Aspeed Ast2500 Datasheet New -
If you have an AST2500 on your bench and it isn't working, the "new" datasheet likely has the answer.
Verdict for new designs: The AST2500 is superior for legacy LPC (Low Pin Count) interfaces and extreme temperature ranges (-40°C to +105°C vs AST2600's -20°C to +95°C). aspeed ast2500 datasheet new
| Feature | AST2500 (New Datasheet) | AST2600 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | ARM9 (32-bit) | ARM11 (64-bit) | | Max DDR Speed | 1600 MT/s | 3200 MT/s | | PCIe Lanes | 1x Gen2 | 2x Gen3 | | MCTP Support | Software-based | Hardware offload | | Die Temperature | Max 105°C | Max 95°C (Tighter limit) | If you have an AST2500 on your bench
The "new" AST2500 datasheet is interesting because it frequently references the AST2600. Here is how the chips differ according to the latest comparative tables: Here is how the chips differ according to
A major headache in older designs was bus contention on I2C channels 0 and 1. The new datasheet introduces a "bus park" mode register (0xE000_01C4) that prevents the BMC from locking the bus during host reset cycles.
In the world of data centers and high-performance computing, the component that often goes unnoticed is the unsung hero of remote management: the . For over a decade, ASPEED Technology has dominated this space. While the AST2600 represents the cutting edge, the ASPEED AST2500 remains the gold standard for a vast majority of deployed servers, high-end network switches, and industrial embedded systems.