Esta es una lista de tasas de bits de interfaz , es una medida de tasas de transferencia de información o capacidad de ancho de banda digital , a la que las interfaces digitales en una computadora o red pueden comunicarse a través de varios tipos de buses y canales . La distinción puede ser arbitraria entre un bus de computadora , a menudo más cercano en el espacio, y redes de telecomunicaciones más grandes . Muchas interfaces o protocolos de dispositivos (por ejemplo, SATA, USB, SAS , PCIe ) se utilizan tanto dentro de cajas de muchos dispositivos, como una PC, como dentro de cajas de un dispositivo, como unacaja del disco duro . En consecuencia, esta página enumera los estándares del cable de comunicaciones externo y de cinta interna juntos en una tabla clasificable.
Factores que limitan el desempeño real, criterios para decisiones reales
La mayoría de las tasas enumeradas son medidas de rendimiento máximo teórico ; En la práctica, el rendimiento efectivo real es casi inevitablemente más baja en proporción a la carga de otros dispositivos ( red / contención de bus ), distancias físicas o temporales, y otra encima de la cabeza en la capa de enlace de datos de protocolos, etc. El máximo goodput (por ejemplo, el archivo tasa de transferencia) puede ser incluso menor debido a una sobrecarga de protocolo de capa más alta y retransmisiones de paquetes de datos causadas por ruido de línea o interferencias como diafonía , o paquetes perdidos en nodos de red intermedios congestionados . Todos los protocolos pierden algo, y los más robustos que se ocupan de manera flexible con muchas situaciones de falla tienden a perder más rendimiento máximo para obtener tasas totales a largo plazo más altas.
Las interfaces de dispositivo en las que un bus transfiere datos a través de otro se limitarán, en el mejor de los casos, al rendimiento de la interfaz más lenta. Por ejemplo, los controladores SATA revisión 3.0 (6 Gbit / s) en un canal PCI Express 2.0 (5 Gbit / s) estarán limitados a la velocidad de 5 Gbit / sy tendrán que emplear más canales para solucionar este problema. Las primeras implementaciones de nuevos protocolos a menudo tienen este tipo de problema. Los fenómenos físicos en los que se basa el dispositivo (como platos giratorios en un disco duro) también impondrán límites; por ejemplo, el envío de ningún plato giratorio en 2009 satura la revisión SATA 2.0 (3 Gbit / s), por lo que pasar de esta interfaz de 3 Gbit / s a USB 3.0 a 4.8 Gbit / s para una unidad giratoria no dará como resultado un aumento en la tasa de transferencia realizada .
La contención en un espectro inalámbrico o ruidoso, donde el medio físico está completamente fuera del control de quienes especifican el protocolo, requiere medidas que también consumen el rendimiento. Los dispositivos inalámbricos, BPL y módems pueden producir una velocidad de línea más alta o una velocidad de bits bruta debido a los códigos de corrección de errores y otros gastos generales de la capa física . Es extremadamente común que el rendimiento sea mucho menos de la mitad del máximo teórico, aunque las tecnologías más recientes (en particular BPL) emplean análisis de espectro preventivo para evitar esto y, por lo tanto, tienen mucho más potencial para alcanzar velocidades reales de gigabits en la práctica que los módems anteriores.
Otro factor que reduce el rendimiento son las decisiones políticas deliberadas que toman los proveedores de servicios de Internet por motivos contractuales, de gestión de riesgos, de saturación de agregación o de marketing. Algunos ejemplos son la limitación de velocidad , la limitación del ancho de banda y la asignación de direcciones IP a grupos. Estas prácticas tienden a minimizar el rendimiento disponible para todos los usuarios, pero maximizan la cantidad de usuarios que pueden recibir soporte en una red troncal.
Además, los chips a menudo no están disponibles para implementar las tasas más rápidas. AMD , por ejemplo, no admite la interfaz HyperTransport de 32 bits en ninguna CPU que haya enviado a fines de 2009. Además, los proveedores de servicios WiMAX en los EE. UU. Generalmente solo admiten hasta 4 Mbit / s a fines de 2009 .
No es aconsejable elegir proveedores de servicios o interfaces basados en máximos teóricos, especialmente para necesidades comerciales. Un buen ejemplo son los centros de datos a gran escala, que deberían preocuparse más por el precio por puerto para soportar la interfaz, las consideraciones de potencia y calor, y el costo total de la solución. Debido a que algunos protocolos como SCSI y Ethernet ahora operan muchos órdenes de magnitud más rápido que cuando se implementaron originalmente, la escalabilidad de la interfaz es un factor importante, ya que evita cambios costosos a tecnologías que no son compatibles con versiones anteriores. Subrayando esto está el hecho de que estos cambios a menudo ocurren involuntariamente o por sorpresa, especialmente cuando un proveedor abandona el soporte para un sistema propietario.
Convenciones
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Por convención, las velocidades de datos de bus y red se indican en bits por segundo (bit / s) o bytes por segundo (B / s). En general, las interfaces paralelas se cotizan en B / sy la serie en bit / s. El más utilizado se muestra a continuación en negrita .
En dispositivos como módems , los bytes pueden tener más de 8 bits de longitud porque pueden rellenarse individualmente con bits de inicio y parada adicionales; las cifras a continuación reflejarán esto. Cuando los canales utilizan códigos de línea (como Ethernet , Serial ATA y PCI Express ), las tarifas cotizadas son para la señal decodificada.
Las cifras siguientes son velocidades de datos símplex , que pueden entrar en conflicto con las velocidades dúplex que los proveedores utilizan a veces en los materiales promocionales. Cuando se enumeran dos valores, el primer valor es la velocidad descendente y el segundo valor es la velocidad ascendente.
Todas las cifras citadas están en unidades decimales métricas . Tenga en cuenta que estos no son los prefijos binarios tradicionales para el tamaño de la memoria. Estos prefijos decimales se han establecido desde hace mucho tiempo en las comunicaciones de datos. Esto ocurrió antes de 1998 cuando IEC y otras organizaciones introdujeron nuevos prefijos binarios e intentaron estandarizar su uso en todas las aplicaciones informáticas.
Anchos de banda
Las figuras a continuación están agrupadas por tipo de red o bus, luego clasificadas dentro de cada grupo de menor a mayor ancho de banda; el sombreado gris indica una falta de implementaciones conocidas.
Como se indicó anteriormente, todos los anchos de banda cotizados son para cada dirección. Por lo tanto, para las interfaces dúplex (capaces de transmisión simultánea en ambos sentidos), los valores indicados son velocidades simplex (unidireccionales), en lugar del total ascendente + descendente.
Estación de señal horaria a radio reloj
Tecnología | Max. Velocidad | Año | |
---|---|---|---|
IRIG y afines | 1 bit / s | ~ 0,125 caracteres / s [1] [2] | ? |
Teletipo (TTY) o dispositivo de telecomunicaciones para sordos (TDD)
Tecnología | Max. Velocidad | Año | |
---|---|---|---|
TTY (V.18) | 45,4545 bit / s | 6 caracteres / s [3] | 1994 [4] |
TTY (V.18) | 50 bit / s | 6,6 caracteres / s | 1994 |
Subtítulos cerrados de la línea 21 de NTSC | 1 kbit / s | ~ 100 caracteres / s | 1976 [5] |
Módems (banda estrecha y banda ancha)
Banda estrecha ( POTS : canal de 4 kHz)
Tecnología | Velocidad | Tasa ex. gastos generales | Año |
---|---|---|---|
Código Morse (operador calificado) | 0,021 kbit / s [6] | 4 caracteres por segundo (~ 40 palabras por minuto ) [7] | 1844 |
Teleimpresora (50 baudios) | 0,05 kbit / s | 404 operaciones por minuto | 1940x |
Módem 110 baudios ( Bell 101 ) | 0,11 kbit / s | 0,010 kB / s (~ 10 cps) [8] | 1959 |
Módem 300 (300 baudios; Bell 103 o V.21 ) | 0,3 kbit / s | 0,03 kB / s (~ 30 cps) [8] | 1962 [9] |
