Abstract:
The invention is a modular bus bridge that comprises an I/O controller board, an optional display, and various connectors. The connectors allow a choice of backplane mounting or cable connections. The I/O controller board interconnects bus interfaces and controls the display. The I/O controller board is connected to the display by releasable connectors, so the display may be optionally added or removed. The display allows an end-user to scroll through a menu presented on the display and select from the menu. The I/O controller board is coupled to a backplane connector for backplane mounting. A cable interface can be releasably connected to the backplane connector if cable connections are desired instead of backplane mounting.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Field of the Invention 
     The invention is related to the field of computer systems, and in particular, to a modular bus bridge that can be readily converted from one version to another. 
     2. Statement of the Problem 
     Computer system block diagrams typically show a central processor unit (CPU) and an Input/Output (I/O) subsystem which includes peripheral devices such as disk drives, tape drives, and printers. For high-performance data transfers, I/O subsystem controllers physically interface to the CPU through one of several different internal bus architectures. The I/O controller normally plugs into the CPU bus and then cables to the actual peripheral devices through yet another bus called the peripheral bus. Popular peripheral bus interfaces include the Small Computer System Interface (SCSI) and Fiber Channel (FC). SCSI and FC protocols are specified by ANSI standards X3T9.2 and X3T9.3, respectively. 
     Conceptually, the SCSI I/O controller serves as a “bridge” between the CPU bus and the peripherals&#39; SCSI bus in that it does wire transport layer conversions from the CPU bus to SCSI and also takes care of any software protocol translations and data buffering. The SCSI controller can also further fan out to multiple peripheral busses since the data bandwidth capabilities of the CPU bus significantly exceed that of the peripheral buses. The peripheral SCSI bus connects directly to the peripheral device (for example, a disk drive) within the CPU cabinet or it can be cabled remotely to another cabinet that contains the peripheral devices. When this remote bus interface leaves the CPU cabinet, it is then called the Host channel. Within the remote external cabinet a comparable bridge can be used to convert the host channel to fan out to additional peripheral busses, called Device channels. Thus, a bridge can be a one-to-many control device, for example, one SCSI Host channel to two SCSI Device channels, referred to as a “1×2 bridge”. 
     Within the external cabinet the bridge can be designed as a single board (Motherboard) that plugs into a local backplane. All interfaces into the bridge including the Host and Device channels, and other supporting buses for management interfaces, for example RS-232, have to be accommodated in the design of the backplane. The backplane also needs to accommodate an interface to any visual displays through yet another interface. Design of the back plane and associated cabinetry are problematic and typically delay implementation of new bridges. 
     An alternative packaging scheme is to design the bridge in such a way that in addition to plugging directly to a backplane, it can also occupy an existing peripheral device slot (for example, 5.25 inch disk drive), in which case the Host and Device channels, and the management interfaces are cabled directly to the bridge. A simple I/O patch panel and display panel can also be designed that attach directly to the bridge. 
     Since current bridge products offer flexible host interfaces, the I/O patch panel could be designed to accommodate several different host channel technologies (for example, SCSI or FC) and the user selects the configuration merely by changing the cabling scheme; there is no need to change backplanes. This makes the customization and conversion effort between interfaces and bridge versions virtually transparent, and benefits the end-user in reduced implementation schedules, field upgrades, and re-installations. Resellers would benefit because they could easily modify the external bridge to fit end-users varied demands. Similarly, the display panel could be removed and easily replaced with a blank enclosure panel or just left off. 
     SUMMARY OF THE SOLUTION 
     The invention solves the above problems with a modular bus bridge that can be bought or sold in multiple versions and readily converted from one configuration to another. The modular bus bridge allows end-users to easily upgrade or re-install the bus bridge, and allows the resellers to tailor in the bus bridge to meet the specific end-user demand for each particular version. 
     The bus bridge includes an I/O bridge controller board which has all the logic for changing the physical bus interfaces between the Host channel and the Device channels and supports the Display interface. The controller provides a monolithic connector which presents all the signals for all external buses; including channels, display logic, and other physical interfaces. This connector attaches directly to the backplane in one configuration. A second connector is used for physically attaching to a display panel. Thus, the controller is designed to plug directly to a backplane or to be configured with a display panel or blank panel, and an I/O patch panel. 
