WO1996005671A1 - Bidirectional buffer - Google Patents

Bidirectional buffer Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1996005671A1
WO1996005671A1 PCT/EP1995/003178 EP9503178W WO9605671A1 WO 1996005671 A1 WO1996005671 A1 WO 1996005671A1 EP 9503178 W EP9503178 W EP 9503178W WO 9605671 A1 WO9605671 A1 WO 9605671A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
buffer
input
line
output
low
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/EP1995/003178
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Hans THÖRNBLAD
Original Assignee
Icl Systems Ab
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Icl Systems Ab filed Critical Icl Systems Ab
Priority to US08/777,000 priority Critical patent/US5859545A/en
Priority to DE69515315T priority patent/DE69515315T2/en
Priority to EP95929841A priority patent/EP0775399B1/en
Publication of WO1996005671A1 publication Critical patent/WO1996005671A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L25/00Baseband systems
    • H04L25/02Details ; arrangements for supplying electrical power along data transmission lines
    • H04L25/0264Arrangements for coupling to transmission lines
    • H04L25/028Arrangements specific to the transmitter end
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K19/00Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits
    • H03K19/0175Coupling arrangements; Interface arrangements
    • H03K19/01759Coupling arrangements; Interface arrangements with a bidirectional operation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K19/00Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits
    • H03K19/02Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits using specified components
    • H03K19/173Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits using specified components using elementary logic circuits as components
    • H03K19/1731Optimisation thereof
    • H03K19/1732Optimisation thereof by limitation or reduction of the pin/gate ratio
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L25/00Baseband systems
    • H04L25/02Details ; arrangements for supplying electrical power along data transmission lines
    • H04L25/0264Arrangements for coupling to transmission lines
    • H04L25/0292Arrangements specific to the receiver end
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L5/00Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
    • H04L5/14Two-way operation using the same type of signal, i.e. duplex
    • H04L5/16Half-duplex systems; Simplex/duplex switching; Transmission of break signals non-automatically inverting the direction of transmission