Módem 1200/75 (600 baudios; V.23 ) | 1,2 / 0,075 kbit / s | 0,12 / 0,0075 kB / s (~ 120 cps) [8] | 1964 (?) [10] |
Módem 1200 (600 baudios; Vadic VA3400, Bell 212A o V.22 ) | 1,2 kbit / s | 0,12 kB / s (~ 120 cps) [8] | 1976 |
Módem 1200 (Bell 202C, 202D) | 1,2 kbit / s | 0,15 kB / s (~ 150 cps) | ? |
Módem 2000 (Bell 201A) | 2 kbit / s | 0,25 kB / s (~ 250 cps) | ? |
Módem 2400 (Bell 201B) | 2,4 kbit / s | 0,3 kB / s (~ 300 cps) | ? |
Módem 2400 (600 baudios; V.22bis ) | 2,4 kbit / s | 0,3 kB / s [8] | 1984 [10] |
Módem 4800/75 (1600 baudios; V.27ter ) | 4,8 / 0,075 kbit / s | 0,6 / 0,0075 kB / s [8] | 1976 [10] |
Módem 4800 (1600 baudios, Bell 208A, 208B) | 4,8 kbit / s | 0,6 kB / s | |
Módem 9600 (2400 baudios; V.32 ) | 9,6 kbit / s | 1,2 kB / s [8] | 1984 [10] |
Módem 14,4 (2400 baudios; V.32bis ) | 14,4 kbit / s | 1,8 kB / s [8] | 1991 [9] |
Módem 28,8 (3200 baudios; V.34 -1994) | 28,8 kbit / s | 3,6 kB / s [8] | 1994 |
Módem 33,6 (3429 baudios; V.34 -1996/98) | 33,6 kbit / s | 4,2 kB / s [8] | 1996 [10] |
Módem 56k (8000/3429 baudios; V.90 ) | 56,0 / 33,6 kbit / s [11] | 7 / 4,2 kB / s | 1998 |
Módem 56k (8000/8000 baudios; V.92 ) | 56,0 / 48,0 kbit / s [11] | 7/6 kB / s | 2001 |
Compresión de datos del módem (variable; V.92 / V.44 ) | 56,0–320,0 kbit / s [11] | 7-40 kB / s | 2000 [10] |
Compresión de texto / imagen del lado del ISP (variable) | 56,0-1 000 0,0 kbit / s | 7-125 kB / s | 1998 [10] |
Interfaz de velocidad básica ISDN (canal único / doble) | 64/128 kbit / s [12] | 8/16 kB / s | 1986 [13] |
IDSL (doble ISDN + canales de datos de 16 kbit / s) | 144 kbit / s | 18 kB / s | 2000 [14] |
Banda ancha (cientos de kHz a GHz de ancho)
Tecnología | Velocidad | Tasa ex. gastos generales | Año |
---|---|---|---|
ADSL (G.lite) | 1536/512 kbit / s | 192/64 kB / s | 1998 |
HDSL ITU G.991.1 también conocido como DS1 | 1544 kbit / s | 193 kB / s | 1998 [15] |
MSDSL | 2000 kbit / s | 250 kB / s | ? |
SDSL | 2320 kbit / s | 290 kB / s | ? |
SHDSL ITU G.991.2 | 5690 kbit / s | 711 kB / s | 2001 |
ADSL (G.dmt) ITU G.992.1 | 8192/1024 kbit / s | 1024/128 kB / s | 1999 |
ADSL2 ITU G.992.3 | 12 288 /1440 kbit / s | 1536/180 kB / s | 2002 |
ADSL2 + ITU G.992.5 | 24 576 / 3,584 mil kbit / s | 3072/448 kB / s | 2003 |
DOCSIS 1.0 [16] ( módem por cable ) | 38/9 Mbit / s | 4,75 / 1,125 MB / s | 1997 |
DOCSIS 2.0 [17] (módem por cable) | 38/27 Mbit / s | 4,75 / 3,375 MB / s | 2002 |
VDSL ITU G.993.1 | 52 Mbit / s | 7 MB / s | 2001 |
VDSL2 ITU G.993.2 | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | 2006 |
Uni-DSL | 200 Mbit / s | 25 MB / s | 2006 |
VDSL2 ITU G.993.2 Enmienda 1 (15/11) | 300 Mbit / s | 37,5 MB / s | 2015 |
BPON ( G.983 ) (servicio de fibra óptica) | 622/155 Mbit / s | 77,7 / 19,3 MB / s | 2005 [18] |
G.fast ITU G.9700 | 1000 Mbit / s | 125 MB / s | 2014 |
EPON ( 802.3ah ) (servicio de fibra óptica) | 1000/1000 Mbit / s | 125/125 MB / s | 2008 |
DOCSIS 3.0 [19] (módem por cable) | 1216/216 Mbit / s | 152/27 MB / s | 2006 |
GPON ( G.984 ) (servicio de fibra óptica) | 2488/1244 Mbit / s | 311 / 155,5 MB / s | 2008 [20] |
DOCSIS 3.1 [21] (módem por cable) | 10/2 Gbit / s | 1,25 / 0,25 GB / s | 2013 |
10G-PON ( G.987 ) (servicio de fibra óptica) | 10 / 2,5 Gbit / s | 1,25 / 0,3125 GB / s | 2012 [22] |
DOCSIS 4.0 (módem por cable) | 10/6 Gbit / s | 1,25 / 0,75 GB / s | 2017 |
XGS-PON (G.9807.1) (servicio de fibra óptica) | 10/10 Gbit / s | 1,25 / 1,25 GB / s | 2016 |
NG-PON2 ( G.989 ) (servicio de fibra óptica) | 40/10 Gbit / s | 5 / 1,25 GB / s | 2015 [23] |
Interfaces de telefonía móvil
Tecnología | Tasa de descarga | Tasa de carga | Año | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GSM CSD ( 2G ) | 14,4 kbit / s [24] | 1,8 kB / s | 14,4 kbit / s | 1,8 kB / s | |
HSCSD | 57,6 kbit / s | 5,4 kB / s | 14,4 kbit / s | 1,8 kB / s | |
GPRS (2,5 G) | 57,6 kbit / s | 7,2 kB / s | 28,8 kbit / s | 3,6 kB / s | |
Ensanchar | 100 kbit / s | 12,5 kB / s | 100 kbit / s | 12,5 kB / s | |
CDMA2000 1 × RTT | 153 kbit / s | 18 kB / s | 153 kbit / s | 18 kB / s | |
EDGE (2.75G) (tipo 1 MS) | 236,8 kbit / s | 29,6 kB / s | 236,8 kbit / s | 29,6 kB / s | 2002 |
UMTS 3G | 384 kbit / s | 48 kB / s | 384 kbit / s | 48 kB / s | |
EDGE (tipo 2 MS) | 473,6 kbit / s | 59,2 kB / s | 473,6 kbit / s | 59,2 kB / s | |
EDGE Evolution (EM tipo 1) | 1184 kbit / s | 148 kB / s | 474 kbit / s | 59 kB / s | |
EDGE Evolution (EM tipo 2) | 1894 kbit / s | 237 kB / s | 947 kbit / s | 118 kB / s | |
1 × EV-DO rev. 0 | 2457 kbit / s | 307,2 kB / s | 153 kbit / s | 19 kB / s | |
1 × EV-DO rev. A | 3,1 Mbit / s | 397 kB / s | 1,8 Mbit / s | 230 kB / s | |
LTE Cat 1 | 10 Mbit / s | 1250 kB / s | 5,2 Mbit / s | 650 kB / s | |
1 × EV-DO rev. B | 14,7 Mbit / s | 1837 kB / s | 5,4 Mbit / s | 675 kB / s | |
HSPA (3,5 G) | 13,98 Mbit / s | 1706 kB / s | 5.760 Mbit / s | 720 kB / s | |
Mejoras 4 × EV-DO (2 × 2 MIMO) | 34,4 Mbit / s | 4,3 MB / s | 12,4 Mbit / s | 1,55 MB / s | |
HSPA + (2 × 2 MIMO) | 42 Mbit / s | 5,25 MB / s | 11,5 Mbit / s | 1.437 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 2 | 50 Mbit / s | 6,25 MB / s | 25 Mbit / s | 3.375 MB / s | |
15 × EV-DO rev. B | 73,5 Mbit / s | 9,2 MB / s | 27 Mbit / s | 3.375 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 3 | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | 50 Mbit / s | 6,25 MB / s | |
UMB (2 × 2 MIMO) | 140 Mbit / s | 17,5 MB / s | 34 Mbit / s | 4.250 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 4 | 150 Mbit / s | 18,75 MB / s | 50 Mbit / s | 6,25 MB / s | |
LTE (2 × 2 MIMO) | 173 Mbit / s | 21,625 MB / s | 58 Mbit / s | 7,25 MB / s | 2004 |
UMB (4 × 4 MIMO) | 280 Mbit / s | 35 MB / s | 68 Mbit / s | 8,5 MB / s | |
EV-DO rev. C | 280 Mbit / s | 35 MB / s | 75 Mbit / s | 9 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 6 | 300 Mbit / s | 37,5 MB / s | 50 Mbit / s | 6,25 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 5 | 300 Mbit / s | 37,5 MB / s | 75 Mbit / s | 9.375 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 7 | 300 Mbit / s | 37,5 MB / s | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | |
LTE (4 × 4 MIMO) | 326 Mbit / s | 40.750 MB / s | 86 Mbit / s | 10,750 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 13 | 390 Mbit / s | 48,75 MB / s | 150 Mbit / s | 18,75 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 9 | 450 Mbit / s | 56,25 MB / s | 50 Mbit / s | 6,25 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 10 | 450 Mbit / s | 56,25 MB / s | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 11 | 600 Mbit / s | 75 MB / s | 50 Mbit / s | 6,25 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 12 | 600 Mbit / s | 75 MB / s | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 16 | 1000 Mbit / s | 125 MB / s | 50 Mbit / s | 6,25 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 18 | 1200 Mbit / s | 150 MB / s | 150 Mbit / s | 18,75 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 21 | 1400 Mbit / s | 175 MB / s | 300 Mbit / s | 37,5 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 20 | 2000 Mbit / s | 250 MB / s | 300 Mbit / s | 37,5 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 8 | 3 Gbit / s | 375 MB / s | 1,5 Gbit / s | 187 MB / s | |
LTE Cat 14 | 3,9 Gbit / s | 487 MB / s | 1,5 Gbit / s | 187 MB / s | |
5G NR | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
Redes de área amplia
Tecnología | Velocidad | Año | |
---|---|---|---|
56k línea | 56 kbit / s | 7 KB / s | 1990 |
DS0 | 64 kbit / s | 8 KB / s | |
G.lite (también conocido como ADSL Lite) | 1,536 / 0,512 Mbit / s | 0,192 / 0,064 MB / s | |
DS1 / T1 (e interfaz de velocidad primaria ISDN ) | 1,544 Mbit / s | 0,192 MB / s | 1990 |
E1 (e interfaz de velocidad primaria ISDN) | 2.048 Mbit / s | 0,256 MB / s | |
G.SHDSL | 2,304 Mbit / s | 0,288 MB / s | |
LR-VDSL2 (4 a 5 km [largo] alcance) (simetría opcional) | 4 Mbit / s | 0,512 MB / s | |
SDSL [25] | 2,32 Mbit / s | 0,29 MB / s | |
T2 | 6,312 Mbit / s | 0,789 MB / s | |
