• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

PCI-SIG Releases PCI-Express Gen 7 Draft Specification 0.7—128 Gbps per Lane

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,417 (7.51/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
PCI-SIG, the consortium that governs the PCI Express I/O interconnect, released draft specification version 0.7 for the upcoming PCI-Express 7.0 standard (or PCIe Gen 7). An early-2025 release of this draft could indicate that PCIe Gen 7 gets finalized into specification version 1.0 by the end of 2025, from where implementers can pick it up to design their devices around. We are now at 32 Gbps per lane per direction with PCIe Gen 5, and PCIe Gen 6 doubles it to 64 Gbps, which would mean PCIe Gen 7 will double that further to 128 Gbps per lane per direction. PCI-Express 7.0 x1 would offer the same bandwidth as PCI-Express 3.0 x16. We could realistically expect the first computing platforms implementing PCIe Gen 7 to come out around 2027 or even 2028. PCIe forms the physical layer for a number of derivative standards, such as CXL, Thunderbolt, USB (USB 3.0 onwards), NVMe, SDexpress, CFexpress, and DMI.



Many Thanks to Tumble George for the tip

View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
Joined
Jan 24, 2011
Messages
290 (0.06/day)
Processor AMD Ryzen 5900X
Motherboard MSI MAG X570 Tomahawk
Cooling Dual custom loops
Memory 4x8GB G.SKILL Trident Z Neo 3200C14 B-Die
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 6800XT Reference
Storage ADATA SX8200 480GB, Inland Premium 2TB, various HDDs
Display(s) MSI MAG341CQ
Case Meshify 2 XL
Audio Device(s) Schiit Fulla 3
Power Supply Super Flower Leadex Titanium SE 1000W
Mouse Glorious Model D
Keyboard Drop CTRL, lubed and filmed Halo Trues
I'm just here for the DFI mobo.
 
Joined
Dec 12, 2016
Messages
2,082 (0.70/day)
PCIe 1.0 2.5 GT/s
PCIe 2.0 5.0 GT/s
PCIe 3.0 8.0 GT/s
PCIe 4.0 16 GT/s
PCIe 5.0 32 GT/s
PCIe 6.0 64 GT/s
.
.
and now...
PCIe 7.0 128 GT/s...I did not see that coming. :)

What would we do without these standards organizations.
 
Joined
Mar 13, 2012
Messages
280 (0.06/day)
PCIe 1.0 2.5 GT/s
PCIe 2.0 5.0 GT/s
PCIe 3.0 8.0 GT/s
PCIe 4.0 16 GT/s
PCIe 5.0 32 GT/s
PCIe 6.0 64 GT/s
.
.
and now...
PCIe 7.0 128 GT/s...I did not see that coming. :)

What would we do without these standards organizations.
Concur, predictable and sad.

We can never get enuf bandwidth, specially now with AI, so why not push the limits of PCIe 7.0 to192 GT/s or even 256GT/s.

It takes several years to evolve just one step forward in a standard like PCIe, better go for the maximum performance each time.

Why double if you can triple or even quadruple each evolution of a standard, if it can be done they should do it.

These incremental upgrades of different standards set in a predefined pattern is a decease in many industries holding back progress and delaying human evolution by years or even decades.

Capitalism at it's best, hold back progress as much as possible to make as much money as long as possible with small and predictable upgrades, NVIDIA done it for years.

There is a reason NVIDIA accelerated it's development of new generations from every two years to every year.

Competition from ASIC is pressuring NVIDIA to expand with 1000 new engineers to push development to the maximum immediately or they will become obsolete in the AI arena in the near future.

ASICs vs. GPUs: Is Nvidia's AI Dominance at Risk?
 
Last edited:
Joined
Dec 12, 2016
Messages
2,082 (0.70/day)
Concur, predictable and sad.

We can never get enuf bandwidth, specially now with AI, so why not push the limits of PCIe 7.0 to192 GT/s or even 256GT/s.

It takes several years to evolve just one step forward in a standard like PCIe, better go for the maximum performance each time.

Why double if you can triple or even quadruple each evolution of a standard, if it can be done they should do it.

These incremental upgrades of different standards set in a predefined pattern is a decease in many industries holding back progress and delaying evolution by years or even decades.
Seeing as the trend started at 2.5 then 5 GT/s and then slowed to 8 GT/s, I don't see that happening. If the original trend had held, at least 160 GT/s would be the value under 7.0.
 
Joined
Jun 22, 2012
Messages
304 (0.07/day)
Processor Intel i7-12700K
Motherboard MSI PRO Z690-A WIFI
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S
Memory Corsair Vengeance 4x16 GB (64GB) DDR4-3600 C18
Video Card(s) MSI GeForce RTX 3090 GAMING X TRIO 24G
Storage Samsung 980 Pro 1TB, SK hynix Platinum P41 2TB
Case Fractal Define C
Power Supply Corsair RM850x
Mouse Logitech G203
Software openSUSE Tumbleweed
It'll be amazing when GPU-RAM-CPU speeds won't be so constrained anymore by PCIe limitations. With upcoming DDR6 memory, under multi-channel configurations, bandwidth should get fast enough that VRAM-less GPUs may even be possible.
 