Definitions

  • This invention relates to bus line buffering and in particular to buffering for a two-way bus.
  • the device may not be able to sink enough current to force the bus lines low.
  • Such buffering is easy to implement if the device D has separate terminals for input and output, ie one terminal 2 for reading an open-collector bus line (external line 4) and a different terminal 3 for forcing the line low, as illustrated in Figure 1.
  • the symbol in buffer 6 denotes an open-collector output.
  • the output buffer 6 must be able to distinguish between two different causes for a low level on the device side, ie on the internal line:
  • the device D is pulling it low.
  • the device D is not pulling it low but the input buffer 5 is.
  • the present invention aims to provide a solution which does not suffer from the aforementioned disadvantages.
  • a buffer circuit for use between a bus line and an input/output terminal of a device capable of reading the status of the bus line and driving it low, the buffer circuit including a line which is connected in use to the terminal and being such that two logical levels of the same type which may be present on the line and have different sources are distinguishable from one another, characterised in that the buffer circuit includes an output buffer in the form of a comparator which compares any said logical level with a reference level and interprets it as arising from a first source if it is less than the reference level or as arising from a second source if it is greater than the reference level.
  • a method of buffering a connection between a bus line and a device capable of reading the status of the bus line and driving it low comprising the steps of:
  • a buffer circuit including an input buffer and an output buffer, in the form of a comparator, between the bus line and an input/output terminal of the device, the buffer circuit being connected by a line to the terminal;
  • determining whether a logical low level on the line is caused by the device or the input buffer pulling it low by comparing, at the output buffer comparator, any said logical low level on the line with a reference level and interpreting it as arising from the device if it is on one side of the reference level and as arising from the input buffer if it is on the other side of the reference level;
  • FIG. 1 illustrates an impractical buffer circuit
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a specific embodiment of the present invention
  • Figure 4 illustrates a more general arrangement of the embodiment of Figure 3.
  • the solution provided by the present invention does not involve the disadvantages associated with the prior art circuits and is suitable for use when there is a reasonable voltage margin between the low output level of the device D and the highest input voltage that the device D is guaranteed to interpret as low level.
  • the solution distinguishes between cases A and B by comparing the two different low-level voltages on the internal line 7 with a reference.
  • the line 7 will be at a high level when neither the device nor the input buffer is pulling it low.
  • U is defined as the low-level output voltage of the device D and ⁇ is defined as the highest input voltage that the device D is guaranteed to recognise as low level.
  • U denote a voltage which is between U and U and is preferably closer to U than U .
  • the input buffer is, according to the invention, designed so that its low-level output pulls down the internal line 7 to level U. when the device D is not pulling the internal line 7 low, and the output buffer is designed so that it interprets U as low (Case A) and U. as high (Case B) .
  • the output buffer pulls the external (bus line) 4 low.
  • the input and output buffers may be implemented by a low cost comparator, such as an LM339 comparator, with or without an extra transistor, depending upon requirements, as will be apparent from the following.
  • a low cost comparator such as an LM339 comparator
  • the first example illustrated in Figure 3 relates to an arrangement for use, for example, in a video monitor
  • the external line (bus) is an ACCESS bus or I C bus.
  • the device D consists of a local bus to which one or more integrated circuits with I 2C ports are connected. It is assumed that all of the reasons 1,
  • the I 2C bus consists of two bus lines (a clock line and a data line) but Figure 3 applies equally to either of them.
  • the LM339 which is a low cost comparator integrated circuit with open-collector outputs, contains four comparators, two of which Cl and C2 are employed in the Figure 3 embodiment. Thus only one LM339 is needed for the overall bus.
  • the LM339 requires a +5V power supply and this may be supplied from a host PC associated with the video monitor or derived from the monitor supply itself, for example.
  • the low-level output of I ⁇ C ports is ⁇ 0.4 volts at 3mA sink current, so that with a 3.92K ohms load resistor
  • U will be less than 0.4V and typically 0.2V.
  • U fo a r I2C ports is 1.5V.
  • the output transistor Tl (2N2369 or equivalent) can sink at least 20mA.
  • Reason 3 is safely taken care of if the signal BUFEN is high when the +5V power supply is stable only. The latter can be achieved by deriving BUFEN from the reset and/or power-watch circuitry that is normally present in a microprocessor system such as of a video monitor. If reason 3 is unimportant, then BUFEN can be simply replaced by a direct connection to +5V.
  • Both the LM339 input (comparator Cl) and the transistor Tl (2N2369) can withstand voltage transients up to +36V from the external line, whether the +5V is on or not. Negative transients are absorbed by diode Dl (1N4148), combined with the fact that the input to the LM339 will then be 0.9V more positive, because of the divider R3/R2, using the values 6.8K/39K, so that the LM339 comparator Cl never gets input levels that are negative enough to disturb proper operation.
  • the reference voltages +2.4V and +0.65V may be obtained from the +5V supply by means of a three-resistor voltage divider.
  • Rl is 51 ohms
  • R5 is 4.7 Kohms
  • R6 is 3.3 Kohms
  • the circuitry of the example shown in Figure 3 may be simplified, depending on requirements.
  • Figure 4 shows a basic implementation circuit which is sufficient if the chosen comparator integrated circuit is adequate as it is for the various requirements.
  • the values of R8 and R9 can be the same as or different to the values of R4 and R7 referred to above.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Computing Systems (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mathematical Physics (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Logic Circuits (AREA)
  • Small-Scale Networks (AREA)

Abstract

A buffer circuit for use between a two-way open-collector bus line (4) and a device (D) capable of reading the status of the bus line and driving it low. The device has a single input/output terminal (1) to which is connected a line (7) of the buffer circuit. The buffer circuit is such as to distinguish between three logical levels on the line, and in particular between two logical low levels (Ua, Ub), which correspond to the device (1) or the input buffer (C1) driving the bus line low. The input and output buffers are comprised by respective comparators (C1, C2). The reference voltage for the output buffer comparator lies between Ua and Ub, whereby to achieve the distinction therebetween. When the output buffer comparator detects Ua, it causes the bus line (4) to be driven low.

