Have you ever been looking through the Newegg stock Motherboards, and seen, in the specs section, a specification for Northbridge and a specification for Southbridge? Ever really wondered what those are, and how they affect your system, your speed, your graphics, etc.?
I'll go as in depth into this as I can here, as a simple knowledge article on the topic.
Mind you, these are
non-removeable chipsets on your Motherboard. You
cannot upgrade them, etc. in any way other than switching Motherboards.
* * * * * * * *
The Northbridge and Southbridge are two very important 'tie-in' components on your motherboard. They handle communication between your CPU and connexions such as the AGP/PCIe, PCI, RAM and your USB interfaces.
You can divide up your standard interfaces into two categories: fast and not-as-fast (Some people would divide them into 'Fast' and 'Slow', but that could hurt your 'high speed' USB port's feelings... :). Once you divide your interfaces into these two groups, you'll see what is controlled by what. Falling into the 'fast' category are your RAM and your PCIe or AGP interfaces. These are connected to the Northbridge (I'll explain why in a minute). Falling into the 'not-as-fast' category is basically everything else: PCI, Power Management (APM), USB, your system clock, IDE connexions, and more.
"So," you may ask, "why call them the 'Northbridge' and 'Southbridge'? I mean, depending on how your computer's sitting, it doesn't need to be north and south, right?"
Wrong. If you don't line them up exactly with north and south magnetic poles, your computer will spontaneously combust into a giant fireball, leaving a crater roughly the size of alaska, and at least as deep. Ok... Um, scratch that. Actually it's very simple to explain. I'll do a little text picture here:
-----
|CPU|
-----
||
----- ------------------
| NB |=|Fast Interfaces|
----- ------------------
||
----- -------------------
| SB |=|Everything Else|
----- -------------------
I've set it up here like a map (kind of) so it'll be easier to visualise.
-The Northbridge is connected to three things - the CPU, the Fast Interface Devices (which, I guess, is more than one thing, but for simplicity sake...), and the Southbridge. The Northbridge is connected
directly to the CPU, which is why it handles the faster Interface Devices.
-The Southbridge is connected to only two things - the Northbridge and 'Everything Else' (conglomerated for the same reason as before). The Southbridge takes care of the slower Interfaces because it doesn't have a direct connexion to the CPU, and thus experiences a kind of degredation of performance. It also means that it doesn't
have to be as fast, etc. as the Northbridge.
The Northbridge determines what series of CPU your motherboard will use, how many it can use, and what speeds are supported (because they're directly linked, if one is slower than the other going
either way, there will be bottlenecking). It also determines the same for your RAM: what speed it can run at, how much you can use, and what type you'll use. Now, the Northbridge may seem like the main man here, but all this is, of course, also dependent on other factors (for example, if your Northbridge accepts multiple types of processors, you'll have to use one compatible with the socket on the motherboard. If the same Northbridge were on another compatible motherboard, it may enable you to use a different socket processor. The same goes for the number of available RAM sockets). The Northbridge is also what the CPU uses to define it's own frequency... which is why the Northbridge plays an integral part in
overclocking. Because of this, many Northbridges now have heatsinks (to avoid melting, or maybe even spontaneous combustion, which can be fun! :).
The Southbridge must be designed to work with your specific Northbridge, because there is no industry standard for the Northbridge/Southbridge connexion (now, as to why, I don't know - you'd think it makes sense, no?). The Southbridge is located further away from the CPU than the Northbridge, and, as such, every little bit (get it? :) of information it sends has a longer distance to travel.
This is why it handles the slower devices, because there's not as much an emphasis on speed. PCI, Serial and Parallel ATA connexions, Firewire, and more run through the Southbridge. In order for these devices to get CPU attention, the integrated interrupt controller (PIC - the 'P' is for 'Programmable', not 'Processor' or 'Pigeon') is used.
Separating the Northbridge and Southbridge is not necessary, as sometimes (read: rarely), when the factors permit, they will be placed together on the same die, and are utilised together. It probably saves on production cost, but seems like it'd be quite a hassle to get it to work correctly (it's always easier to build two small sandcastles than one large one).
Also, if you look at the model numbers or descriptions of motherboards, you'll see the name of the Northbridge (or some concatenated version of it) but not the Southbridge. Why? Because the Southbridge
has to work with the Northbridge, so there's usually only a few (if not
one) Southbridge in compliance. Because of this, the Southbridge suffers from low-self-esteem issues. ("Why doesn't anyone care about me?")
Did that video-card-looking mumbo jumbo on the Northbridges ever confuse you? Like, when you're looking through the specs, and it says something like "NVIDIA nForce 570 SLI MCP"? It's really just a descriptor, and I'm sure that if you read through the rest of the specs, you'd understand - but, for simplicity sake, I'm going to explain it here real fast: This specific one supports SLI, Multi-Core, and the nForce series. Though the specific Motherboard may not have enough PCIe slots for SLI, or whatever else, the support is there in the Northbridge, if the Motherboard wishes to utilise it.
* * * * * * * *
I hope that this clears up some questions, and maybe some other tech-heads like me will be able to better understand the workings of a computer by ingesting this. :) I had fun writing, and if you found it an interesting read, let me know - perhaps I'll delve into different areas later.
(If you see mistakes, or have additions, please let me know so I can change this OP and credit you. Thanks!)
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da Man. :)
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