ADSL [26] | 8,0 / 1,024 Mbit / s | 1,0 / 0,128 MB / s | |
E2 | 8.448 Mbit / s | 1.056 MB / s | |
ADSL2 | 12 / 3,5 Mbit / s | 1,5 / 0,448 MB / s | |
Internet por satélite [27] | 16/1 Mbit / s | 2,0 / 0,128 MB / s | |
ADSL2 + | 24 / 3,5 Mbit / s | 3,0 / 0,448 MB / s | |
E3 | 34,368 Mbit / s | 4.296 MB / s | |
DOCSIS 1.0 ( módem por cable ) [16] | 38/9 Mbit / s | 4,75 / 1,125 MB / s | 1997 |
DOCSIS 2.0 (módem por cable) [17] | 38/27 Mbit / s | 4,75 / 3,38 MB / s | 2002 |
DS3 / T3 ('45 Meg ') | 44,736 Mbit / s | 5.5925 MB / s | |
STS-1 / OC-1 / STM-0 | 51,84 Mbit / s | 6,48 MB / s | |
VDSL (simetría opcional) | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | |
OC-3 / STM-1 | 155,52 Mbit / s | 19,44 MB / s | |
VDSL2 (simetría opcional) | 250 Mbit / s | 31,25 MB / s | |
T4 | 274,176 Mbit / s | 34,272 MB / s | |
T5 | 400,352 Mbit / s | 50,044 MB / s | |
OC-9 | 466,56 Mbit / s | 58,32 MB / s | |
OC-12 / STM-4 | 622,08 Mbit / s | 77,76 MB / s | |
OC-18 | 933,12 Mbit / s | 116,64 MB / s | |
DOCSIS 3.0 (módem por cable) [19] | 1216/216 Mbit / s | 152/27 MB / s | 2006 |
OC-24 | 1,244 Gbit / s | 155,5 MB / s | |
OC-36 | 1.900 Gbit / s | 237,5 MB / s | |
OC-48 / STM-16 | 2,488 Gbit / s | 311.04 MB / s | |
OC-96 | 4.976 Gbit / s | 622,08 MB / s | |
OC-192 / STM-64 | 9,953 Gbit / s | 1.244 125 GB / s | |
WAN PHY de 10 Gigabit Ethernet | 9,953 Gbit / s | 1.244 125 GB / s | |
DOCSIS 3.1 (módem por cable) | 10/2 Gbit / s | 1,25 / 0,25 GB / s | 2013 |
DOCSIS 4.0 (módem por cable) | 10/6 Gbit / s | 1,25 / 0,75 GB / s | 2017 |
OC-256 | 13,271 Gbit / s | 1,659 GB / s | |
OC-768 / STM-256 | 39,813 Gbit / s | 4.976 GB / s | |
OC-1536 / STM-512 | 79,626 Gbit / s | 9,953 GB / s | |
OC-3072 / STM-1024 | 159,252 Gbit / s | 19.907 GB / s |
Redes de área local
Tecnología | Velocidad | Año | |
---|---|---|---|
LocalTalk | 230 kbit / s | 28,8 kB / s | 1988 |
Econet | 800 kbit / s | 100 kB / s | 1981 |
Omninet | 1 Mbit / s | 125 kB / s | 1980 |
Red de PC de IBM | 2 Mbit / s | 250 kB / s | 1985 |
ARCNET (estándar) | 2,5 Mbit / s | 312,5 kB / s | 1977 |
Chaosnet (original) | 4 Mbit / s | 3,0 Mbit / s | 1971 |
Token Ring (Original) | 4 Mbit / s | 500 kB / s | 1985 |
Ethernet (10BASE-X) | 10 Mbit / s | 1,25 MB / s | 1980 (estándar IEEE de 1985) |
Token Ring (más tarde) | 16 Mbit / s | 2 MB / s | 1989 |
ARCnet Plus | 20 Mbit / s | 2,5 MB / s | 1992 |
TCNS | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | 1993? |
100 VG | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | 1995 |
Token Ring IEEE 802.5t | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | |
Fast Ethernet (100BASE-X) | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | 1995 |
FDDI | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | |
MoCA 1.0 [28] | 100 Mbit / s | 12,5 MB / s | |
MoCA 1.1 [28] | 175 Mbit / s | 21,875 MB / s | |
HomePlug AV | 200 Mbit / s | 25 MB / s | 2005 |
FireWire (IEEE 1394) 400 [29] [30] | 400 Mbit / s | 50 MB / s | 1995 |
MoCa 2.0 | 500 Mbit / s | 2016 | |
HIPPI | 800 Mbit / s | 100 MB / s | |
IEEE 1901 | 1000 Mbit / s | 125 MB / s | 2010 |
Token Ring IEEE 802.5v | 1 Gbit / s | 125 MB / s | 2001 |
Gigabit Ethernet (1000BASE-X) | 1 Gbit / s | 125 MB / s | 1998 |
Memoria reflectante o RFM2 (latencia de 1,25 µs) | 2 Gbit / s | 170 MB / s | 2017 |
Myrinet 2000 | 2 Gbit / s | 250 MB / s | |
Infiniband SDR 1 × [31] | 2 Gbit / s | 250 MB / s | 2001 |
RapidIO Gen1 1 × | 2,5 Gbit / s | 312,5 MB / s | 2000 |
2.5 Gigabit Ethernet (2.5GBASE-T) | 2,5 Gbit / s | 312,5 MB / s | 2016 |
Quadrics QsNet I | 3,6 Gbit / s | 450 MB / s | |
Infiniband DDR 1 × [31] | 4 Gbit / s | 500 MB / s | 2005 |
RapidIO Gen2 1 × | 5 Gbit/s | 625 MB/s | 2008 |
5 Gigabit Ethernet (5GBASE-T) | 5 Gbit/s | 625 MB/s | 2016 |
Infiniband QDR 1×[31] | 8 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s | 2007 |
Infiniband SDR 4×[31] | 8 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s | |
Quadrics QsNetII | 8 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s | |
RapidIO Gen1 4x | 10 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | |
RapidIO Gen2 2x | 10 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | 2008 |
10 Gigabit Ethernet (10GBASE-X) | 10 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | 2002-2006 |
Myri 10G | 10 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | |
Infiniband FDR-10 1×[32] | 10.31 Gbit/s | 1.29 GB/s | |
NUMAlink 3 | 12.8 Gbit/s | 1.6 GB/s | 2004 |
Infiniband FDR 1×[32] | 13.64 Gbit/s | 1.7 GB/s | 2011 |
Infiniband DDR 4×[31] | 16 Gbit/s | 2 GB/s | 2005 |
RapidIO Gen2 4x | 20 Gbit/s | 2.5 GB/s | 2008 |
Scalable Coherent Interface (SCI) Dual Channel SCI, x8 PCIe | 20 Gbit/s | 2.5 GB/s | |
Infiniband SDR 12×[31] | 24 Gbit/s | 3 GB/s | |
RapidIO Gen4 1× | 24.63 Gbit/s | 3.079 GB/s | 2016 |
Infiniband EDR 1×[32] | 25 Gbit/s | 3.125 GB/s | 2014 |
25 Gigabit Ethernet (25GBASE-X) | 25 Gbit/s | 3.125 GB/s | 2016 |
NUMAlink 4 | 25.6 Gbit/s | 3.2 GB/s | 2004 |
Infiniband QDR 4×[31] | 32 Gbit/s | 4 GB/s | 2007 |
RapidIO Gen2 8x | 40 Gbit/s | 5 GB/s | 2008 |
40 Gigabit Ethernet (40GBASE-X) 4× | 40 Gbit/s | 5 GB/s | 2010 |
Infiniband FDR-10 4×[32] | 41.25 Gbit/s | 5.16 GB/s | |
Infiniband DDR 12×[31] | 48 Gbit/s | 6 GB/s | 2005 |
Infiniband HDR 1×[33] | 50 Gbit/s | 6.250 GB/s[32] | 2017 |
50 Gigabit Ethernet (50GBASE-X) | 50 Gbit/s | 6.25 GB/s | 2016 |
NUMAlink 6 | 53.6 Gbit/s | 6.7 GB/s | 2012 |
Infiniband FDR 4×[32] | 54.54 Gbit/s | 6.82 GB/s | 2011 |
RapidIO Gen2 16× | 80 Gbit/s | 10 GB/s | 2008 |
Infiniband QDR 12×[31] | 96 Gbit/s | 12 GB/s | 2007 |
Infiniband EDR 4×[32] | 100 Gbit/s | 12.5 GB/s | 2014 |
100 Gigabit Ethernet (100GBASE-X) 10×/4× | 100 Gbit/s | 12.5 GB/s | 2010/2018 |
Omni-Path | 100 Gbit/s | 12.5 GB/s | 2015 |
Infiniband FDR-10 12×[32] | 123.75 Gbit/s | 15.47 GB/s | |
NUMAlink 7 | 159.52 Gbit/s | 19.94 GB/s | 2014 |
Infiniband FDR 12×[32] | 163.64 Gbit/s | 20.45 GB/s | 2011 |
Infiniband HDR 4×[33] | 200 Gbit/s | 25 GB/s[32] | 2017 |
200 Gigabit Ethernet (200GBASE-X) | 200 Gbit/s | 25 GB/s | 2017 |
Infiniband EDR 12×[32] | 300 Gbit/s | 37.5 GB/s | 2014 |
400 Gigabit Ethernet (400GBASE-X) | 400 Gbit/s | 50 GB/s | 2017 |
Infiniband HDR 12×[33] | 600 Gbit/s | 75 GB/s[32] | 2017 |
Wireless networks
802.11 networks in infrastructure mode are half-duplex; all stations share the medium. In infrastructure or access point mode, all traffic has to pass through an Access Point (AP). Thus, two stations on the same access point that are communicating with each other must have each and every frame transmitted twice: from the sender to the access point, then from the access point to the receiver. This approximately halves the effective bandwidth.
802.11 networks in ad hoc mode are still half-duplex, but devices communicate directly rather than through an access point. In this mode all devices must be able to "see" each other, instead of only having to be able to "see" the access point.
Standard | Rate | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
Classic WaveLAN | 2 Mbit/s | 250 kB/s | 1988 |
IEEE 802.11 | 2 Mbit/s | 250 kB/s | 1997 |
RONJA (full duplex) | 10 Mbit/s | 1.25 MB/s | 2001 |
IEEE 802.11a | 54 Mbit/s | 6.75 MB/s | 1999 |
IEEE 802.11b | 11 Mbit/s | 1.375 MB/s | 1999 |
IEEE 802.11g | 54 Mbit/s | 6.75 MB/s | 2003 |
IEEE 802.16 (WiMAX) | 70 Mbit/s | 8.75 MB/s | 2004 |
IEEE 802.11g with Super G by Atheros | 108 Mbit/s | 13.5 MB/s | 2003 |
IEEE 802.11g with 125 High Speed Mode by Broadcom | 125 Mbit/s | 15.625 MB/s | 2003 |
IEEE 802.11g with Nitro by Conexant | 140 Mbit/s | 17.5 MB/s | 2003 |
IEEE 802.11n (aka Wi-Fi 4) | 600 Mbit/s | 75 MB/s | 2009 |
IEEE 802.11ac (aka Wi-Fi 5) | 6.8–6.93 Gbit/s | 850–866.25 MB/s | 2012 |
IEEE 802.11ad | 7.14–7.2 Gbit/s | 892.5–900 MB/s | 2011 |
IEEE 802.11ax (aka Wi-Fi 6) | 11 Gbit/s | 1375 MB/s | 2019 |
Wireless personal area networks
Technology | Rate | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
ANT | 20 kbit/s | 2.5 kB/s | |
IrDA-Control | 72 kbit/s | 9 kB/s | |
IrDA-SIR | 115.2 kbit/s | 14 kB/s | |
