AMD
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) is an American multinational corporation and fabless semiconductor company that designs, develops and sells computer processors and related technologies for business and consumer markets.
AMD's main products include microprocessors, motherboard chipsets, embedded processors, and graphics processors for servers, workstations, personal computers, and embedded system applications. The company has also expanded into new markets, such as the data center, gaming, and high-performance computing markets. AMD's processors are used in a wide range of computing devices, including personal computers, servers, laptops, and gaming consoles.
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Maybe I should rephrase my question.
Are PCIe 5.0 or backwards compatible 6.0+ devices (GPUs), that say x16 (16 lanes) in their product specification, required by the PCIe standard to also support only 8 lanes? I.e. can the device transceiver decide to not connect if not all lanes are available at the protocol level? I'm not referring to slot size here.
The thing is that there are motherboards that have 2 PCIe 5.0 16x slots that are connected to the CPU (hopefully not false marketing). But the slots are downgraded to 8x if you connect two devices, since a AM5 CPUs only have 24 lanes.
I probably need to read the PCIe 5.0 standard document if I want to be sure.
Yes they do. The number of lanes is just a reference for the bandwidth. If your GPU says it should use PCIe 5.0 x16 (which is a huge amount of bandwidth) but you use it in a slot that will only activate 8 lanes, it can only use the bandwidth of 8 lanes. This may cause bottlenecks if you have a beast of a GPU.
The device will still work, it might just not reach its full potential. That said, it will only ever max out on bandwidth if you really let it stretch its legs.
You can pretty much calculate if you'll ever need PCIe 5.0 x16, provided you know the output your video uses.
Ah, I think I have a better understanding of the PCIe hardware protocol now. Feel a bit more confident regard a 2 x8 setup. Thanks.
Just for the record: my understanding is that the HW protocol performs a handshake which settles the number of lanes that will be used when establishing a link. And the PCIe standard is always backwards compatible, so things should work just fine even if I buy something that says PCIe 6.0 later. Or at least the lower layers of the protocol should be compatible. And as long bandwidth isn't an issue.
The version is no issue for compatibility, correct. The only effect it may have is bottlenecking. PCIe is a very 'dumb' protocol: it doesn't affect any kind of features because the feature set is all handled in either the chipset or the expansion card. The only thing that ever gets an upgrade in PCIe standards is the bandwidth and all kinds of stability improvements that you really won't notice unless you are a power user.
If you want, you can put Nvidia's new 5090 in a PCIe 2.0 x16 slot and it'll function properly. You can also put a PCIe 4.0 SSD in a PCIe 6.0 slot and it'll work fine. Really the only thing you have to worry about is whether the lanes provide enough bandwidth for the expansion card to use all of its power.