Hardware protection against bit-flips during I/O between storage and DRAM?











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If a motherboard supports ECC DRAM, then it has a 72 bit bus between the DRAM slot and the memory controller. 64 data bits + 8 parity bits for SECDED. Nowadays, most CPUs have the memory controller integrated inside. So, the moving bits between the DIMM and the CPU are protected against one single bit error per 8 bits.



Is there also any kind of correction/detection of bit-flips during the process of reading/writing between non-volatile memory and volatile memory possible?



Often storage devices are connected to a PCH, which is connected to the CPU. Sometimes storage devices are connected to the CPU directly.



Anyway, is there somehow any hardware protection against data corruption during I/O between storage and DRAM?










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    If a motherboard supports ECC DRAM, then it has a 72 bit bus between the DRAM slot and the memory controller. 64 data bits + 8 parity bits for SECDED. Nowadays, most CPUs have the memory controller integrated inside. So, the moving bits between the DIMM and the CPU are protected against one single bit error per 8 bits.



    Is there also any kind of correction/detection of bit-flips during the process of reading/writing between non-volatile memory and volatile memory possible?



    Often storage devices are connected to a PCH, which is connected to the CPU. Sometimes storage devices are connected to the CPU directly.



    Anyway, is there somehow any hardware protection against data corruption during I/O between storage and DRAM?










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      0
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      0
      down vote

      favorite











      If a motherboard supports ECC DRAM, then it has a 72 bit bus between the DRAM slot and the memory controller. 64 data bits + 8 parity bits for SECDED. Nowadays, most CPUs have the memory controller integrated inside. So, the moving bits between the DIMM and the CPU are protected against one single bit error per 8 bits.



      Is there also any kind of correction/detection of bit-flips during the process of reading/writing between non-volatile memory and volatile memory possible?



      Often storage devices are connected to a PCH, which is connected to the CPU. Sometimes storage devices are connected to the CPU directly.



      Anyway, is there somehow any hardware protection against data corruption during I/O between storage and DRAM?










      share|improve this question















      If a motherboard supports ECC DRAM, then it has a 72 bit bus between the DRAM slot and the memory controller. 64 data bits + 8 parity bits for SECDED. Nowadays, most CPUs have the memory controller integrated inside. So, the moving bits between the DIMM and the CPU are protected against one single bit error per 8 bits.



      Is there also any kind of correction/detection of bit-flips during the process of reading/writing between non-volatile memory and volatile memory possible?



      Often storage devices are connected to a PCH, which is connected to the CPU. Sometimes storage devices are connected to the CPU directly.



      Anyway, is there somehow any hardware protection against data corruption during I/O between storage and DRAM?







      storage ecc data-integrity dram dma






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      edited Nov 22 at 11:40

























      asked Nov 21 at 16:51









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