Synchronous Dma Transfer; Signal Line Definitions; Protocol Rules - Seagate Medalist Pro 9140 Product Manual

Ultra ata interface drives
Hide thumbs Also See for Medalist Pro 9140:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

36
Medalist Pro 9140, 6530 and 4520 Product Manual, Rev. B

3.3 Synchronous DMA Transfer

3.3.1 Signal Line Definitions

Some existing ATA signal lines are redefined during the Synchronous
DMA protocol to provide new functions. If the Synchronous DMA transfer
mode was previously chosen by the Set Features, the ATA signal lines
change from the old to new definitions as soon as the host allows for a
DMA burst. The drive detects this change upon assertion of the –DMACK
line. These lines revert back to their original definitions upon the deas-
sertions of –DMACK at the termination of the DMA burst.
Pin
New Definitions
21
DMARQ
29
–DMACK
27
–DMACK
25
STROBE
25
27
23
STOP
Note. DMARQ and –DMACK signal lines remain unchanged. This en-
sures backward compatibility with PIO modes.

3.3.2 Protocol Rules

The general rules of the Synchronous DMA Transfer Protocol are as
follows:
A DMA burst is defined as the period from an assertion of –DMACK
to subsequent deassertion of –DMACK.
A receiver must be prepared to receive at least two words of data
whenever it enters or resumes a burst mode.
During the entire burst, –CS0, –CS1, and –IOCS16 are in the high
negated state. DA2, DA1, and DA0 are driven low.
The drive begins driving and stops tristating IORDY when –DMACK
is first asserted and SyncDMA is enabled. The drive must continue to
Signal Line Definitions
Old Definitions
DMARQ
–DMACK
IORDY on write commands
–DIOR on read commands
–DIOR on write commands
IORDY on read commands
–DIOW

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents