component in Intel's
Nehalem microarchitecture. The QPI is an element of a system architecture that Intel calls the
QuickPath architecture that implements what Intel calls
QuickPath technology. In its simplest form on a single-processor motherboard, a single QPI is used to connect the processor to the IO Hub (e.g., to connect an
Intel Core i7 to an
X58). In more complex instances of the architecture, separate QPI link pairs connect one or more processors and one or more IO hubs or routing hubs in a network on the motherboard, allowing all of the components to access other components via the network. As with HyperTransport, the QuickPath Architecture assumes that the processors will have integrated
memory controllers, and enables a
non-uniform memory access (NUMA) architecture. Each QPI comprises two 20-lane point-to-point data links, one in each direction (
full duplex), with a separate clock pair in each direction, for a total of 42 signals. Each signal is a
differential pair, so the total number of pins is 84. The 20 data lanes are divided onto four "quadrants" of 5 lanes each. The basic unit of transfer is the 80-bit
flit, which has 8 bits for error detection, 8 bits for "link-layer header", and 64 bits for data. One 80-bit flit is transferred in two clock cycles (four 20-bit transfers, two per clock tick.) QPI bandwidths are advertised by computing the transfer of 64 bits (8 bytes) of data every two clock cycles in each direction. Although the initial implementations use single four-quadrant links, the QPI specification permits other implementations. Each quadrant can be used independently. On high-reliability servers, a QPI link can operate in a degraded mode. If one or more of the 20+1 signals fails, the interface will operate using 10+1 or even 5+1 remaining signals, even reassigning the clock to a data signal if the clock fails. In post-2009 single-socket chips starting with Lynnfield, Clarksfield, Clarkdale and Arrandale, the traditional
northbridge functions are integrated into these processors, which therefore communicate externally via the slower
DMI and PCI Express interfaces. Thus, there is no need to incur the expense of exposing the (former) front-side bus interface via the processor socket. Although the core–uncore QPI link is not present in desktop and mobile
Sandy Bridge processors (as it was on Clarkdale, for example), the internal ring interconnect between on-die cores is also based on the principles behind QPI, at least as far as
cache coherency is concerned. ==Frequency specifications==