You tell me how many slots you have and I can tell you which ones they are...
The answer is at the top of my post.
You tell me how many slots you have and I can tell you which ones they are...
So you have 6 "slots" in which you can plug a card into.The answer is at the top of my post.
As mentioned before hardware isn't my thing, I figured some other stuff would probably be connected to the PCI slots through some other means like lanes or something else. Since what I read from that PCI wikipedia article it seems a lot of components are connected to each someway through a bus or some sort of bridge or other way of connecting.I guess technically this thread is about PCI "slots" so that is helpful. But everything on the PCI bus isn't necessarily in a slot.
Most 32-bit PCI cards will function properly in 64-bit PCI-X slots, but the bus clock rate will be limited to the clock frequency of the slowest card, an inherent limitation of PCI's shared bus topology. For example, when a PCI 2.3, 66-MHz peripheral is installed into a PCI-X bus capable of 133 MHz, the entire bus backplane will be limited to 66 MHz. To get around this limitation, many motherboards have two or more PCI/PCI-X buses, with one bus intended for use with high-speed PCI-X peripherals, and the other bus intended for general-purpose peripherals.
I have two PCI slots i verrified not working with a working GPU. They are white.Humour me.. what colour is the slot thats not working?
I have 2 PCIE slots...one is X16 and one is X4. The X16 is black and the X4 is white. I also have a PCIX which is unverified either way because I don't know if the card is god or not (its slot is little over an inch wide and is black). The lspci was ran with a working GPU in the X16. A unknown if its working card in the pcix slot, a verified working tv tuner card in PCI1 slot. The PCI X4 card is empty as is the PCI2 and PCI3 slots were empty.@dos2unix
you have hit on something that was going through my head, I think he has 2 PCIe and 1 PCI [legacy standard] whilst you can put a peripheral designed for PCI into PCIe, and it will work, it won't work the other way around, PCI were single channel and ran at a speed of around 264mbs, PCIe have one to 16 channels each of 1gbs so can run more than 16 times faster
My original confusion was due to my confusion as to how a GPU card in the PCIX4 slot could take out the slot above it (PCIX), skip a slot PCI1, then take out PCI2 and PCI3. I have made multple mistakes in this adventure verbalizing what I needed to know, but have just recently realized I also messed up NOT trying different cards in the PCIx slot to see if it other cards would work.....damn it.As mentioned before hardware isn't my thing, I figured some other stuff would probably be connected to the PCI slots through some other means like lanes or something else. Since what I read from that PCI wikipedia article it seems a lot of components are connected to each someway through a bus or some sort of bridge or other way of connecting.
All my PCI cards cards are from the same year give or take a few years.You should have a short black PCIe4 a black PCIe 16, near to that you should have a legacy PCI white with a release tail, and one that looks like a PCI slot near the edge of the motherboard without a release tail... this is not a PCI slot. If you have been following what we have been saying, your modern cards will not work in the white PCI slot it is not fast enough
legacy slots are best for cards older than 20 yrs modern cards will need at least pcie4All my PCI cards cards are from the same year give or take a few years.
Damn near impossible unless you have it on a test bench, even then I was never more than passably successfulmotherboard level stuff is very difficult to test for.
THANK YOU!!!Having dealt with slots data in inxi (inxi --slots) and of course pci bus data, the sad fact is that as far as I know, not only is there no way to detect broken or dead hardware, beyond it not showing up, but, slightly worse, dmidecode data is not always complete for pci slots. I have examples where working pci slots do not show up at all in dmidecode/inxi --slots, something I discovered while testing the --slots feature when it was introduced.
In general it's almost impossible for a running operating system to detect hardware damage, with one exception, you can often detect damaged drives using either file system checks or smartctl. But otherwise, beyond searching for clear fault messages in system logs, you can't generally deduce much about failing hardware, outside of an item, say, a usb port, or audio port, suddenly simply being gone from lspci output, that almost always means it's dead. But those are not empty slots, those are occupied slots.
In more extreme failure events, like a failed controller card, which is half running, but mostly dead, you may detect it by system hangs, the Linux kernel gets very sad and grouchy when something that is telling it is there, like a usb controller card, actually is incapable of standard request/response type actions.
There used to be some system utility disks that included things like motherboard testers, but I never had any luck with those working, ram testers work, but in general, motherboard level stuff is very difficult to test for.