802.15.4 (2.4 GHz) | 250 kbit/s | 31.25 kB/s | |
Bluetooth 1.1 | 1 Mbit/s | 125 kB/s | 2002 |
Bluetooth 2.0+EDR | 3 Mbit/s | 375 kB/s | 2004 |
IrDA-FIR | 4 Mbit/s | 500 kB/s | |
IrDA-VFIR | 16 Mbit/s | 2 MB/s | |
Bluetooth 3.0 | 25 Mbit/s | 3.125 MB/s | 2009 |
Bluetooth 4.0 | 25 Mbit/s | 3.125 MB/s | 2010 |
Bluetooth 5.0 | 50 Mbit/s | 6.25 MB/s | 2016 |
IrDA-UFIR | 96 Mbit/s | 12 MB/s | |
WUSB-UWB | 480 Mbit/s | 60 MB/s | |
IrDA-Giga-IR | 1024 Mbit/s | 128 MB/s |
Computer buses
Main buses
Technology | Rate | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
I²C | 3.4 Mbit/s | 425 kB/s | 1992 (standardized) |
Apple II series (incl. Apple IIGS) 8-bit/1 MHz | 8 Mbit/s | 1 MB/s[34][35] | 1977 |
SS-50 Bus 8-bit/1(?) MHz | 8 Mbit/s | 1 MB/s | 1975 |
STD-80 8-bit/8 MHz | 16 Mbit/s | 2 MB/s | |
ISA 8-Bit/4.77 MHz | 0 W/S: every 4 clocks 8 bits 1 W/S: every 5 clocks 8 bits | 0 W/S: every 4 clocks 1 byte 1 W/S: every 5 clocks 1 byte | 1981 (created) |
STD-80 16-bit/8 MHz | 32 Mbit/s | 4 MB/s | |
I3C (HDR mode)[36] | 33.3 Mbit/s | 4.16 MB/s | 2017 |
Zorro II 16-bit/7.14 MHz[37] | 42.4 Mbit/s | 5.3 MB/s | 1986 |
ISA 16-Bit/8.33 MHz | 66.64 Mbit/s | 8.33 MB/s | 1984 (created) |
Europe Card Bus 8-Bit/10 MHz | 66.7 Mbit/s | 8.33 MB/s | 1977 (created) |
S-100 bus 8-bit/10 MHz | 80 Mbit/s | 10 MB/s | 1976 (published) |
Serial Peripheral Interface Bus (Up to 100 MHz) | 100 Mbit/s | 12.5 MB/s | 1989 |
Low Pin Count | 125 Mbit/s | 15.63 MB/s [x] | 2002 |
STEbus 8-Bit/16 MHz | 128 Mbit/s | 16 MB/s | 1987 (standardized) |
C-Bus 16-bit/10 MHz | 160 Mbit/s | 20 MB/s[38] | 1982 |
HP Precision Bus | 184 Mbit/s | 23 MB/s | |
STD-32 32-bit/8 MHz | 256 Mbit/s | 32 MB/s[39] | |
NESA 32-bit/8 MHz | 256 Mbit/s | 32 MB/s[40] | |
EISA 32-bit/8.33 MHz | 266.56 Mbit/s | 33.32 MB/s | 1988 |
VME64 32-64bit | 400 Mbit/s | 40 MB/s | 1981 |
MCA 32bit/10 MHz | 400 Mbit/s | 40 MB/s | 1987 |
NuBus 10 MHz | 400 Mbit/s | 40 MB/s | 1987 (standardized) |
DEC TURBOchannel 32-bit/12.5 MHz | 400 Mbit/s | 50 MB/s | |
NuBus90 20 MHz | 800 Mbit/s | 80 MB/s | 1991 |
MCA 32bit/20 MHz | 800 Mbit/s | 80 MB/s[41] | 1992 |
APbus 32-bit/25(?) MHz | 800 Mbit/s | 100 MB/s[42] | |
Sbus 32-bit/25 MHz | 800 Mbit/s | 100 MB/s | 1989 |
DEC TURBOchannel 32-bit/25 MHz | 800 Mbit/s | 100 MB/s | |
Local Bus 98 32-bit/33 MHz | 1056 Mbit/s | 132 MB/s[43] | |
VESA Local Bus (VLB) 32-bit/33 MHz | 1067 Mbit/s | 133.33 MB/s | 1992 |
PCI 32-bit/33 MHz | 1067 Mbit/s | 133.33 MB/s | 1993 |
HP GSC-1X | 1136 Mbit/s | 142 MB/s | |
Zorro III 32-bit/async (eq. 37.5 MHz)[44][45] | 1200 Mbit/s | 150 MB/s[46] | 1990 |
VESA Local Bus (VLB) 32-bit/40 MHz | 1280 Mbit/s | 160 MB/s | 1992 |
Sbus 64-bit/25 MHz | 1.6 Gbit/s | 200 MB/s | 1995 |
HP GSC-2X | 2.048 Gbit/s | 256 MB/s | |
PCI 64-bit/33 MHz | 2.133 Gbit/s | 266.7 MB/s | 1993 |
PCI 32-bit/66 MHz | 2.133 Gbit/s | 266.7 MB/s | 1995 |
AGP 1× | 2.133 Gbit/s | 266.7 MB/s | 1997 |
PCI Express 1.0 (×1 link)[47] | 2.5 Gbit/s | 250 MB/s [z] | 2004 |
RapidIO Gen1 1× | 2.5 Gbit/s | 312.5 MB/s | |
HIO bus | 2.560 Gbit/s | 320 MB/s | |
GIO64 64-bit/40 MHz | 2.560 Gbit/s | 320 MB/s | |
PCI Express 1.0 (×2 link)[47] | 5 Gbit/s | 500 MB/s [z] | 2011 |
PCI Express 2.0 (×1 link)[48] | 5 Gbit/s | 500 MB/s [z] | 2007 |
AGP 2× | 4.266 Gbit/s | 533.3 MB/s | 1997 |
PCI 64-bit/66 MHz | 4.266 Gbit/s | 533.3 MB/s | |
PCI-X DDR 16-bit | 4.266 Gbit/s | 533.3 MB/s | |
RapidIO Gen2 1× | 5 Gbit/s | 625 MB/s | |
PCI 64-bit/100 MHz | 6.4 Gbit/s | 800 MB/s | |
PCI Express 3.0 (×1 link)[49] | 8 Gbit/s | 984.6 MB/s [y] | 2011 |
Unified Media Interface (UMI) (×4 link) | 10 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s [z] | 2011 |
Direct Media Interface (DMI) (×4 link) | 10 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s [z] | 2004 |
Enterprise Southbridge Interface (ESI) | 8 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s | |
PCI Express 1.0 (×4 link)[47] | 10 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s [z] | 2004 |
PCI Express 2.0 (x2 link)[47] | 10 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s [z] | 2007 |
AGP 4× | 8.533 Gbit/s | 1.067 GB/s | 1998 |
PCI-X 133 | 8.533 Gbit/s | 1.067 GB/s | |
PCI-X QDR 16-bit | 8.533 Gbit/s | 1.067 GB/s | |
InfiniBand single 4×[31] | 8 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s [z] | |
RapidIO Gen1 4× | 10 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | |
RapidIO Gen2 2× | 10 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | |
UPA | 15.360 Gbit/s | 1.920 GB/s | |
PCI Express 3.0 (×2 link)[49] | 16 Gbit/s | 1.969 GB/s [y] | 2011 |
Unified Media Interface 2.0 (UMI 2.0; ×4 link) | 20 Gbit/s | 2 GB/s [z] | 2012 |
Direct Media Interface 2.0 (DMI 2.0; ×4 link) | 20 Gbit/s | 2 GB/s [z] | 2011 |
PCI Express 1.0 (×8 link)[47] | 20 Gbit/s | 2 GB/s [z] | 2004 |
PCI Express 2.0 (×4 link)[48] | 20 Gbit/s | 2 GB/s [z] | 2007 |
AGP 8× | 17.066 Gbit/s | 2.133 GB/s | 2002 |
PCI-X DDR | 17.066 Gbit/s | 2.133 GB/s | |
RapidIO Gen2 4× | 20 Gbit/s | 2.5 GB/s | |
Sun JBus (200 MHz) | 20.48 Gbit/s | 2.56 GB/s | 2003 |
HyperTransport (800 MHz, 16-pair) | 25.6 Gbit/s | 3.2 GB/s | 2001 |
PCI Express 3.0 (×4 link)[49] | 32 Gbit/s | 3.938 GB/s [y] | 2011 |
HyperTransport (1 GHz, 16-pair) | 32 Gbit/s | 4 GB/s | |
PCI Express 1.0 (×16 link)[47] | 40 Gbit/s | 4 GB/s [z] | 2004 |
PCI Express 2.0 (×8 link)[48] | 40 Gbit/s | 4 GB/s [z] | 2007 |
PCI-X QDR | 34.133 Gbit/s | 4.266 GB/s | |
AGP 8× 64-bit | 34.133 Gbit/s | 4.266 GB/s | |
RapidIO Gen2 8x | 40 Gbit/s | 5 GB/s | |
Direct Media Interface 3.0 (DMI 3.0; ×4 link) | 40 Gbit/s | 4 GB/s [z] | 2015 |
PCI Express 3.0 (×8 link)[49] | 64 Gbit/s | 7.877 GB/s [y] | 2011 |
PCI Express 1.0 (×32 link)[47] | 80 Gbit/s | 8 GB/s [z] | 2001 |
PCI Express 2.0 (×16 link)[48] | 80 Gbit/s | 8 GB/s [z] | 2007 |
RapidIO Gen2 16x | 80 Gbit/s | 10 GB/s | |
PCI Express 3.0 (×16 link)[49] | 128 Gbit/s | 15.75 GB/s [y] | 2011 |
CAPI | 128 Gbit/s | 15.75 GB/s [y] | 2014 |
PCI Express 2.0 (×32 link)[48] | 160 Gbit/s | 16 GB/s [z] | 2007 |
QPI (4.80GT/s, 2.40 GHz) | 153.6 Gbit/s | 19.2 GB/s | |
HyperTransport 2.0 (1.4 GHz, 32-pair) | 179.2 Gbit/s | 22.4 GB/s | 2004 |
QPI (5.86GT/s, 2.93 GHz) | 187.52 Gbit/s | 23.44 GB/s | |
QPI (6.40GT/s, 3.20 GHz) | 204.8 Gbit/s | 25.6 GB/s | |
QPI (7.2GT/s, 3.6 GHz) | 230.4 Gbit/s | 28.8 GB/s | 2012 |
PCI Express 3.0 (×32 link)[49] | 256 Gbit/s | 31.51 GB/s [y] | 2011 |
PCI Express 4.0 (×16 link)[50] | 256 Gbit/s | 31.51 GB/s[y] | 2018 |
CAPI 2 | 256 Gbit/s | 31.51 GB/s[y] | 2016 |
QPI (8.0GT/s, 4.0 GHz) | 256.0 Gbit/s | 32.0 GB/s | 2012 |
QPI (9.6GT/s, 4.8 GHz) | 307.2 Gbit/s | 38.4 GB/s | 2014 |
HyperTransport 3.0 (2.6 GHz, 32-pair) | 332.8 Gbit/s | 41.6 GB/s | 2006 |
HyperTransport 3.1 (3.2 GHz, 32-pair) | 409.6 Gbit/s | 51.2 GB/s | 2008 |
CXL Specification 1.x (×16 link) | 512 Gbit/s | 63.02 GB/s | 2019 |
PCI Express 5.0 (×16 link)[51] | 512 Gbit/s | 63.02 GB/s[y] | 2019 |
NVLink 1.0 | 640 Gbit/s | 80 GB/s | 2016 |
PCI Express 6.0 (×16 link) | 1024 Gbit/s | 126 GB/s[y] | 2020 |
NVLink 2.0 | 1.2 Tbit/s | 150 GB/s | 2017 |
Infinity Fabric (Max. theoretical) | 4.096 Tbit/s | 512 GB/s | 2017 |
x LPC protocol includes high overhead. While the gross data rate equals 33.3 million 4-bit-transfers per second (or 16.67 MB/s), the fastest transfer, firmware read, results in 15.63 MB/s. The next fastest bus cycle, 32-bit ISA-style DMA write, yields only 6.67 MB/s. Other transfers may be as low as 2 MB/s.[52]
y Uses 128b/130b encoding, meaning that about 1.54% of each transfer is used by the interface instead of carrying data between the hardware components at each end of the interface. For example, a single link PCIe 3.0 interface has an 8 Gbit/s transfer rate, yet its usable bandwidth is only about 7.88 Gbit/s.
z Uses 8b/10b encoding, meaning that 20% of each transfer is used by the interface instead of carrying data from between the hardware components at each end of the interface. For example, a single link PCIe 1.0 has a 2.5 Gbit/s transfer rate, yet its usable bandwidth is only 2 Gbit/s (250 MB/s).