     The modular bus bridge system then includes the I/O controller, Display panel, blank panel, and associated cables to allow implementation in several different configurations. For non-backplane implementations, it also would be designed into a sheet metal enclosure with guide rails allowed to be inserted into a standard 5.25 inch slot or other device form factor slot. The users then have the complete flexibility to determine how to configure a system to meet their needs. 
     The invention is a modular bus bridge that comprises an I/O controller board, an optional display, and various connectors. The connectors allow a choice of backplane mounting or cable connections. The I/O controller board interconnects bus interfaces and controls the display. The I/O controller board is connected to the display by releasable connectors, so the display may be optionally added or removed. The display allows an end-user to scroll through a menu presented on the display and select operations from the menu. The I/O controller board is coupled to a backplane connector for backplane mounting. A cable interface can be releasably connected to the backplane connector if cable connections are desired instead of backplane mounting. 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a block diagram of modular bus bridge components in an example of the invention. 
     FIG. 2 is a block diagram of modular bus bridge components in an example of the invention. 
     FIG. 3 illustrates the front of the display for the modular bus bridge in an example of the invention. 
     FIG. 4 is a block diagram of the cable connector on the cable interface of the modular bus bridge in an example of the invention. 
     FIG. 5 is a block diagram of modular bus bridge configuration in an example of the invention. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     Modular Bus Bridge Components—FIGS. 1-4 
     FIG. 1 depicts components of the modular bus bridge of the present invention. An I/O controller board  100  is coupled to a display connector  102 . The I/O controller board  100  is also coupled to a backplane connector  106 . 
     The I/O controller board  100  contains all of the logic to interconnect the bus interface for the Host channel and the bus interfaces for the Device channels. The Host channel and the Device channels are typically SCSI or Fiber Channel. The I/O controller board  100  also provides display control signals, handles software protocol translations, and performs data buffering. I/O controller boards are well-known in the art with examples being models AIC-7132 and AEC-43128 by Adaptec Inc. of Milpitas Calif. 
     The display connector  102  is a conventional male or female pin and socket type connector. In one version of the invention, the display connector  102  is a male connector with 26 pins. The pins support power, ground, 8-bit data bus, 3-bit control bus, 6-bit LCD control, and menu scroll, and menu selection signals. 
     The backplane connector  106  is a conventional component that is comprised of a female connector with several pins that fit into the male connections of a backplane. The backplane connector  106  includes all of the external connections for the Host channel, Device channels, power, ground, and configuration. 
     FIG. 2 depicts additional components for the modular bus bridge. A display  210  is coupled to display connector  212  by a cable  214 . The display  210  provides the user with status information and control menus. In one version of the invention, the display  210  includes a Liquid Crystal Display (LCD), indicator lights, and control buttons that allow the user to scroll through a menu and make menu selections. The display  210  also includes circuitry to forward user inputs to the I/O controller board  100  and to drive the LCD based on display control signals from the I/O controller board  100 . In alternative embodiments of the invention, the display  210  can be replaced by a blank front plate if the display is not desired. 
     The display connector  212  is a conventional male or female pin and socket type connector operational for releasable connection to the display connector  102 . The display connectors  102  and  212  should be coordinated so one is a male connector and the other is a female connector. In one version of the invention, the display connector  212  is a female connector that accepts 26 pins. The pins support power, ground, 8-bit data bus, 3-bit control bus, 6-bit LCD control, menu scroll, and menu selection signals. The cable  214  is conventional. 
     A cable interface  216  is also included that is comprised of a backplane connector  218  and cable connector  220 . The cable interface  216  allows cable connections to be used when connecting the modular bus bridge to other devices instead of mounting the modular bus bridge onto a backplane. The connections of the backplane connector  106  are mapped through the backplane connector  218  and the cable connector  220  to cables. These connections and cables are typically for a Host channel, Device channels, power, ground, and configuration. 