Description

BIDI ECTIONAL BUFFER
This invention relates to bus line buffering and in particular to buffering for a two-way bus.
Devices connected to an open-collector bus (or an open-drain bus) must normally be able to read the status (high/low) of the bus lines, as well as be able to force them low by means of open-collector (or open-drain) drivers. It is often desirable to have buffer circuitry between the device, which may be an integrated circuit or a local sub-bus system, for example, and the bus, for one or more reasons, such as the following reasons:
1. To protect the device from destructive voltage transients on the bus. This would typically be the case if the device contains CMOS circuitry and the bus lines extend outside of a shielding cabinet.
2. The device may not be able to sink enough current to force the bus lines low.
3. If the device cannot be guaranteed not to force the bus lines low while it is in the power-off state, or while it is entering or leaving the power-off state.
Such buffering is easy to implement if the device D has separate terminals for input and output, ie one terminal 2 for reading an open-collector bus line (external line 4) and a different terminal 3 for forcing the line low, as illustrated in Figure 1. There is an input buffer 5 connected between external line 4 and terminal 2 and an output buffer 6 connected between terminal 3 and line 4. The symbol in buffer 6 denotes an open-collector output.
However, if the input and output are handled by the same terminal, which is often the case, then buffering is more complicated. Simply paralleling an input buffer 5 with an output buffer 6 as shown in Figure 2 would cause the line 4 to be locked low. Both buffers will remain low indefinitely as each one supplies a low input to the other one.
To overcome the problem, the output buffer 6 must be able to distinguish between two different causes for a low level on the device side, ie on the internal line:
A. The device D is pulling it low.
B. The device D is not pulling it low but the input buffer 5 is.
In Case A the output buffer 6 must pull the external line 4 low, but in Case B it must not.
There are commercially available buffer circuits which make this distinction by way of current sensing and current amplification. If a positive current is flowing into the device D on the internal line 7 (Case A) , then the output buffer will sink a multiple of that current on the external line. The disadvantages of these buffer circuits are cost and the fact that the current amplification also causes capacitance amplification. The external line "sees" the internal capacitance multiplied by the current amplification factor. Furthermore, these buffer circuits may not be consistent with reasons 1 and/or 3 referred to above.
The present invention aims to provide a solution which does not suffer from the aforementioned disadvantages.
According to one aspect of the present invention there is provided a buffer circuit for use between a bus line and an input/output terminal of a device capable of reading the status of the bus line and driving it low, the buffer circuit including a line which is connected in use to the terminal and being such that two logical levels of the same type which may be present on the line and have different sources are distinguishable from one another, characterised in that the buffer circuit includes an output buffer in the form of a comparator which compares any said logical level with a reference level and interprets it as arising from a first source if it is less than the reference level or as arising from a second source if it is greater than the reference level.
According to another aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of buffering a connection between a bus line and a device capable of reading the status of the bus line and driving it low, comprising the steps of:
disposing a buffer circuit including an input buffer and an output buffer, in the form of a comparator, between the bus line and an input/output terminal of the device, the buffer circuit being connected by a line to the terminal;
determining whether a logical low level on the line is caused by the device or the input buffer pulling it low by comparing, at the output buffer comparator, any said logical low level on the line with a reference level and interpreting it as arising from the device if it is on one side of the reference level and as arising from the input buffer if it is on the other side of the reference level; and
pulling the bus line low by means of the output buffer when the device is pulling the line low.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to accompanying drawings, in which Figure 1 illustrates a first known buffer circuit;
Figure 2 illustrates an impractical buffer circuit;
Figure 3 illustrates a specific embodiment of the present invention, and
