Home > Chip + Interface IP Glossary > Port Dual-Mode
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Port Dual-Mode refers to the capability of a hardware interface port—commonly found in high-speed serial communication systems—to operate in two distinct protocol modes. This feature allows a single physical port to support multiple standards, such as PCI Express (PCIe) and Compute Express Link (CXL), or DisplayPort and HDMI, depending on system requirements. Dual-mode operation enhances flexibility, reduces hardware complexity, and supports dynamic configuration in multi-protocol environments.
Dual-mode ports are designed with shared physical layers (PHYs) and configurable protocol stacks. During initialization or based on system configuration, the port detects the connected device or receives firmware instructions to switch between supported modes. For example:
This is achieved through protocol-aware controllers and PHYs that support multiple encoding schemes, link training sequences, and electrical specifications.
Port Dual-Mode functionality is enabled by:
Rambus offers PCI Express Controller IP that support dual-mode operation for high-performance computing, AI/ML, and data center applications. These IP cores are designed for low latency, high bandwidth, and robust interoperability across multiple standards, enabling flexible system design and future scalability.
