IBM Series 1 User Manual page 33

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PROCESSOR I/O CHANNEL OPERATIONAL CHARACTERISTICS
Operations on the processor I/O channel are performed
by
the
follovin~
major
signal
sequences
utilizing
either
the
service group, the poll group, or a combination of both.
DPe sequence (service group)--a write or read
transfer
initiated
by
an Operate I/O instruction.
The sequence
terainates after one byte or one word is transferred.
Interrupt service sequence
{service
group)--initiated
by
a
poll capture following an interrupt request from
an I/O device.
The sequence is
terminated
after
the
interrupt 10 word is transferred.
Cycle
steal service sequence (service group)--an input
or output transfer initiated by a poll capture after
a
cycle
steal request from the I/O device.
The sequence
terminates after
one
byte-
or
vord-transfer
unless
burst mode is active.
Poll
sequence
(poll
group)--initiated
by
either an
interrupt request or a cycle steal request.
The
poll
is
either propagated or captured by an I/O device.
If
the poll is captured, the I/O
device
returns
a
poll
return
tag for either (1) capture of an interrupt poll
or (2)
for a single cycle steal transfer.'
The
device
returns
the
burst return tag for multiple cycle steal
transfers.
Processor initiated
IPL
sequence
{service
and
poll
group)--initiated
when
the Load key on the console is
pressed.
The sequence terminates when the
I/O
device
has transferred the complete IPL record.
Host
initiated
IPL
sequence
(service
and
poll
groups)--initiated
by
a signal from the I/O
attachment
that
connects
the
I/O channel to the host processor.
The sequence terminates when the
complete
IPL
record
has been transferred.
Reset
sequences--(1)
initiated
by
the halt I/O or MCHK
tag when a halt I/O command is issued or when a machine
check
interrupt
occurs,
or
(2)
initiated
when the
system reset key on the console is pressed.
The service and poll groups
operate
concurrently
and
asynchronously
to
each
other.
This
characteristic is a
major operational and design consideration.
However,
some
of
the
sequences
occurring
on
the
I/O
channel
are
interdependent.
Figure 2-7 is a block diagram
illustrating
the
architectural
interdependencies
of
the major channel
sequences from the viewpoint of a group of devices in normal
operation.
This diagram does not attempt to show contention
2-18
GA34-0033

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