Figure 4 illustrates a more general arrangement of the embodiment of Figure 3.
The solution provided by the present invention does not involve the disadvantages associated with the prior art circuits and is suitable for use when there is a reasonable voltage margin between the low output level of the device D and the highest input voltage that the device D is guaranteed to interpret as low level. The solution distinguishes between cases A and B by comparing the two different low-level voltages on the internal line 7 with a reference. The line 7 will be at a high level when neither the device nor the input buffer is pulling it low. Hence there are three levels to be distinguished between on the internal line 7, although the invention is only concerned with distinguishing between the two low levels.
U is defined as the low-level output voltage of the device D and ϋ is defined as the highest input voltage that the device D is guaranteed to recognise as low level. Let U, denote a voltage which is between U and U and is preferably closer to U than U . The input buffer is, according to the invention, designed so that its low-level output pulls down the internal line 7 to level U. when the device D is not pulling the internal line 7 low, and the output buffer is designed so that it interprets U as low (Case A) and U. as high (Case B) . When the low level corresponds to Ucl (the device) the output buffer pulls the external (bus line) 4 low.
In a practical realisation the input and output buffers may be implemented by a low cost comparator, such as an LM339 comparator, with or without an extra transistor, depending upon requirements, as will be apparent from the following.
The first example, illustrated in Figure 3, relates to an arrangement for use, for example, in a video monitor
2 where the external line (bus) is an ACCESS bus or I C bus. In this case the device D consists of a local bus to which one or more integrated circuits with I 2C ports are connected. It is assumed that all of the reasons 1,
2 and 3 apply. If this is not the case, the implementation can be simplified.
The I 2C bus, consists of two bus lines (a clock line and a data line) but Figure 3 applies equally to either of them. The LM339, which is a low cost comparator integrated circuit with open-collector outputs, contains four comparators, two of which Cl and C2 are employed in the Figure 3 embodiment. Thus only one LM339 is needed for the overall bus. The LM339 requires a +5V power supply and this may be supplied from a host PC associated with the video monitor or derived from the monitor supply itself, for example. The low-level output of I^C ports is < 0.4 volts at 3mA sink current, so that with a 3.92K ohms load resistor
R4, U will be less than 0.4V and typically 0.2V. U foar I2C ports is 1.5V. The voltage divider R7/R4
(909 ohms/3.92 Kohms) will make U. nominally equal to
1.0V, which is safely below U , and the output comparator C2 can safely distinguish between U (Case A) and U, (Case B) .
The output transistor Tl (2N2369 or equivalent) can sink at least 20mA. Reason 3 is safely taken care of if the signal BUFEN is high when the +5V power supply is stable only. The latter can be achieved by deriving BUFEN from the reset and/or power-watch circuitry that is normally present in a microprocessor system such as of a video monitor. If reason 3 is unimportant, then BUFEN can be simply replaced by a direct connection to +5V.
Both the LM339 input (comparator Cl) and the transistor Tl (2N2369) can withstand voltage transients up to +36V from the external line, whether the +5V is on or not. Negative transients are absorbed by diode Dl (1N4148), combined with the fact that the input to the LM339 will then be 0.9V more positive, because of the divider R3/R2, using the values 6.8K/39K, so that the LM339 comparator Cl never gets input levels that are negative enough to disturb proper operation.
The reference voltages +2.4V and +0.65V may be obtained from the +5V supply by means of a three-resistor voltage divider.
For the example described, Rl is 51 ohms, R5 is 4.7 Kohms and R6 is 3.3 Kohms, when the values of R2, R3, R4 and R7 are as quoted above. The circuitry of the example shown in Figure 3 may be simplified, depending on requirements. Figure 4 shows a basic implementation circuit which is sufficient if the chosen comparator integrated circuit is adequate as it is for the various requirements. The values of R8 and R9 can be the same as or different to the values of R4 and R7 referred to above.
Whilst a +5 volt supply is indicated in Figures 3 and 4, this is not the only possibility and in the arrangement of Figure 3 the quoted reference values are also not the only possibilities. The values employed will be dictated by the components employed and practical concerns.

