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NuBus - NuBus architecture |  | NuBus - NuBus architecture: Encyclopedia II - NuBus - NuBus architecture |  | NuBus was a considerable step forward compared to other interfaces of the day. At the time most computer bus systems were 8-bit, as were the computers they plugged into. However NuBus decided on a 32-bit interface because it was clear the market was headed in this direction.
In addition, NuBus was agnostic about the processor itself. Most buses up to this point were basically the pins on the CPU run out onto the backplane, meaning that the cards had to conform to the signalling and data standards of the machine it was plugged into (be ...
See also:NuBus, NuBus - NuBus architecture, NuBus - NuBus implementations, NuBus - External link |  | | NuBus, NuBus - External link, NuBus - NuBus architecture, NuBus - NuBus implementations, Industry Standard Architecture (ISA), Extended Industry Standard Architecture (EISA), Micro Channel architecture (MCA), VESA Local Bus (VESA), Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI), Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP), PCI Express (PCIe) |  | |
|  |  | NuBus: Encyclopedia II - NuBus - NuBus architecture
NuBus - NuBus architecture
NuBus was a considerable step forward compared to other interfaces of the day. At the time most computer bus systems were 8-bit, as were the computers they plugged into. However NuBus decided on a 32-bit interface because it was clear the market was headed in this direction.
In addition, NuBus was agnostic about the processor itself. Most buses up to this point were basically the pins on the CPU run out onto the backplane, meaning that the cards had to conform to the signalling and data standards of the machine it was plugged into (being little endian for instance). NuBus made no such assumptions, which meant that a NuBus card could be plugged into any NuBus machine, as long as there was an appropriate device driver.
In order to select the proper device driver, NuBus included an ID scheme that allowed the cards to identify themselves to the host computer during startup. This meant that the user didn't have to configure the system, the bane of bus systems up to that point. For instance, with ISA the driver has to be configured not only for the card, but for any memory it needs, the interrupts it uses, and so on. NuBus required no such configuration, making it one of the first examples of plug-and-play architecture.
On the downside, while this flexibility made NuBus much simpler for the user and device driver authors, it made things more difficult for the designers of the cards themselves. Whereas most "simple" bus systems were easily supported with a handful of input/output chips designed to be used with that CPU in mind, with NuBus every card and computer had to convert everything in a platform-agnostic "NuBus world". Typically this meant adding a NuBus controller chip between the bus and any I/O chips on the card, increasing costs. While this is a trivial exercise today, one that all newer buses require, at the time in the 1980s NuBus was considered complex and expensive.
Other related archives32-bit, Accelerated Graphics Port, Apple Computer, CPU, Computer buses, Extended Industry Standard Architecture, ISA, Industry Standard Architecture, Lisp Machine, MIT, Macintosh II, Macintosh Quadras, Macintosh internals, Micro Channel architecture, NeXT Computer, NuMachine, PCB, PCI, PCI Express, Peripheral Component Interconnect, Texas Instruments, VESA Local Bus, VME, backplane, computer bus, device driver, input/output, interrupts, little endian, parallel, plug-and-play, workstation
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "NuBus architecture", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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