What is the most common bus type in use today, and what did it replace as the general standard in modern computers? What do each stand for?
PCI is the most commonly used bus type today, replacing the old ISA standard. PCI stands for Peripheral Component Interconnect. ISA stands for Industry Standard Architecture.
The ISA bus was sometimes called the AT bus after the IBM PC-AT in which it was first used in 1984.
The ISA bus was sometimes called the AT bus after the IBM PC-AT in which it was first used in 1984.
Tags: bus, ISA, PCI
Quelle:
Quelle:
What bit devices do each ISA and PCI support, respectively?
ISA supports 8-bit and 16-bit cards.
PCI supports 32-bit devices.
PCI supports 32-bit devices.
Tags: bit, bus types, ISA, PCI
Quelle:
Quelle:
Tags: bus, fs, pci, proc
Quelle:
Quelle:
What commands can you run to display information on devices on the system's PCI bus? What command would you run if you were not a root user?
- lspci - for root users
- /sbin/lspci - for non-root users
- cat /proc/pci
Tags: commands, lspci, pci, proc
Quelle:
Quelle:
Kartensatzinfo:
Autor: Ryan Robson
Oberthema: Informatics
Thema: Linux
Ort: Houston
Veröffentlicht: 08.02.2011
Schlagwörter Karten:
Alle Karten (75)
/dev (2)
/etc (2)
101.1 (36)
acronyms (1)
architecture (1)
ata (2)
bash (1)
BIOS (5)
bios (1)
bit (1)
branch (1)
bus (2)
bus types (7)
cables (1)
clock (3)
codes (1)
commands (7)
configuration (1)
controller (1)
daemon (1)
data rates (1)
dev (1)
device types (1)
devices (5)
dmesg (1)
facilities (1)
fdisk (1)
fork (1)
fs (8)
hard drives (17)
history (1)
host adapter (1)
hwclock (1)
IEEE (1)
ISA (2)
klog (1)
linux (31)
logs (5)
lspci (1)
lsusb (1)
master (1)
modprobe (1)
naming standards (1)
options (1)
packages (1)
partitions (11)
pata (2)
PATA (6)
PCI (2)
pci (2)
priority (1)
proc (3)
RAM (1)
resistor (1)
RPM (2)
sata (3)
SATA (2)
scsi (9)
SCSI (4)
SCSI chain (1)
security (1)
slave (1)
synchronize (1)
syslog (4)
termination (2)
time (4)
type codes (2)
umount (1)
USB (1)
x86 (6)