Portable
Technology | Rate | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
PC Card 16-bit 255 ns byte mode | 31.36 Mbit/s | 3.92 MB/s | |
PC Card 16-bit 255 ns word mode | 62.72 Mbit/s | 7.84 MB/s | |
PC Card 16-bit 100 ns byte mode | 80 Mbit/s | 10 MB/s | |
PC Card 16-bit 100 ns word mode | 160 Mbit/s | 20 MB/s | |
PC Card 32-bit (CardBus) byte mode | 267 Mbit/s | 33.33 MB/s | |
ExpressCard 1.2 USB 2.0 mode | 480 Mbit/s | 60 MB/s | |
PC Card 32-bit (CardBus) word mode | 533 Mbit/s | 66.66 MB/s | |
PC Card 32-bit (CardBus) doubleword mode | 1067 Mbit/s | 133.33 MB/s | |
ExpressCard 1.2 PCI Express mode | 2500 Mbit/s | 250 MB/s | |
ExpressCard 2.0 USB 3.0 mode | 4800 Mbit/s | 600 MB/s | |
ExpressCard 2.0 PCI Express mode | 5000 Mbit/s | 625 MB/s |
Storage
Technology | Rate | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
Teletype Model 33 paper tape | 70 bit/s | 10 B/s | 1963 |
TRS-80 Model 1 Level 1 BASIC cassette tape interface | 250 bit/s | 32 B/s | 1977 |
C2N Commodore Datasette 1530 cassette tape interface | 300 bit/s | 15 B/s | 1977 |
Apple 2 cassette tape interface | 1.5 kbit/s | 200 B/s | 1977 |
Single Density 8-inch FM Floppy Disk Controller (160 KB) | 250 kbit/s | 31 KB/s | 1973 |
Double Density 5.25-inch MFM Floppy Disk Controller (360 KB) | 500 kbit/s | 62 KB/s | 1978 |
High Density MFM Floppy Disk Controller (1.2 MB/1.44 MB) | 1 Mbit/s | 124 KB/s | 1984 |
CD Controller (1×) | 1.171 Mbit/s | 0.146 MB/s | 1988 |
MFM hard disk | 5 Mbit/s | 0.625 MB/s | 1980 |
RLL hard disk | 7.5 Mbit/s | 0.937 MB/s | |
DVD Controller (1×) | 11.1 Mbit/s | 1.32 MB/s | |
ESDI | 24 Mbit/s | 3 MB/s | |
ATA PIO Mode 0 | 26.4 Mbit/s | 3.3 MB/s | 1986 |
HD DVD Controller (1×) | 36 Mbit/s | 4.5 MB/s | |
Blu-ray Controller (1×) | 36 Mbit/s | 4.5 MB/s | |
SCSI (Narrow SCSI) (5 MHz)[53] | 40 Mbit/s | 5 MB/s | 1986 |
ATA PIO Mode 1 | 41.6 Mbit/s | 5.2 MB/s | 1994 |
ATA PIO Mode 2 | 66.4 Mbit/s | 8.3 MB/s | 1994 |
Fast SCSI (8 bits/10 MHz) | 80 Mbit/s | 10 MB/s | |
ATA PIO Mode 3 | 88.8 Mbit/s | 11.1 MB/s | 1996 |
AoE over Fast Ethernet[54] | 100 Mbit/s | 11.9 MB/s | 2009 |
iSCSI over Fast Ethernet[55] | 100 Mbit/s | 11.9 MB/s | 2004 |
ATA PIO Mode 4 | 133.3 Mbit/s | 16.7 MB/s | 1996 |
Fast Wide SCSI (16 bits/10 MHz) | 160 Mbit/s | 20 MB/s | |
Ultra SCSI (Fast-20 SCSI) (8 bits/20 MHz) | 160 Mbit/s | 20 MB/s | |
SD (High Speed) | 200 Mbit/s | 25 MB/s | |
Ultra DMA ATA 33 | 264 Mbit/s | 33 MB/s | 1998 |
Ultra Wide SCSI (16 bits/20 MHz) | 320 Mbit/s | 40 MB/s | |
Ultra-2 SCSI 40 (Fast-40 SCSI) (8 bits/40 MHz) | 320 Mbit/s | 40 MB/s | |
SDHC/SDXC/SDUC (UHS-I Full Duplex) | 400 Mbit/s | 50 MB/s | |
Ultra DMA ATA 66 | 533.6 Mbit/s | 66.7 MB/s | 2000 |
Blu-ray Controller (16×) | 576 Mbit/s | 72 MB/s | |
Ultra-2 wide SCSI (16 bits/40 MHz) | 640 Mbit/s | 80 MB/s | |
Serial Storage Architecture SSA | 640 Mbit/s | 80 MB/s | 1990 |
Ultra DMA ATA 100 | 800 Mbit/s | 100 MB/s | 2002 |
Fibre Channel 1GFC (1.0625 GHz)[56] | 850 Mbit/s | 103.23 MB/s | 1997 |
AoE over gigabit Ethernet, jumbo frames[57] | 1 Gbit/s | 124.2 MB/s | 2009 |
iSCSI over gigabit Ethernet, jumbo frames[58] | 1 Gbit/s | 123.9 MB/s | 2004 |
Ultra DMA ATA 133 | 1.064 Gbit/s | 133 MB/s | 2005 |
SDHC/SDXC/SDUC (UHS-II Full Duplex) | 1.25 Gbit/s | 156 MB/s | |
Ultra-3 SCSI (Ultra 160 SCSI; Fast-80 Wide SCSI) (16 bits/40 MHz DDR) | 1.28 Gbit/s | 160 MB/s | |
SATA revision 1.0[59] | 1.500 Gbit/s | 150 MB/s [a] | 2003 |
Fibre Channel 2GFC (2.125 GHz)[56] | 1.700 Gbit/s | 206.5 MB/s | 2001 |
Ultra-320 SCSI (Ultra4 SCSI) (16 bits/80 MHz DDR) | 2.560 Gbit/s | 320 MB/s | |
Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) SAS-1[59] | 3 Gbit/s | 300 MB/s [a] | 2004 |
SATA Revision 2.0[59] | 3 Gbit/s | 300 MB/s [a] | 2004 |
SDHC/SDXC/SDUC (UHS-III Full Duplex) | 2.5 Gbit/s | 312 MB/s | |
Fibre Channel 4GFC (4.25 GHz)[56] | 3.4 Gbit/s | 413 MB/s | 2004 |
Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) SAS-2[59] | 6 Gbit/s | 600 MB/s [a] | 2009 |
SATA Revision 3.0[59] | 6 Gbit/s | 600 MB/s [a] | 2008 |
Fibre Channel 8GFC (8.50 GHz)[56] | 6.8 Gbit/s | 826 MB/s | 2005 |
SDHC/SDXC/SDUC (SD Express) | 7.9 Gbit/s | 985 MB/s | |
AoE over 10GbE[57] | 10 Gbit/s | 1.242 GB/s | 2009 |
iSCSI over 10GbE[58] | 10 Gbit/s | 1.239 GB/s | 2004 |
FCoE over 10GbE[60] | 10 Gbit/s | 1.206 GB/s | 2009 |
Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) SAS-3[59] | 12 Gbit/s | 1.2 GB/s | 2013 |
Fibre Channel 16GFC (14.025 GHz)[56] | 13.6 Gbit/s | 1.652 GB/s [b] | 2011 |
SATA Express | 16 Gbit/s | 2 GB/s | 2013 |
Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) 4 | 22.5 Gbit/s | 2.4 GB/s [c] | 2017 |
UFS (version 3.0) | 23.2 Gbit/s | 2.9 GB/s | 2018 |
Fibre Channel 32GFC (28.05 GHz)[56] | 26.424 Gbit/s | 3.303 GB/s [b] | 2016 |
NVMe over M.2 or U.2 (using PCI Express 3.0 ×4 link)[49] | 32 Gbit/s | 3.938 GB/s | 2013 |
iSCSI over InfiniBand 4× | 32 Gbit/s | 4 GB/s | 2007 |
NVMe over M.2 or U.2 (using PCI Express 4.0 ×4 link) | 64 Gbit/s | 7.876 GB/s | 2017 |
iSCSI over 100G Ethernet[58] | 100 Gbit/s | 12.392 GB/s | 2010 |
FCoE over 100G Ethernet[60] | 100 Gbit/s | 12.064 GB/s | 2010 |
a Uses 8b/10b encoding b Uses 64b/66b encoding c Uses 128b/150b encoding
Peripheral
Technology | Rate | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
Apple Desktop Bus | 10.0 kbit/s | 1.25 kB/s | 1986 |
PS/2 port | 12.0 kbit/s | 1.5 kB/s | 1987 |
Serial MIDI | 31.25 kbit/s | 3.9 kB/s | 1983 |
CBM Bus max[61][62] | 41.6 kbit/s | 5.1 kB/s | 1981 |
Serial RS-232 max | 230.4 kbit/s | 28.8 kB/s | 1962 |
Serial DMX512A | 250.0 kbit/s | 31.25 kB/s | 1998 |
Parallel (Centronics/IEEE 1284) | 1 Mbit/s | 125 kB/s | 1970 (standardized 1994) |
Serial 16550 UART max | 1.5 Mbit/s | 187.5 kB/s | |
USB 1.0 low speed | 1.536 Mbit/s | 192 kB/s | 1996 |
Serial UART max | 2.7648 Mbit/s | 345.6 kB/s | |
GPIB/HPIB (IEEE-488.1) IEEE-488 max. | 8 Mbit/s | 1 MB/s | Late 1960s (standardized 1976) |
Serial EIA-422 max. | 10 Mbit/s | 1.25 MB/s | |
USB 1.0 full speed | 12 Mbit/s | 1.5 MB/s | 1996 |
Parallel (Centronics/IEEE 1284) EPP (Enhanced Parallel Port) | 16 Mbit/s | 2 MB/s | 1992 |
Parallel (Centronics/IEEE 1284) ECP (Extended Capability Port) | 20 Mbit/s | 2.5 MB/s | 1994 |
Serial EIA-485 max. | 35 Mbit/s | 4.375 MB/s | |
GPIB/HPIB (IEEE-488.1-2003) IEEE-488 max. | 64 Mbit/s | 8 MB/s | |
FireWire (IEEE 1394) 100 | 98.304 Mbit/s | 12.288 MB/s | 1995 |
FireWire (IEEE 1394) 200 | 196.608 Mbit/s | 24.576 MB/s | 1995 |
FireWire (IEEE 1394) 400 | 393.216 Mbit/s | 49.152 MB/s | 1995 |
USB 2.0 high speed | 480 Mbit/s | 60 MB/s | 2000 |
FireWire (IEEE 1394b) 800[63] | 786.432 Mbit/s | 98.304 MB/s | 2002 |
Fibre Channel 1 Gb SCSI | 1.0625 Gbit/s | 100 MB/s | |
FireWire (IEEE 1394b) 1600[63] | 1.573 Gbit/s | 196.6 MB/s | 2007 |
Fibre Channel 2 Gb SCSI | 2.125 Gbit/s | 200 MB/s | |
eSATA (SATA 300) | 3 Gbit/s | 300 MB/s | 2004 |
CoaXPress Base (up and down bidirectional link) | 3.125 Gbit/s + 20.833 Mbit/s | 390 MB/s | 2009 |
FireWire (IEEE 1394b) 3200[63] | 3.1457 Gbit/s | 393.216 MB/s | 2007 |
External PCI Express 2.0 ×1 | 4 Gbit/s | 500 MB/s | |
Fibre Channel 4 Gb SCSI | 4.25 Gbit/s | 531.25 MB/s | |
USB 3.0 SuperSpeed (aka USB 3.1 Gen 1) | 5 Gbit/s | 500 MB/s | 2010 |
eSATA (SATA 600) | 6 Gbit/s | 600 MB/s | 2011 |
CoaXPress full (up and down bidirectional link) | 6.25 Gbit/s + 20.833 Mbit/s | 781 MB/s | 2009 |
External PCI Express 2.0 ×2 | 8 Gbit/s | 1 GB/s | |
USB 3.1 SuperSpeed+ (aka USB 3.1 Gen 2) | 10 Gbit/s | 1.212 GB/s | 2013 |
External PCI Express 2.0 ×4 | 16 Gbit/s | 2 GB/s | |
Thunderbolt | 20 Gbit/s !">2 × 10 Gbit/s | 2500 MB/s !">2 × 1.25 GB/s | 2011 |
USB 3.2 SuperSpeed+[64] (aka USB 3.2 Gen 2×2) | 20 Gbit/s | 2.424 GB/s | 2017 |
Thunderbolt 2 | 20 Gbit/s | 2.5 GB/s | 2013 |
External PCI Express 2.0 ×8 | 32 Gbit/s | 4 GB/s | |
Thunderbolt 3 two links | 40 Gbit/s | 5 GB/s | 2015 |
USB4[65] | 40 Gbit/s | 5 GB/s | 2019 |
External PCI Express 2.0 ×16 | 64 Gbit/s | 8 GB/s |
MAC to PHY
Technology | Channels | Bits | MGT Lanes | Rate | Year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Count | Encoding | Rate | ||||||
Media Independent Interface (MII) | 1 | 4 | 100 Mbit/s | 12.5 MB/s | ||||
Reduced MII (RMII) | 1 | 2 | 100 Mbit/s | 12.5 MB/s | ||||
Serial MII (SMII) | 1 | 1 | 100 Mbit/s | 12.5 MB/s | ||||
Gigabit MII (GMII) | 1 | 8 | 1.0 Gbit/s | 125 MB/s | ||||
Reduced gigabit/s MII (RGMII) | 1 | 4 | 1.0 Gbit/s | 125 MB/s | ||||
Ten-bit interface (TBI) | 1 | 10 | 1.0 Gbit/s | 125 MB/s | ||||
