, the L-series among others can only support M.2 cards using the PCIe standard in the WWAN slot. Some notebooks (notably

1508-488: The PCI Express bus is a high-speed serial replacement of the older PCI/PCI-X bus. One of the key differences between the PCI Express bus and the older PCI is the bus topology; PCI uses a shared parallel bus architecture, in which the PCI host and all devices share a common set of address, data, and control lines. In contrast, PCI Express is based on point-to-point topology , with separate serial links connecting every device to

1560-400: The PCI Express peripheral is bidirectional . PCI Express devices communicate via a logical connection called an interconnect or link . A link is a point-to-point communication channel between two PCI Express ports allowing both of them to send and receive ordinary PCI requests (configuration, I/O or memory read/write) and interrupts ( INTx , MSI or MSI-X ). At the physical level, a link

1612-499: The PCIe x1 Mini-Card slot that typically do not support mSATA SSD. A list of desktop boards that natively support mSATA in the PCIe x1 Mini-Card slot (typically multiplexed with a SATA port) is provided on the Intel Support site. M.2 replaces the mSATA standard and Mini PCIe. Computer bus interfaces provided through the M.2 connector are PCI Express 3.0 (up to four lanes), Serial ATA 3.0, and USB 3.0 (a single logical port for each of

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1664-521: The card is wake capable. All PCI express cards may consume up to 3  A at +3.3  V ( 9.9  W ). The amount of +12 V and total power they may consume depends on the form factor and the role of the card: Optional connectors add 75  W (6-pin) or 150  W (8-pin) of +12 V power for up to 300  W total ( 2 × 75 W + 1 × 150 W ). Some cards use two 8-pin connectors, but this has not been standardized yet as of 2018 , therefore such cards must not carry

1716-517: The conductors on each side of the edge connector on a PCI Express card. The solder side of the printed circuit board (PCB) is the A-side, and the component side is the B-side. PRSNT1# and PRSNT2# pins must be slightly shorter than the rest, to ensure that a hot-plugged card is fully inserted. The WAKE# pin uses full voltage to wake the computer, but must be pulled high from the standby power to indicate that

1768-410: The connection of powerful external GPU boxes, OCuLink's popularity lies primarily in its use for PCIe interconnections in servers, a more prevalent application. Numerous other form factors use, or are able to use, PCIe. These include: The PCIe slot connector can also carry protocols other than PCIe. Some 9xx series Intel chipsets support Serial Digital Video Out , a proprietary technology that uses

1820-519: The full transfer rate. Standard mechanical sizes are x1, x4, x8, and x16. Cards using a number of lanes other than the standard mechanical sizes need to physically fit the next larger mechanical size (e.g. an x2 card uses the x4 size, or an x12 card uses the x16 size). The cards themselves are designed and manufactured in various sizes. For example, solid-state drives (SSDs) that come in the form of PCI Express cards often use HHHL (half height, half length) and FHHL (full height, half length) to describe

1872-453: The largest time difference between signal arrivals, recovery of the transmitted word is no longer possible. Since timing skew over a parallel bus can amount to a few nanoseconds, the resulting bandwidth limitation is in the range of hundreds of megahertz. A serial interface does not exhibit timing skew because there is only one differential signal in each direction within each lane, and there is no external clock signal since clocking information

1924-490: The latter two). It is up to the manufacturer of the M.2 host or device to choose which interfaces to support, depending on the desired level of host support and device type. PCI Express External Cabling (also known as External PCI Express , Cabled PCI Express , or ePCIe ) specifications were released by the PCI-SIG in February 2007. Standard cables and connectors have been defined for x1, x4, x8, and x16 link widths, with

1976-646: The motherboard than a socketed part. As the pin density increases in modern sockets, increasing demands are placed on the printed circuit board fabrication technique, which permits the large number of signals to be successfully routed to nearby components. Likewise, within the chip carrier , the wire bonding technology also becomes more demanding with increasing pin counts and pin densities. Each socket technology will have specific reflow soldering requirements. As CPU and memory frequencies increase, above 30 MHz or thereabouts, electrical signalling increasingly shifts to differential signaling over parallel buses, bringing

2028-435: The newer M.2 form factor for this purpose. Due to different dimensions, PCI Express Mini Cards are not physically compatible with standard full-size PCI Express slots; however, passive adapters exist that let them be used in full-size slots. Dimensions of PCI Express Mini Cards are 30 mm × 50.95 mm (width × length) for a Full Mini Card. There is a 52-pin edge connector , consisting of two staggered rows on

2080-548: The official PCI Express logo. This configuration allows 375 W total ( 1 × 75 W + 2 × 150 W ) and will likely be standardized by PCI-SIG with the PCI Express 4.0 standard. The 8-pin PCI Express connector could be confused with the EPS12V connector, which is mainly used for powering SMP and multi-core systems. The power connectors are variants of the Molex Mini-Fit Jr. series connectors. The 16-pin 12VHPWR connector

2132-458: The other being v1.1 or v1.0a. The PCI-SIG also said that PCIe 2.0 features improvements to the point-to-point data transfer protocol and its software architecture. Intel 's first PCIe 2.0 capable chipset was the X38 and boards began to ship from various vendors ( Abit , Asus , Gigabyte ) as of 21 October 2007. AMD started supporting PCIe 2.0 with its AMD 700 chipset series and nVidia started with

