Short for
Accelerated Graphics Port, an interface specification developed by
Intel Corporation. AGP is based on
PCI, but is designed especially for the
throughput demands of
3-D graphics. Rather than using the PCI bus for graphics data, AGP introduces a dedicated point-to-point
channel so that the graphics
controller can directly access
main memory. The AGP channel is 32 bits wide and runs at 66
MHz. This translates into a total
bandwidth of 266
MBps, as opposed to the PCI bandwidth of 133 MBps. AGP also supports two optional faster modes, with throughputs of 533 MBps and 1.07 GBps. In addition, AGP allows 3-D textures to be stored in main memory rather than video memory.
AGP has a couple important system requirements:
AGP-enabled computers and graphics accelerators hit the market in August, 1997. However, there are several different levels of AGP compliance. The following features are considered optional:
Also see
Understanding Video and Graphics Adapters in Webopedia's "Did
You Know...?" section.