Serial gigabit/s MII (SGMII) | 1 | 1 | 8b/10b | 1.25 Gbit/s | 1.0 Gbit/s | 125 MB/s | ||
Reduced serial gigabit/s MII (RSGMII) | 2 | 1 | 8b/10b | 2.5 Gbit/s | 2.0 Gbit/s | 250 MB/s | ||
Reduced serial gigabit/s MII plus (RSGMII-PLUS) | 4 | 1 | 8b/10b | 5.0 Gbit/s | 4.0 Gbit/s | 500 MB/s | ||
Quad serial gigabit/s MII (QSGMII) | 4 | 1 | 8b/10b | 5.0 Gbit/s | 4.0 Gbit/s | 500 MB/s | ||
10 gigabit/s MII (XGMII) | 1 | 32 | 10.0 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | ||||
XGMII attachment unit interface (XAUI) | 1 | 4 | 8b/10b | 3.125 Gbit/s | 10.0 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | ||
Reduced Pin XAUI (RXAUI) | 1 | 2 | 8b/10b | 6.25 Gbit/s | 10.0 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | ||
XFI/SFI | 1 | 1 | 64b/66b | 10.3125 Gbit/s | 10.0 Gbit/s | 1.25 GB/s | ||
40 gigabit/s MII (XLGMII, on-chip only) | 1 | 40.0 Gbit/s | 5 GB/s | |||||
100 gigabit/s MII (CGMII, on-chip only) | 1 | 100.0 Gbit/s | 12.5 GB/s | 2008 | ||||
100G AUI (CAUI-10) | 1 | 10 | 64b/66b | 10.3125 Gbit/s | 100.0 Gbit/s | 12.5 GB/s | ||
100G AUI (CAUI-4) | 1 | 4 | 64b/66b | 25.78125 Gbit/s | 100.0 Gbit/s | 12.5 GB/s |
PHY to XPDR
Technology | Rate | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
10 gigabit/s 16-bit interface (XSBI; 16 lanes) | 0.995 Gbit/s | 0.124 GB/s |
Dynamic random-access memory
The table below shows values for PC memory module types. These modules usually combine multiple chips on one circuit board. SIMM modules connect to the computer via an 8-bit- or 32-bit-wide interface. RIMM modules used by RDRAM are 16-bit- or 32-bit-wide.[66] DIMM modules connect to the computer via a 64-bit-wide interface. Some other computer architectures use different modules with a different bus width.
In a single-channel configuration, only one module at a time can transfer information to the CPU. In multi-channel configurations, multiple modules can transfer information to the CPU at the same time, in parallel. FPM, EDO, SDR, and RDRAM memory was not commonly installed in a dual-channel configuration. DDR and DDR2 memory is usually installed in single- or dual-channel configuration. DDR3 memory is installed in single-, dual-, tri-, and quad-channel configurations. Bit rates of multi-channel configurations are the product of the module bit-rate (given below) and the number of channels.
Module type | Chip type | Internal clock[a] | Bus clock | Bus speed[b] | Transfer rate | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
FPM DRAM | 45 ns | 22 MHz | 22 MHz | 0.177 GT/s | 1.416 Gbit/s | 177 MB/s |
EDO DRAM | 30 ns | 33 MHz | 33 MHz | 0.266 GT/s | 2.128 Gbit/s | 266 MB/s |
PC-66 SDR SDRAM | 10/15 ns | 66 MHz | 66 MHz | 0.066 GT/s | 4.264 Gbit/s | 533 MB/s |
PC-100 SDR SDRAM | 8 ns | 100 MHz | 100 MHz | 0.100 GT/s | 6.4 Gbit/s | 800 MB/s |
PC-133 SDR SDRAM | 7/7.5 ns | 133 MHz | 133 MHz | 0.133 GT/s | 8.528 Gbit/s | 1.066 GB/s |
RIMM-1200 RDRAM | PC600 | 75 MHz | 300 MHz | 0.600 GT/s | 9.6 Gbit/s | 1.2 GB/s |
RIMM-1400 RDRAM | PC700 | 87.5 MHz | 350 MHz | 0.700 GT/s | 11.2 Gbit/s | 1.4 GB/s |
RIMM-1600 RDRAM | PC800 | 100 MHz | 400 MHz | 0.800 GT/s | 12.8 Gbit/s | 1.6 GB/s |
PC-1600 DDR SDRAM | DDR-200 | 100 MHz | 100 MHz | 0.200 GT/s | 12.8 Gbit/s | 1.6 GB/s |
RIMM-2100 RDRAM | PC1066 | 133 MHz | 533 MHz | 1.066 GT/s | 17.034 Gbit/s | 2.133 GB/s |
PC-2100 DDR SDRAM | DDR-266 | 133 MHz | 133 MHz | 0.266 GT/s | 17.034 Gbit/s | 2.133 GB/s |
RIMM-2400 RDRAM | PC1200 | 150 MHz | 600 MHz | 1.2 GT/s | 19.2 Gbit/s | 2.4 GB/s |
PC-2700 DDR SDRAM | DDR-333 | 166 MHz | 166 MHz | 0.333 GT/s | 21.336 Gbit/s | 2.667 GB/s |
PC-3200 DDR SDRAM | DDR-400 | 200 MHz | 200 MHz | 0.400 GT/s | 25.6 Gbit/s | 3.2 GB/s |
PC2-3200 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-400 | 100 MHz | 200 MHz | 0.400 GT/s | 25.6 Gbit/s | 3.2 GB/s |
PC-3500 DDR SDRAM | DDR-433 | 216 MHz | 216 MHz | 0.433 GT/s | 27.728 Gbit/s | 3.466 GB/s |
PC-3700 DDR SDRAM | DDR-466 | 233 MHz | 233 MHz | 0.466 GT/s | 29.864 Gbit/s | 3.733 GB/s |
PC-4000 DDR SDRAM | DDR-500 | 250 MHz | 250 MHz | 0.500 GT/s | 32 Gbit/s | 4 GB/s |
PC-4200 DDR SDRAM | DDR-533 | 266 MHz | 266 MHz | 0.533 GT/s | 34.128 Gbit/s | 4.266 GB/s |
PC2-4200 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-533 | 133 MHz | 266 MHz | 0.533 GT/s | 34.128 Gbit/s | 4.266 GB/s |
PC-4400 DDR SDRAM | DDR-550 | 275 MHz | 275 MHz | 0.550 GT/s | 35.2 Gbit/s | 4.4 GB/s |
PC-4800 DDR SDRAM | DDR-600 | 300 MHz | 300 MHz | 0.600 GT/s | 38.4 Gbit/s | 4.8 GB/s |
PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-667 | 166 MHz | 333 MHz | 0.667 GT/s | 42.664 Gbit/s | 5.333 GB/s |
PC2-6000 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-750 | 188 MHz | 375 MHz | 0.750 GT/s | 48 Gbit/s | 6 GB/s |
PC2-6400 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-800 | 200 MHz | 400 MHz | 0.800 GT/s | 51.2 Gbit/s | 6.4 GB/s |
PC3-6400 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-800 | 100 MHz | 400 MHz | 0.800 GT/s | 51.2 Gbit/s | 6.4 GB/s |
PC2-7200 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-900 | 225 MHz | 450 MHz | 0.900 GT/s | 57.6 Gbit/s | 7.2 GB/s |
PC2-8000 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-1000 | 250 MHz | 500 MHz | 1 GT/s | 64 Gbit/s | 8 GB/s |
PC2-8500 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-1066 | 266 MHz | 533 MHz | 1.066 GT/s | 68 Gbit/s | 8.5 GB/s |
PC3-8500 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-1066 | 133 MHz | 533 MHz | 1.066 GT/s | 68 Gbit/s | 8.5 GB/s |
PC2-8800 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-1100 | 275 MHz | 550 MHz | 1.1 GT/s | 70.4 Gbit/s | 8.8 GB/s |
PC2-9200 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-1150 | 288 MHz | 575 MHz | 1.15 GT/s | 73.6 Gbit/s | 9.2 GB/s |
PC2-9600 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-1200 | 300 MHz | 600 MHz | 1.2 GT/s | 76.8 Gbit/s | 9.6 GB/s |
PC2-10000 DDR2 SDRAM | DDR2-1250 | 312 MHz | 625 MHz | 1.25 GT/s | 80 Gbit/s | 10 GB/s |
PC3-10600 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-1333 | 167 MHz | 667 MHz | 1.333 GT/s | 85.336 Gbit/s | 10.667 GB/s |
PC3-11000 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-1375 | 172 MHz | 688 MHz | 1.375 GT/s | 88 Gbit/s | 11 GB/s |
PC3-12800 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-1600 | 200 MHz | 800 MHz | 1.6 GT/s | 102.4 Gbit/s | 12.8 GB/s |
PC3-13000 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-1625 | 203 MHz | 813 MHz | 1.625 GT/s | 104 Gbit/s | 13 GB/s |
PC3-14400 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-1800 | 225 MHz | 900 MHz | 1.8 GT/s | 115.2 Gbit/s | 14.4 GB/s |
PC3-14900 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-1866 | 233 MHz | 933 MHz | 1.866 GT/s | 119.464 Gbit/s | 14.933 GB/s |
PC3-16000 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-2000 | 250 MHz | 1000 MHz | 2 GT/s | 128 Gbit/s | 16 GB/s |
PC3-17000 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-2133 | 267 MHz | 1067 MHz | 2.133 GT/s | 136.528 Gbit/s | 17.066 GB/s |
PC4-17000 DDR4 SDRAM | DDR4-2133 | 267 MHz | 1067 MHz | 2.133 GT/s | 136.5 Gbit/s | 17 GB/s |
PC3-17600 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-2200 | 275 MHz | 1100 MHz | 2.2 GT/s | 140.8 Gbit/s | 17.6 GB/s |
PC3-19200 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-2400 | 300 MHz | 1200 MHz | 2.4 GT/s | 153.6 Gbit/s | 19.2 GB/s |
PC4-19200 DDR4 SDRAM | DDR4-2400 | 300 MHz | 1200 MHz | 2.4 GT/s | 153.6 Gbit/s | 19.2 GB/s |
PC3-21300 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-2666 | 333 MHz | 1333 MHz | 2.666 GT/s | 170.5 Gbit/s | 21.3 GB/s |
PC4-21300 DDR4 SDRAM | DDR4-2666 | 333 MHz | 1333 MHz | 2.666 GT/s | 170.5 Gbit/s | 21.3 GB/s |
PC3-24000 DDR3 SDRAM | DDR3-3000 | 375 MHz | 1500 MHz | 3.0 GT/s | 192 Gbit/s | 24 GB/s |
PC4-24000 DDR4 SDRAM | DDR4-3000 | 375 MHz | 1500 MHz | 3.0 GT/s | 192 Gbit/s | 24 GB/s |
PC4-25600 DDR4 SDRAM | DDR4-3200 | 400 MHz | 1600 MHz | 3.2 GT/s | 204.8 Gbit/s | 25.6 GB/s |
PC5-41600 DDR5 SDRAM | DDR5-5200 | 650 MHz | 2600 MHz | 5.2 GT/s | 332.8 Gbit/s | 41.6 GB/s |
PC5-51200 DDR5 SDRAM | DDR5-6400 | 800 MHz | 3200 MHz | 6.4 GT/s | 409.6 Gbit/s | 51.2 GB/s |
a The clock rate at which DRAM memory cells operate. The memory latency is largely determined by this rate. Note that until the introduction of DDR4 the internal clock rate saw relatively slow progress. DDR/DDR2/DDR3 memory uses 2n/4n/8n (respectively) prefetch buffer to provide higher throughput, while the internal memory speed remains similar to that of the previous generation.
