If you’ve ever built a PC or spec’d a server, you know the lingo: PCIe x16, Gen 4, Gen 5, 32 GT/s. We throw these numbers around like football stats. But underneath every one of those marketing bullet points lies a dense, often intimidating document:
Compliance to the spec saves watts. The draft spec for PCIe 7.0 is already floating around. It promises 128 GT/s (512 GB/s on x16). But here is the catch: to hit that speed, the spec will likely require optical cables for any trace longer than a few inches. pcie spec
Decoding the PCIe Spec: More Than Just Lanes and Gigatransfers If you’ve ever built a PC or spec’d
If you jam a GPU into a slot upside down? No (don't do that). But if a motherboard designer routes traces in a weird order, the spec allows the two devices to say, "Hey, I know Lane 0 is supposed to go to Lane 0, but you sent it to Lane 3. I'll fix it in firmware." The draft spec for PCIe 7
This is what your OS sees. It handles memory addressing, interrupts (MSI-X), and data packet routing. If a driver crashes, you're looking at a Transaction Layer issue.