Joined
Oct 24, 2022
Messages
254 (0.31/day)
PCIe 1.0 2.5 GT/s
PCIe 2.0 5.0 GT/s
PCIe 3.0 8.0 GT/s
PCIe 4.0 16 GT/s
PCIe 5.0 32 GT/s
PCIe 6.0 64 GT/s
.
.
and now...
PCIe 7.0 128 GT/s...I did not see that coming. :)

What would we do without these standards organizations.



PCIe Gen 5

Can the TPU staff please do tests with RTX 5000 cards to we see the impact of using a VGA PCIe 5.0 on previous generation PCIe slots?
 
Joined
Jul 29, 2022
Messages
557 (0.62/day)
Hopefully by then, videocards with m.2 slots via bifurcation will be the standard, can't see how a consumer card would need 128 x 16 GT/s, half or even quarter of that will be enough, and we can use the rest for more NVME storage. With m.2 slots on the videocard, it will also be very space efficient for small form factor builds.

PCIe 1.0 2.5 GT/s
PCIe 2.0 5.0 GT/s
PCIe 3.0 8.0 GT/s
PCIe 4.0 16 GT/s
PCIe 5.0 32 GT/s
PCIe 6.0 64 GT/s
.
.
and now...
PCIe 7.0 128 GT/s...I did not see that coming. :)

What would we do without these standards organizations.
The interesting part isn't the doubling of speed, it's what technology and data encoding they use to reach that speed on the same physical connector.
 
Joined
Jun 1, 2021
Messages
311 (0.23/day)
Seeing as the trend started at 2.5 then 5 GT/s and then slowed to 8 GT/s, I don't see that happening. If the original trend had held, at least 160 GT/s would be the value under 7.0.
From PCIe 2 to 3 there was a change in the encoding, that mostly made up for the 5 GT/s to 8 GT/s, so it still was roughly a doubling.
PCIe Gen 2 and earlier use 8b/10b, so it means that 5 GT/s is actually 4 GT/s after you remove the encoding overhead.
 
Joined
Oct 24, 2022
Messages
254 (0.31/day)
@Nhonho

A summary table on Wikipedia is somewhat different:


Yes, for commercial purposes, it was published that PCIe 3.0 has a throughput of 1 GB/s per lane, but in fact, the real values are those in this Wikipedia table.

data encoding they use to reach that speed on the same physical connector.

It was necessary to achieve the speed of PCIe 3.0 and later. The encoding of PCIe 1 and 2 was 10b/8b, which generated 20% overhead. And in computing, it is curious that, the larger the size of the data packet, the lower the % of overhead data required (only 1.5% of overhead data in the case of PCIe 3, 4 and 5).

A summary table on Wikipedia is somewhat different:

If we are being really strict, even the Wikipedia table is wrong, because each PCIe lane transfers data in both directions independently. So, for example, a PCIe 1.0 lane actually transfers 500 MB/s (250 MB/s in each direction).
 
Last edited:
Joined
Oct 18, 2013
Messages
6,336 (1.54/day)
Location
So close that even your shadow can't see me !
System Name The Little One
Processor i5-11320H @4.4GHZ
Motherboard AZW SEI
Cooling Fan w/heat pipes + side & rear vents
Memory 64GB Crucial DDR4-3200 (2x 32GB)
Video Card(s) Iris XE
Storage WD Black SN850X 8TB m.2, Seagate 2TB SSD + SN850 8TB x2 in an external enclosure
Display(s) 2x Samsung 43" & 2x 32"
Case Practically identical to a mac mini, just purrtier in slate blue, & with 3x usb ports on the front !
Audio Device(s) Yamaha ATS-1060 Bluetooth Soundbar & Subwoofer
Power Supply 65w brick
Mouse Logitech MX Master 2
Keyboard Logitech G613 mechanical wireless
VR HMD Whahdatiz ???
Software Windows 10 pro, with all the unnecessary background shitzu turned OFF !
Benchmark Scores PDQ
Capitalism at it's best, hold back progress as much as possible to make as much money as long as possible with small and predictable upgrades, NVIDIA done it for years.
^^THIS^^

but you should add Intel and almost every other tech company onto the list....as they ALL are or have been guilty of this at one time or another !
 

NoLoihi

New Member
Joined
Sep 15, 2024
Messages
25 (0.20/day)
Hey, guys, have you considered that it’s technically hard to increase speeds? Doublings are huge increases. You’re sure it’s moving on its own and companies are just there to hold the brakes!? :rolleyes:
*(Exponential, by the way. Same as we’ve got for CPU speeds, just at a vastly higher rate from one generation to the next.**)
**(Homework task: Find out where we stand, cumulating those gains, with CPU and GPU vs. PCIe speed, also in terms of storage. I’d love to see that spread out.)


Maybe, with more capital investment, movement could have been sped up even more … … … May you please remind me what the general opinion on faster PCIe standards was, please? Did you note any … issue with them? IDK, in terms of—well, not color fidelity, of course—maybe, rather: Temperatures, power draw, design constraints!? Did it get harder to design PCIe risers, for one? What do we know about trace lengths? Is there an increase in capital expenditure for every unit of product sold using those higher rates?

Yeah. :kookoo:
 
Last edited:
Top