b The "memory speed/clock" advertised by manufactures and suppliers usually refers to this rate (with 1 GT/s = 1 GHz). Note that modern types of memory use DDR bus with two transfers per clock.
Graphics processing units' RAM
RAM memory modules are also utilised by graphics processing units; however, memory modules for those differ somewhat from standard computer memory, particularly with lower power requirements, and are specialised to serve GPUs: for example, GDDR3 was fundamentally based on DDR2. Every graphics memory chip is directly connected to the GPU (point-to-point). The total GPU memory bus width varies with the number of memory chips and the number of lanes per chip. For example, GDDR5 specifies either 16 or 32 lanes per "device" (chip), while GDDR5X specifies 64 lanes per chip. Over the years, bus widths rose from 64-bit to 512-bit and beyond: e.g. HBM is 1024 bits wide.[67] Because of this variability, graphics memory speeds are sometimes compared per pin. For direct comparison to the values for 64-bit modules shown above, video RAM is compared here in 64-lane lots, corresponding to two chips for those devices with 32-bit widths. In 2012, high-end GPUs used 8 or even 12 chips with 32 lanes each, for a total memory bus width of 256 or 384 bits. Combined with a transfer rate per pin of 5 GT/s or more, such cards could reach 240 GB/s or more.
RAM frequencies used for a given chip technology vary greatly. Where single values are given below, they are examples from high-end cards.[68] Since many cards have more than one pair of chips, the total bandwidth is correspondingly higher. For example, high-end cards often have eight chips, each 32 bits wide, so the total bandwidth for such cards is four times the value given below.
Chip type | Module type | Memory clock | Transfers/s | Bandwidth | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
DDR | 64 lanes | 350 MHz | 0.7 GT/s | 44.8 Gbit/s | 5.6 GB/s |
DDR2 | 64 lanes | 250 MHz | 1 GT/s | 64 Gbit/s | 8 GB/s |
GDDR3 | 64 lanes | 625 MHz | 2.5 GT/s | 159 Gbit/s | 19.9 GB/s |
GDDR4 | 64 lanes | 275 MHz | 2.2 GT/s | 140.8 Gbit/s | 17.6 GB/s |
GDDR5[69] | 64 lanes | 625–1000 MHz | 5–8 GT/s | 320–512 Gbit/s | 40–64 GB/s |
GDDR5X[70] | 64 lanes | 625–875 MHz | 10–12 GT/s | 640–768 Gbit/s | 80–96 GB/s |
GDDR6 | 64 lanes | 875–1000 MHz | 14–16 GT/s | 896–1024 Gbit/s | 112–128 GB/s |
GDDR6X[71] | 64 lanes | MHz | 19–21 GT/s | 1216–1344 Gbit/s | 152–168 GB/s |
HBM[72] | 1024 lanes (8 channels @ 128 lanes ea) | 500 MHz | 1 GT/s | 1024 Gbit/s | 128 GB/s |
HBM2[72][73] | 1024 lanes (8 channels @ 128 lanes ea) | 500 MHz | 2 GT/s | 2048 Gbit/s | 256 GB/s |
HBM3[73] | 1024 lanes (8 channels @ 128 lanes ea) | 500 MHz | 4 GT/s | 4096 Gbit/s | 512 GB/s |
HMC | 128 lanes (8 links @ 16 lanes ea) | (internal) | 10 GT/s | 2560 Gbit/s | 320 GB/s |
HMC2 | 64 lanes (4 links @ 16 lanes ea) | (internal) | 30 GT/s | 3840 Gbit/s | 480 GB/s |
Digital audio
Device | Rate | |
---|---|---|
CD Audio (16-bit PCM) | 1.411 Mbit/s | 176.4 kB/s |
I²S | 2.250 Mbit/s @ 24bit/48 kHz | 0.281 MB/s |
AES/EBU | 2.625 Mbit/s @ 24-bit/48 kHz | 0.328 MB/s |
S/PDIF fs 48kHz | 3.072 Mbit/s | 0.384 MB/s |
ADAT Lightpipe (Type I) | 9.216 Mbit/s | 1.152 MB/s |
AC'97 | 12.288 Mbit/s | 1.536 MB/s |
HDMI | 36.864 Mbit/s | 4.608 MB/s |
DisplayPort | 36.864 Mbit/s | 4.608 MB/s |
Intel High Definition Audio rev. 1.0[74] | 48 Mbit/s outbound; 24 Mbit/s inbound | 6 MB/s outbound; 3 MB/s inbound |
MADI | 100 Mbit/s | 12.5 MB/s |
Digital video interconnects
Data rates given are from the video source (e.g., video card) to receiving device (e.g., monitor) only. Out of band and reverse signaling channels are not included.
Device | Rate | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
HD-SDI (SMPTE 292M) | 1.485 Gbit/s | 0.186 GB/s | |
Camera Link Base (single) 24-bit 85 MHz | 2.040 Gbit/s | 0.255 GB/s | |
LVDS Display Interface[75] | 2.80 Gbit/s | 0.35 GB/s | |
3G-SDI (SMPTE 424M) | 2.97 Gbit/s | 0.371 GB/s | 2006 |
Single link DVI | 4.95 Gbit/s | 0.619 GB/s [a] | 1999 |
HDMI 1.0[76] | 4.95 Gbit/s | 0.619 GB/s [a] | 2002 |
Camera Link full (dual) 64-bit 85 MHz | 5.44 Gbit/s | 0.680 GB/s | |
6G-SDI (SMPTE 2081) | 5.94 Gbit/s | 0.75 GB/s | 2015 |
DisplayPort 1.0 (4-lane Reduced Bit Rate)[77] | 6.48 Gbit/s | 0.810 GB/s [a] | 2006 |
Dual link DVI | 9.90 Gbit/s | 1.238 GB/s [a] | 1999 |
Thunderbolt | 20 Gbit/s !">2 × 10 Gbit/s | 2.5 GB/s !">2 × 1.25 GB/s | 2011 |
HDMI 1.3[78] | 10.2 Gbit/s | 1.275 GB/s [a] | 2006 |
Dual High-Speed LVDS Display Interface | 10.5 Gbit/s | 1.312 GB/s | |
DisplayPort 1.0 (4-lane High Bit Rate)[77] | 10.8 Gbit/s | 1.35 GB/s [a] | 2006 |
12G-SDI (SMPTE 2082) | 11.88 Gbit/s | 1.5 GB/s | 2015 |
HDMI 2.0[79] | 18.0 Gbit/s | 2.25 GB/s [a] | 2013 |
Thunderbolt 2 | 20 Gbit/s | 2.5 GB/s | 2013 |
DisplayPort 1.2 (4-lane High Bit Rate 2)[77] | 21.6 Gbit/s | 2.7 GB/s [a] | 2009 |
DisplayPort 1.3 (4-lane High Bit Rate 3) | 32.4 Gbit/s | 4.05 GB/s [a] | 2014 (2016) |
superMHL | 36 Gbit/s | 4.5 GB/s | 2015 |
Thunderbolt 3 | 40 Gbit/s | 5 GB/s | 2015 |
HDMI 2.1[80] | 48 Gbit/s | 6 GB/s [b] | 2017 |
DisplayPort 2.0 (4-lane) | 80 Gbit/s | 10 GB/s [c] | 2019 |
SMPTE 2110 over 100 Gigabit Ethernet | 100 Gbit/s | 12.5 GB/s | 2017 |
a Uses 8b/10b encoding (20% coding overhead) b Uses 16b/18b encoding (11% overhead) c Uses 128b/132b encoding (3% overhead)
Ver también
- Bitrates in multimedia
- Comparison of mobile phone standards
- Comparison of wireless data standards
- List of Internet access technology bit rates
- OFDM system comparison table
- Sneakernet
- Spectral efficiency comparison table
- Orders of magnitude (bit rate)
- Optical Carrier transmission rates
Notas
- ^ NIST-Enhanced-WWVB-Broadcast-Format-sept-2012-Radio-Station-staff, By John Lowe, September 2012, nist.gov
- ^ http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/2422.pdf Archived version
- ^ TTY uses a Baudot code, not ASCII. This uses 5 bits per character instead of 8, plus one start and approx. 1.5 stop bits (7.5 total bits per character sent).