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2184-406: The overall link width. The lane count is automatically negotiated during device initialization and can be restricted by either endpoint. For example, a single-lane PCI Express (x1) card can be inserted into a multi-lane slot (x4, x8, etc.), and the initialization cycle auto-negotiates the highest mutually supported lane count. The link can dynamically down-configure itself to use fewer lanes, providing

2236-452: The per-lane throughput rises from 250 MB/s to 500 MB/s. Consequently, a 16-lane PCIe connector (x16) can support an aggregate throughput of up to 8 GB/s. PCIe 2.0 motherboard slots are fully backward compatible with PCIe v1.x cards. PCIe 2.0 cards are also generally backward compatible with PCIe 1.x motherboards, using the available bandwidth of PCI Express 1.1. Overall, graphic cards or motherboards designed for v2.0 work, with

2288-540: The physical dimensions of the card. Modern (since c.  2012 ) gaming video cards usually exceed the height as well as thickness specified in the PCI Express standard, due to the need for more capable and quieter cooling fans , as gaming video cards often emit hundreds of watts of heat. Modern computer cases are often wider to accommodate these taller cards, but not always. Since full-length cards (312 mm) are uncommon, modern cases sometimes cannot fit those. The thickness of these cards also typically occupies

2340-409: The physical slot size. An example is a x16 slot that runs at x4, which accepts any x1, x2, x4, x8 or x16 card, but provides only four lanes. Its specification may read as "x16 (x4 mode)", while "mechanical @ electrical" notation (e.g. "x16 @ x4") is also common. The advantage is that such slots can accommodate a larger range of PCI Express cards without requiring motherboard hardware to support

2392-428: The pins or lands on the CPU. Many packages are keyed to ensure the proper insertion of the CPU. CPUs with a PGA (pin grid array) package are inserted into the socket and, if included, the latch is closed. CPUs with an LGA (land grid array) package are inserted into the socket, the latch plate is flipped into position atop the CPU, and the lever is lowered and locked into place, pressing the CPU's contacts firmly against

2444-584: The sense pins only make contact if the power pins are seated properly. PCI Express Mini Card (also known as Mini PCI Express , Mini PCIe , Mini PCI-E , mPCIe , and PEM ), based on PCI Express, is a replacement for the Mini PCI form factor. It is developed by the PCI-SIG . The host device supports both PCI Express and USB  2.0 connectivity, and each card may use either standard. Most laptop computers built after 2005 use PCI Express for expansion cards; however, as of 2015 , many vendors are moving toward using

2496-709: The socket's lands and ensuring a good connection, as well as increased mechanical stability. Table legend: Sandy Bridge supports 20 PCIe 2.0 lanes. Ivy Bridge supports 40 PCIe 3.0 lanes. Intel Mainstream Socket. AMD Athlon Bristol Ridge AMD Athlon Raven Ridge 14nm AMD Athlon Picasso 12nm AMD Ryzen 1000 series AMD Ryzen 2000 series AMD Ryzen 3000 series AMD Ryzen 4000 series AMD Ryzen 5000 series Intel Raptor Lake (14th gen) Slotkets are special adapters for using socket processors in bus-compatible slot motherboards. PCI Express PCI Express ( Peripheral Component Interconnect Express ), officially abbreviated as PCIe or PCI-e ,

2548-443: The software level, PCI Express preserves backward compatibility with PCI; legacy PCI system software can detect and configure newer PCI Express devices without explicit support for the PCI Express standard, though new PCI Express features are inaccessible. The PCI Express link between two devices can vary in size from one to 16 lanes . In a multi-lane link, the packet data is striped across lanes, and peak data throughput scales with

2600-782: The space of 2 to 5 PCIe slots. In fact, even the methodology of how to measure the cards varies between vendors, with some including the metal bracket size in dimensions and others not. For instance, comparing three high-end video cards released in 2020: a Sapphire Radeon RX 5700 XT card measures 135 mm in height (excluding the metal bracket), which exceeds the PCIe standard height by 28 mm, another Radeon RX 5700 XT card by XFX measures 55 mm thick (i.e. 2.7 PCI slots at 20.32 mm), taking up 3 PCIe slots, while an Asus GeForce RTX 3080 video card takes up two slots and measures 140.1   mm × 318.5   mm × 57.8   mm, exceeding PCI Express' maximum height, length, and thickness respectively. The following table identifies

2652-453: The terms "width" or "by" e.g., an eight-lane slot could be referred to as a "by 8" or as "8 lanes wide." For mechanical card sizes, see below . The bonded serial bus architecture was chosen over the traditional parallel bus because of the inherent limitations of the latter, including half-duplex operation, excess signal count, and inherently lower bandwidth due to timing skew . Timing skew results from separate electrical signals within

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2704-450: The typical Asus miniPCIe SSD is 71 mm long, causing the Dell 51 mm model to often be (incorrectly) referred to as half length. A true 51 mm Mini PCIe SSD was announced in 2009, with two stacked PCB layers that allow for higher storage capacity. The announced design preserves the PCIe interface, making it compatible with the standard mini PCIe slot. No working product has yet been developed. Intel has numerous desktop boards with

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