     The backplane connector  218  is comprised of a female connector that accepts the pins of the backplane connector  106  to provide for a convenient, secure, and releasable connection. The cable connector  220  is comprised of conventional sockets that accept the pins in the plug at the end of a cable. For example, the cable connector  220  could include SCSI or Fiber Channel sockets for accepting SCSI or Fiber Channel cables. In one version of the invention, the cable connector  220  includes connectors for multiple SCSI cables, battery and power cables, failover jumpers, and a configuration cable. 
     FIG. 3 depicts the front view of the display  210  in one example of the invention although other configurations would not depart from the scope of the invention. The display  210  includes an LCD  322  and control buttons  324  allowing the user to scroll through menu on the LCD  322  and make menu selections. Bus bridge displays and menus are known in the art. 
     FIG. 4 depicts the back view of the cable connections  220  in one example of the invention although other configurations would not depart from the scope of the invention. The cable connections  220  include SCSI sockets  430 ,  432 , and  434 . SCSI sockets  430  and  432  would typically be used for the Device channels and the socket  434  would be used for the Host channel. Fiber channel could be used instead of SCSI for these connections if desired. Battery connector  436  and power connector  438  are provided to support the operation of the modular bus bridge, including the display  210 . A configuration connector  410  is provided to allow the user to configure and control the bus bridge. The configuration connection is typically a conventional serial bus. These connectors and their function are known in the art. 
     Modular Bus Bridge Configuration—FIG. 5 
     FIG. 5 depicts the above described components interconnected to form a version of the modular bus bridge. The I/O controller board  100  is connected to the display  210  by interconnecting the display connector  102  and the display connector  212 . The I/O controller board  100  is able to display status information to the end-user on the display  210 . The I/O controller board  100  also receives menu selections input through display  210  by the end-user. 
     The I/O controller board  100  is connected to the cable interface  216  by plugging the backplane connector  218  into the backplane connector  106 . Cables  540 ,  542 , and  544  are connected to the cable connector  220 . The cables  540  and  542  are remotely connected over the Device channels to peripheral devices, such as disk drives, tape drives, and printers. Cable  544  is remotely connected over the Host channel to the CPU. 
     An enclosure  530  is also included. The enclosure is typically comprised of sheet metal with guide rails that allow it to be inserted into a standard peripheral device slot, such as a 5.25 inch slot. The enclosure  530  houses the I/O control board  100 , display connector  102 , cable  104 , and backplane connector  106 . The display  210  is configured to readily connect to the enclosure  530  which then also houses the display connector  212  and the cable  214 . If desired, the enclosure  530  can include a battery and a fan. 
     The connections between: 1) display connectors  102  and  212 ; 2) backplane connectors  218  and  220 ; and 3) cable connector  220  and cables  540 ,  542 , and  544  are “releasable” connections. The term “releasable” means that the connections can be plugged together and unplugged, such as the plug-type connections to a conventional computer that are known in the art. The releasable connections allow for the modular design. 
     The modular design of the invention should be appreciated from FIG.  5 . In some configurations of the invention, the I/O controller board  100  can be simply plugged into a backplane using the backplane connector  106 . In this configuration, the cable interface  216  is not needed since all connections are made through the backplane. If desired, the display  210  can be attached in this configuration. 
     In other configurations of the invention, cabling can be used instead of backplane mounting. The cable interface  216  is connected to the backplane connector  106 . The modular bus bridge is now ready to accept cable connections  540 ,  542 , and  544  to the host CPU and peripheral devices. This installation typically includes the metal enclosure  530  that fits into a standard peripheral device slot. If desired, the display  210  can be attached to the metal enclosure  530 . Alternatively, a blank front plate can be used on the enclosure  530  instead of the display  210 . 
     The modular bus bridge can be bought or sold in multiple versions and readily converted from one configuration to another. The modular bus bridge allows end-users to easily upgrade or re-install the bus bridge, and allows the resellers to tailor in the bus bridge to meet the specific end-user demand for each particular version. 
     Those skilled in the art will appreciate variations of the above-described embodiments that fall within the scope of the invention. As a result, the invention is not limited to the specific examples and illustrations discussed above, but only by the following claims and their equivalents.