- ^ https://www.itu.int/ITU-T/recommendations/rec.aspx?rec=2727
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20110719060406/http://www.ncicap.org/caphist.asp
- ^ Morse can transport 26 alphabetic, 10 numeric and one interword gap plaintext symbols. Transmitting 37 different symbols requires 5.21 bits of information (25.21=37). A skilled operator encoding the benchmark "PARIS" plus an interword gap (equal to 31.26 bits) at 40 wpm is operating at an equivalence of 20.84 bit/s.
- ^ WPM, or Words Per Minute, is the number of times the word "PARIS" is transferred per minute. Strictly speaking the code is quinary, accounting inter-element, inter-letter, and inter-word gaps, yielding 50 binary elements (bits) per one word. Counting characters, including inter-word gaps, gives six characters per word or 240 characters per minute, and finally four characters per second.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j All modems are wrongly assumed to be in serial operation with 1 start bit, 8 data bits, no parity, and 1 stop bit (2 stop bits for 110-baud modems). Therefore, currently modems are wrongly calculated with transmission of 10 bits per 8-bit byte (11 bits for 110-baud modems). Although the serial port is nearly always used to connect a modem and has equivalent data rates, the protocols, modulations and error correction differ completely.
- ^ a b Modem Types and Timeline, Daxal Communications, 2003-12-16, archived from the original on 2008-10-08, retrieved 2009-04-16
- ^ a b c d e f g "ITU-T Recommendations: V Series: Data communication over the telephone network". ITU.
- ^ a b c 56K modems: V.90 and V.92 have just 5% overhead for the protocol signalling. The maximum capacity can only be achieved when the upstream (service provider) end of the connection is digital, i.e. a DS0 channel.
- ^ Note that effective aggregate bandwidth for an ISDN installation is typically higher than the rates shown for a single channel due to the use of multiple channels. A basic rate interface (BRI) provides two "B" channels and one "D" channel. Each B channel provides 64 kBit/s bandwidth and the "D" channel carries signaling (call setup) information. B channels can be bonded to provide a 128 kbit/s data rate. Primary rate interfaces (PRI) vary depending on whether the region uses E1 (Europe, world) or T1 (North America) bearers. In E1 regions, the PRI carries 30 B-channels and one D-channel; in T1 regions the PRI carries 23 B-channels and one D-channel. The D-channel has different bandwidth on the two interfaces.
- ^ Massey, David (2006-07-04), "Timeline of Telecommunications", Telephone Tribute, retrieved 2009-04-16
- ^ Adam.com.au
- ^ "Recommendation G.991.1 (10/98)". ITU.
- ^ a b DOCSIS 1.0 Archived 2006-06-13 at the Wayback Machine includes technology which first became available around 1995–1996, and has since become very widely deployed. DOCSIS 1.1 Archived 2006-06-13 at the Wayback Machine introduces some security improvements and quality of service (QoS).
- ^ a b DOCSIS 2.0 Archived 2009-09-04 at the Wayback Machine specifications provide increased upstream throughput for symmetric services.
- ^ "G.983.2". ITU.
- ^ a b DOCSIS 3.0 Archived 2006-06-19 at the Wayback Machine includes support for channel bonding and IPv6.
- ^ "G.984.4 : Gigabit-capable passive optical networks (G-PON)". ITU.
- ^ DOCSIS 3.1 is currently in development by the Cablelabs Consortium
- ^ "G.987 : 10-Gigabit-capable passive optical network (XG-PON) systems". ITU.
- ^ "G.989 : 40-Gigabit-capable passive optical networks (NG-PON2)". ITU.
- ^ Most operators only support up to 9600bit/s
- ^ SDSL is available in various speeds.
- ^ ADSL connections will vary in throughput from 64 kbit/s to several Mbit/s depending on configuration. Most are commonly below 2 Mbit/s. Some ADSL and SDSL connections have a higher digital bandwidth than T1 but their rate is not guaranteed, and will drop when the system gets overloaded, whereas the T1 type connections are usually guaranteed and have no contention ratios.
- ^ Satellite internet may have a high bandwidth but also has a high latency due to the distance between the modem, satellite and hub. One-way satellite connections exist where all the downstream traffic is handled by satellite and the upstream traffic by land-based connections such as 56K modems and ISDN.
- ^ a b "MoCA 1.1 improves throughput" over coaxial cable to 175 Mbits/s versus the 100 Mbits/s provided by the MoCA 1.0 specification.
- ^ FireWire natively supports TCP/IP, and is often used at an alternative to Ethernet when connecting 2 nodes. Tweaktown.com
- ^ Data rate comparison between FW and Giganet shows that FW's lower overhead has nearly the same throughput as Giganet. Unibrain.com Archived 2008-02-07 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j InfiniBand SDR, DDR and QDR use an 8b/10b encoding scheme.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l InfiniBand FDR-10, FDR and EDR use a 64b/66b encoding scheme.
- ^ a b c Lee, Bill. "Chair of marketing working group". IBTA Blog. IBTA. Archived from the original on 2018-06-25. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
- ^ Mac History
- ^ VAW: Apple IIgs Specs Archived 2011-01-10 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "After 35 years of I2C, I3C Improves Capability and Performance | Sensors and MEMS". eecatalog.com. Retrieved 2019-06-26.
- ^ The Zorro II bus use 4 clocks per 16-Bit of data transferred. See the Zorro III technical specification Archived 2012-07-16 at the Wayback Machine for more information.
- ^ Japan wikipedia article, Bus used in early NEC PC-9800 series and compatible systems
- ^ STD 32 Bus Specification and Designer's Guide
- ^ Japan wikipedia article, Bus used in later NEC PC-9800 series and compatible systems
- ^ RISC System/6000 POWERstation/POWERserver 580
- ^ Local Area Networks Newsletter by Paul Polishuk, September 1992, Page 7 (APbus used in Sony NeWS and NEC UP4800 workstations and NEC EWS4800 servers after VMEbus and before switch to PCI)
- ^ Japan wikipedia article, Bus used in NEC PC-9821 series
- ^ Dave Haynie, designer of the Zorro III bus, claims in this posting that the theoretical max of the Zorro III bus can be derived by the timing information given in chapter 5 of the Zorro III technical specification Archived 2012-07-16 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Dave Haynie, designer of the Zorro III bus, states in this posting that Zorro III is an asynchronous bus and therefore does not have a classical MHz rating. A maximum theoretical MHz value may be derived by examining timing constraints detailed in the Zorro III technical specification Archived 2012-07-16 at the Wayback Machine, which should yield about 37.5 MHz. No existing implementation performs to this level.
- ^ Dave Haynie, designer of the Zorro III bus, claims in this posting that Zorro III has a max burst rate of 150 MB/s.
- ^ a b c d e f g Note that PCI Express 1.0/2.0 lanes use an 8b/10b encoding scheme.
- ^ a b c d e PCIe 2.0 effectively doubles the bus standard's bandwidth from 2.5 GT/s to 5 GT/s
- ^ a b c d e f g PCIe 3.0 increases the bandwidth from 5 GT/s to 8 GT/s and switches to 128b-130b encoding
- ^ Born, Eric (8 June 2017). "PCIe 4.0 specification finally out with 16 GT/s on tap". Tech Report. Retrieved 21 February 2018.
- ^ Smith, Ryan. "PCI-SIG Finalizes PCIe 5.0 Specification: x16 Slots to Reach 64GB/sec". www.anandtech.com. Retrieved 2019-06-26.
- ^ Intel LPC Interface Specification 1.1
- ^ SCSI-1, SCSI-2 and SCSI-3 are signaling protocols and do not explicitly refer to a specific rate. Narrow SCSI exists using SCSI-1 and SCSI-2. Higher rates use SCSI-2 or later.
- ^ minimum overhead is 38 byte L1/L2, 14 byte AoE per 1024 byte user data
- ^ minimum overhead is 38 byte L1/L2, 20 byte IP, 20 byte TCP per 1460 byte user data
- ^ a b c d e f Fibre Channel 1GFC, 2GFC, 4GFC use an 8b/10b encoding scheme. Fibre Channel 10GFC, which uses a 64B/66B encoding scheme, is not compatible with 1GFC, 2GFC and 4GFC, and is used only to interconnect switches.
- ^ a b minimum overhead is 38 byte L1/L2, 14 byte AoE per 8192 byte user data
- ^ a b c minimum overhead is 38 byte L1/L2, 20 byte IP, 20 byte TCP per 8960 byte user data
- ^ a b c d e f SATA and SAS use an 8b/10b encoding scheme.
- ^ a b minimum overhead is 38 byte L1/L2, 36 byte FC per 2048 byte user data
- ^ proprietary serial version of IEEE-488 by Commodore International
- ^ http://cbmmuseum.kuto.de/floppy.html
- ^ a b c FireWire (IEEE 1394b) uses an 8b/10b encoding scheme.
- ^ Dent, Steve (26 July 2017). "USB 3.2 doubles your connection speeds with the same port". Engadget. Retrieved 26 July 2017.
- ^ Shilov, Anton. "USB4 Specification Announced: Adopting Thunderbolt 3 Protocol for 40 Gbps USB". www.anandtech.com. Retrieved 2019-06-26.
- ^ "RDRAM Memory Architecture".
- ^ Comparison of AMD graphics processing units
- ^ Comparison of Nvidia graphics processing units
- ^ "GRAPHICS DOUBLE DATA RATE (GDDR5) SGRAM STANDARD JESD212C". JEDEC. 2016-02-01. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
- ^ "GRAPHICS DOUBLE DATA RATE (GDDR5X) SGRAM STANDARD JESD232". JEDEC. 2015-11-01. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
- ^ "Doubling I/O Performance with PAM4 - Micron Innovates GDDR6X to Accelerate Graphics Memory". Micron. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
- ^ a b Shilov, Anton (20 January 2016). "JEDEC Publishes HBM2 Specification". Anandtech. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
- ^ a b Walton, Mark (23 August 2016). "HBM3: Cheaper, up to 64GB on-package, and terabytes-per-second bandwidth". Ars Technica. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
- ^ High Definition Audio Specification, Revision 1.0a, 2010
- ^ Videsignline.com, Panel display interfaces and bandwidth: From TTL, LVDS, TDMS to DisplayPort
- ^ "Octavainc.com". Archived from the original on 2008-12-05. Retrieved 2008-10-20.
- ^ a b c Displayport Technical Overview Archived 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine, May 2010
- ^ HDMI.org
- ^ HDMI.org
- ^ HDMI.org
enlaces externos
- Interconnection Speeds Compared
- LTE Categories 1
- LTE Categories 2
- Need for Speed: Theoretical Bandwidth Comparison—Contains a graph (from 2004) illustrating digital bandwidths