The invention relates to a computer system comprising at least one power supply for providing a standby voltage and at least one system board with a plurality of system components arranged thereupon. The invention further relates to a system board for such a computer system.
In known computer systems any components of a system board and any expansion cards plugged thereon, if required, are powered by a common 3.3 V supply path. For example, for especially powerful and/or components which have been later plugged in a respective socket or plug connector of the system board, short-circuits or failures in the voltage supply may occur which may impair other components arranged on the system board, which affects the operational reliability of the computer system as a whole.
In this context it is an object of the invention to describe an improved computer system and an improved system board, respectively, which enhance the operational reliability of the computer system and the system board.
According to a first aspect of the invention said object is solved by a computer system of the kind described above, wherein a first group of system components of the plurality of system components is connected to the at least one power supply via a first supply path for providing the standby voltage, and wherein a second group of system components, different from the first group, of the plurality of system components is connected to the at least one power supply via a second supply path which is electrically independent of the first supply path for providing the standby voltage.
By means of an electrical separation of a first supply path and a second supply path, predetermined groups of system components may be electrically separated from one another, thus e.g. the occurrence of a failure in a system component of the first group does not result in an impairment of a system component of the second group.
For example, in the first group especially failure-prone system components, and in the second group system components which are less prone to failure may be grouped. Alternatively or in addition, a separation may also be performed according to that that those components are combined in the first group which are of minor importance for operating the computer system, while in the second group those system components are combined, which are essential for operating the computer system.
For example, the first group of system components comprises at least one of the following components: a voltage regulator for powering or supplying a central data processing unit, in particular a processor, and/or a plug connector for receiving an expansion card. The second group of system components includes at least one part of a chipset, a system monitoring module, a sequencing controller, and/or a power supply controller, for example.
The components mentioned first typically have a high electrical power consumption above the average and are often connected to the system board via respective sockets or plug connectors in a pluggable way. The two features quite often result in causing electrical troubles in the computer system. However, the components of the second group are typically firmly soldered to the system board and have only a small energy consumption. Due to that they normally do not impair the electrical safety of the system board. In addition, these components are e.g. important to detect failures in the computer system, which may occur, and are able to signal failures to an external monitoring component, if required.
In at least one configuration, the power supply comprises at least one first voltage transformer for generating the standby voltage for the system components connected to the first supply path, and at least one second voltage transformer, independent of the first voltage transformer, for generating the standby voltage for the system components connected to the second supply path. With such a complete separation of the voltage supply, a supply of the second group of system components may even be ensured when an electric failure occurs in the power supply itself, e.g. in the first voltage transformer.
The system components of the second group may detect an occurring failure in the area of the first supply path and signal it to a higher level monitoring component, which is independent of the computer system. Alternatively or in addition, a power supply controller of the computer system may deactivate the provision of the standby voltage via at least the first supply path when receiving an error signal to prevent possible subsequent damages, as for example an overloading of the power supply or a burn-through of further components of the system board.
The object mentioned above is also solved by a system board for usage in a computer system having at least one first electric conductor track for supplying a standby voltage to a first group of system components, and at least one second electric conductor track, separated from of the first electric conductor track, for supplying a standby voltage to a second group of system components, which is different from the first group. The first group of system components includes at least one component, which is releasably, e.g. pluggably connected to the system board, and the second group of system components exclusively includes such components, which are firmly connected, e.g. soldered, to the system board. Regarding the advantages and further configurations of such a system board, reference is made to the above.
Further advantageous configurations of the inventions are described in the appended dependent claims and in the following description by means of exemplary embodiments. The exemplary embodiments will be described with reference to the appended figures.
Before the invention is explained in detail in the following, first a conventional diagram for providing a standby voltage in a computer system is described with reference to
The standby voltage is distributed via an electrical distribution structure 2 including a plurality of branches to a variety of system components. In the diagram according to
In an embodiment according to
The components 3, 4, and 6 are typically plugged in the respective socketw or plug connectors 5 of a system board. In addition, they have a relatively high electrical power, as for example 75 W per plug connector 5. Due to a faulty plug operation or unfavorable thermal conditions, such components may thus quite easily cause a short-circuit or any other overload of the voltage transformer 1. As in the supply diagram according to
The first standby voltage of the first voltage transformer 1a is provided via a first electrical supply path 11, one or more plug connectors 5, and expansion cards 6 received therein. The second standby voltage of the second voltage transformer 1b is supplied via a second supply path 12, which is electrically completely separated therefrom, exclusively to one or more system critical components, in the exemplary embodiment to chipset 7. In addition, as described above, the first standby voltage may also be coupled to a third supply path 13 via an interruption device 8 depending on an operation mode of the computer system. For example, the third supply path 13 serves to provide a voltage regulator 3 for a downstream processor 4 with operating power.
In the supply diagram according to
In an advantageous configuration, the second group 15 further comprises an internal monitoring device 16 which is capable of monitoring the state of the first standby voltage and to forward an respective failure to other internal or external components of the computer system, even if an electrical short-circuit of one of the components of the first group 14 or along the first supply path 11 or a third supply path 13 has occurred. In addition, the monitoring device 16 may detect and forward further states, as e.g. an ACPI state of the computer system, which allows to deduce information about an operating state of the computer system.
The power supply 21 includes a first voltage transformer 1a, a second voltage transformer 1b, and a power supply controller 24. In the exemplary embodiment, the first voltage transformer 1a has a higher electrical output power than the second voltage transformer 1b.
In the exemplary embodiment, the system board 22 includes two PCIe plug connectors 25 for receiving corresponding PCIe expansion cards 26, a voltage regulator 3 for providing an adequate core voltage for a processor 4 connected thereto, a sequencing controller 27, a so-called PCH module 28 (platform controller hub) which constitutes an essential component of the chipset, and a system management module 29 for remote maintenance and monitoring of the computer system 20. The PCIe plug connectors 25 are directly connected to a first plug contact 31 of the plug connector 23 via a first conductor track 30. By means of this plug contact 31, the standby voltage (3.3V Stdby) of the first voltage transformer 1a is provided to the first voltage transformer 1a of the power supply 21. The sequencing controller 27, the PCH module 28, and the system management module 29 are directly connected to a corresponding second plug contact 33 via a second conductor track 32 by means of which the standby voltage (3.3V stby_Safe) of the second voltage transformer 1b of the power supply 21 is provided. The voltage regulator 3 of the processor 4 is connected to a disruption device 8 via a third conductor track 34. By means of the disruption device 8 an indirect electrical connection to the first conductor track 30 and thus to the 3.3V standby voltage of the first voltage transformer 1a may be established.
As described above referring to
In normal operating mode, the sequencing controller 27 activates and deactivates the various system components of the printed circuit board 22, respectively, in response to predetermined control signals and predetermined time schedules. In addition, an internal monitoring device 16 of the sequencing controller 27 monitors the provision of various voltages by the power supply 21, and the voltage level of the conductor tracks 30 and 34, respectively. In case a deviation of an expected desired range occurs, the monitoring device 16 signals this to the sequencing controller 27, the PCH module 28, the system management module 29 and/or the power supply controller 24.
As shown in
By the disclosed concept of providing a standby voltage in a computer system, a group of system components may be supplied with the standby voltage independently of a second group of system components. This way, it is e.g. possible to separate a potentially dangerous first supply path from a not or less potentially dangerous supply path, which is especially vital for operation of the computer system. Thus in case of a failure, critical components are able to continue working and forward possible error messages to a monitoring component which is independent from the computer system. Further, they are able to shut down the computer system in a controlled way to prevent any further damage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102019101198.1 | Jan 2019 | DE | national |