Controller (computing)


In computing and especially in computer hardware, a controller is a chip, an expansion card, or a stand-alone device that interfaces with a more peripheral device. This may be a link between two parts of a computer or a controller on an external device that manages the operation of that device.
The term is sometimes used in the opposite sense to refer to a device by which the user controls the operation of the computer, as in game controller.
In desktop computers the controller may be a plug-in board, a single integrated circuit on the motherboard, or an external device. In mainframes the controller is usually either a separate device attached to a channel or integrated into the peripheral.

Host and peripheral controllers

Controllers can be present on both sides of a computer bus. The controller on the host side is called a host controller or a host bus adapter. The controller on the peripheral side is called a peripheral controller; examples are disk controllers and flash memory controllers, which in modern systems are usually integrated into the drive.
This classification does not apply to network controllers, since systems participate as peers and neither system is clearly more central/peripheral.

Controller boards

Early desktop computers such as the IMSAI 8080 used expansion boards for all controllers, each handling a specific type of device. Examples of expansion board controllers are:
As chip densities improved controllers were implemented as single chips and often located on the motherboard. Examples are:
Further integration enabled development of Super I/O chips — single chips that could control a variety of devices such as floppy disks, parallel ports, serial ports, keyboard, and mouse.

External controllers

In IBM terminology a controller is "a device that decodes the command and effects the operation of the device."
In most mainframe systems a device-independent channel usually attaches to the CPU and to a controller or control unit which implements device-dependent logic for attaching specific devices. The functions performed by the control unit are similar to the functions performed by a device driver program on smaller systems. Some devices have integrated control units, which are logically discrete but are included with the device rather than requiring a separate box. Often a control unit can attach to multiple channels connected to a single or multiple systems. Some mainframe control units are: