Intel D410PT Intel Desktop Board D410PTL /D410PTLW Technical Product Specifica - Page 18

USB, 1.5.3 SATA Support - drivers xp

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Intel Desktop Board D410PTL and Intel Desktop Board D410PTLW Technical Product Specification 1.5.2 USB The board provides up to eight USB 2.0 ports, supports UHCI and EHCI, and uses UHCI- and EHCI-compatible drivers. The port arrangement is as follows: • Eight USB 2.0 ports (D410PTL only): ⎯ Four back panel ports ⎯ Four ports are implemented with two dual port internal headers for front panel cabling • Seven USB 2.0 ports (D410PTLW only): ⎯ Four back panel ports ⎯ Two ports are implemented with a dual port internal header for front panel cabling ⎯ One port is implemented with an internal header (brown-colored) that supports an Intel® Z-U130 USB Solid-State Drive (or compatible device) NOTE Computer systems that have an unshielded cable attached to a USB port may not meet FCC Class B requirements, even if no device is attached to the cable. Use shielded cable that meets the requirements for full-speed devices. For information about The location of the USB connectors on the back panel The location of the front panel USB headers Refer to Figure 8, page 37 Figure 10, page 39 1.5.3 SATA Support The board provides two SATA interface connectors that support one device per connector. The board's SATA controller offers independent SATA ports with a theoretical maximum transfer rate of 3.0 Gbits/sec on each port. One device can be installed on each port for a maximum of two SATA devices. A point-to-point interface is used for host to device connections, unlike PATA which supports a master/slave configuration and two devices on each channel. For compatibility, the underlying SATA functionality is transparent to the operating system. The SATA controller supports IDE and AHCI configuration and can operate in both legacy and native modes. In legacy mode, standard ATA I/O and IRQ resources are assigned (IRQ 14 and 15). In Native mode, standard PCI Conventional bus resource steering is used. Native mode is the preferred mode for configurations using the Windows* XP and Windows Vista* operating systems. For information about Obtaining AHCI driver The location of the SATA connectors Refer to Section 1.2, page 14 Figure 10, page 39 18

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Intel Desktop Board D410PTL and Intel Desktop Board D410PTLW Technical Product
Specification
18
1.5.2
USB
The board provides up to eight USB 2.0 ports, supports UHCI and EHCI, and uses
UHCI- and EHCI-compatible drivers.
The port arrangement is as follows:
Eight USB 2.0 ports (D410PTL only):
Four back panel ports
Four ports are implemented with two dual port internal headers for front panel
cabling
Seven USB 2.0 ports (D410PTLW only):
Four back panel ports
Two ports are implemented with a dual port internal header for front panel
cabling
One port is implemented with an internal header (brown-colored) that supports
an Intel
®
Z-U130 USB Solid-State Drive (or compatible device)
NOTE
Computer systems that have an unshielded cable attached to a USB port may not
meet FCC Class B requirements, even if no device is attached to the cable.
Use
shielded cable that meets the requirements for full-speed devices.
For information about
Refer to
The location of the USB connectors on the back panel
Figure 8, page 37
The location of the front panel USB headers
Figure 10, page 39
1.5.3
SATA Support
The board provides two SATA interface connectors that support one device per
connector.
The board’s SATA controller offers independent SATA ports with a theoretical
maximum transfer rate of 3.0 Gbits/sec on each port.
One device can be installed on
each port for a maximum of two SATA devices.
A point-to-point interface is used for
host to device connections, unlike PATA which supports a master/slave configuration
and two devices on each channel.
For compatibility, the underlying SATA functionality is transparent to the operating
system.
The SATA controller supports IDE and AHCI configuration and can operate in
both legacy and native modes.
In legacy mode, standard ATA I/O and IRQ resources
are assigned (IRQ 14 and 15).
In Native mode, standard PCI Conventional bus
resource steering is used.
Native mode is the preferred mode for configurations using
the Windows* XP and Windows Vista* operating systems.
For information about
Refer to
Obtaining AHCI driver
Section 1.2, page 14
The location of the SATA connectors
Figure 10, page 39