Highpoint RocketRAID 2220 PCI-X SATA-II Controller
PCI-X doomed?
Before we get into the controller card itself, we should explain why PCI-X is soon to go the same way PCI is heading.
The evolution of PCI-X is simply the tweaking of the PCI bus standard to suit the server environment. When servers started to really chew up performance bandwidth, it was clear that PCI was unable to cope with the increasing demand for a high speed connection. PCI-X originated back with the Pentium Pro series CPU and the I440FX chipset, the starting blocks for the 440BX.
PCI-X slots are double the size of a standard PCI slot, and are still a shared bus amongst all the PCI-X slots, which means it's still parallel. PCI Express has now shown up on the market, and a PCI-E x4 slot is able to deliver 2GB/s, 1GB/s in each direction and its nature is serial, so each PCI-E x4 slot gets its own 2GB/s bandwidth to the controller chip. PCI-E x4 slots are also smaller than a standard PCI slot, making them ideal for low profile and small footprint servers.
To this end we can see the end of the PCI-X on the server market coming within the next 2-3 years. Currently server boards are now placing PCI-X and PCI-E x4 slots on the same boards. The main reason for PCI-X is that there are still many PCI-X Dual Gigabit NIC's on the market. SCSI controllers and even SATA controllers are still on this standard; however, soon PCI-E will be the dominant standard, leaving PCI and all of its descendants dead and buried.






