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Can VME make the transition to VITA 46? By Duncan Young Connector evolution Federated architectures with fixed-function subsystems are giving way to integrated and network-centric architectures that will make use of the new switched fabrics that are becoming economically available. These new fabrics, and the ever increasing signaling rates used in sensor, video, and I/O subsystems (such as Xilinx's RocketIO) are beginning to show the limitations of the VME DIN connectors. It is remarkable that the original DIN41612-style connector has survived so well all this time. What other piece of technology is still current and so eminently usable after 30 years or more? VITA 41 VITA 46 VITA 46 versus 41 From the table, it can be seen that while VITA 46 embraces the new features introduced with VITA 41, it necessarily has to go much further to properly become the new standard for rugged and harsh environment defense and aerospace applications. Even though VITA 41 maintains a level of backward compatibility at the connectors, VITA 46 has decided to take the revolutionary step of changing to a new type of connector to meet its extended set of requirements. The proposed connector is a seven-row MultigigRT2 from Tyco Electronics offering 192 differential pairs, and 48 single signal pins, for a total of 432 signal pins. This compares to 335 single signal pins on current five-row VME cards including P0. The general arrangement of a conduction cooled 6U VME card fitted with the proposed MultigigRT2 connectors is shown in Figure 1.
In order to preserve current VME chassis technology, including conduction-cooled air transport rack chassis, VITA 46 continues with the 6U and 3U Eurocard formats on 0.8-inch pitch, defined by the IEEE 1101.10 and IEEE 1101.2 standards. It is anticipated that existing chassis can be retrofitted from the VME64 standard to VITA 46 just by replacement of the backplane assembly, thereby allowing a quick and affordable upgrade to the new standard. It is also anticipated that during the introductory phase of VITA 46 products there will be hybrid systems that incorporate VME64 and VITA 46 on the same backplane. A hybrid backplane with six VME64 slots, and fourteen VITA 46 slots is shown in Figure 2. Connector scenarios
This example uses all 432 pins of the new proposed connector, and it clearly illustrates the inadequacy of the current 335 pins of VME64 as this mapping does not even include a PCI backplane bus. With the increased functional density of currently developed devices (e.g., VME SBCs), it is easy to foresee the full use of all 76 general purpose I/O pins shown in the above example. 3U VME format VITA 46 product introduction However, the hybrid approach will rapidly disappear from new system designs, as SBCs will continue to become ever more complex as they evolve into complete single board compute and I/O engines. Finally, more use will be made of backplane PCI and carrier cards with PMC modules leaving these new systems as pure VITA 46 implementations. The next logical evolution will be to maintain all the infrastructure and ecosystem of VITA 46, finally relinquishing the VMEbus interconnect in favor of more complex I/O and fabrics. This is why VME must make the transition to VITA 46. It is not VMEbus technology that sustains today’s vibrant market. It is the breadth and depth of products and end use applications, plus the ultra-competitive supplier base that is continually innovating and evolving to provide what the customer in this marketplace really wants: stability of supplier base, ever increasing performance, less risk, and lower cost. For more information about VITA 46: www.vita.com
. . . . . For more information, contact Duncan at: Curtiss Wright Controls Embedded Computing |
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