Claims

1. A buffer circuit for use between a bus line and an input/output terminal of a device capable of reading the status of the bus line and driving it low, the buffer circuit including a line which is connected in use to the terminal and being such that two logical levels of the same type which may be present on the line and have different sources are distinguishable from one another, characterised in that the buffer circuit includes an output buffer in the form of a comparator which compares any said logical level with a reference level and interprets it as arising from a first source if it is less than the reference level or as arising from a second source if it is greater than the reference level.
2. A buffer circuit as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the buffer circuit includes an input buffer in parallel with the output buffer, the input of the input buffer being connected to the output of the output buffer and connected in use to the bus line, the output of the input buffer being connected to the input of the output buffer and to the line, and wherein the output buffer is such as to distinguish between two logical low levels on the line, whose sources are the device or the input buffer, respectively, pulling the line low, and wherein the output buffer is such as to pull the bus line low only when the device is pulling the line low.
3. A buffer circuit as claimed in claim 2 wherein the input and output buffers include respective identical comparators, wherein the input buffer comparator includes means at its output whereby the input buffer pulls the line to one said logical low level (U, ) when the device is not pulling the line low in use of the circuit, the other said logical low level corresponding to the low level output voltage of the device (U ) .
4. A buffer circuit as claimed in Claim 3 wherein U, lies between U and the highest input voltage the device is guaranteed to recognise as low level
Figure imgf000011_0001
5. A buffer circuit as claimed in claim 4 wherein U. is closer to Uc than Ua.
6. A buffer circuit as claimed in any of Claims 3-5 wherein said means includes a voltage divider for producing level U, from a source of input voltage required for the input buffer comparator.
A buffer circuit as claimed in any one of Claims 3-6 wherein the line is connected to one input of the output buffer comparator and a reference level between U and U, is in use applied to the other input and the output buffer distinguishes between U and U, by interpreting a signal on the one input which is below the reference level as U C , and interpreting a signal on the one input which is above the reference level but below Uc as U.D.
A buffer circuit as claimed in any one of Claims 3-7 wherein an output transistor is disposed at the output of the output buffer comparator and serves to increase the current sink capability and/or to absorb positive voltage transients on the bus line in use and/or to ensure that in use the bus line is not driven low while the device is in a power-off state or entering or leaving a power-off state.
9. A buffer circuit as claimed in any one of Claims 4-9 wherein the bus line is an open-collector bus and the outputs of the comparators are open-collector outputs.
10. A method of buffering a connection between a bus line and a device capable of reading the status of the bus line and driving it low, comprising the steps of:
disposing a buffer circuit including an input buffer and an output buffer, in the form of a comparator, between the bus line and an input/output terminal of the device, the buffer circuit being connected by a line to the terminal;
determining whether a logical low level on the line is caused by the device or the input buffer pulling it low by comparing, at the output buffer comparator, any said logical low level on the line with a reference level and interpreting it as arising from the device if it is on one side of the reference level and as arising from the input buffer if it is on the other side of the reference level; and
pulling the bus line low by means of the output buffer when the device is pulling the line low.
11. A method as claimed in Claim 10 wherein the highest input voltage the device is guaranteed to recognise as low level is U and one said logical low level is the low level output voltage of the device (U CL) , including the step of causing the input buffer to pull the line to another said logical low level (U, ) which lies between U and U , the output buffer comparator interpreting the U CL low level as arising from the device and the U, low level as arising from the input buffer.
12. A buffer circuit for use between a bus line and an input/output terminal of a device substantially as herein described with reference to Figure 3 or Figure 4 of the accompanying drawings.
PCT/EP1995/003178 1994-08-12 1995-08-10 Bidirectional buffer WO1996005671A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/777,000 US5859545A (en) 1994-08-12 1995-08-10 Bidirectional buffer
DE69515315T DE69515315T2 (en) 1994-08-12 1995-08-10 BIDIRECTIONAL BUFFER
EP95929841A EP0775399B1 (en) 1994-08-12 1995-08-10 Bidirectional buffer

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9416380.5 1994-08-12
GB9416380A GB2292277B (en) 1994-08-12 1994-08-12 Bus line buffering

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1996005671A1 true WO1996005671A1 (en) 1996-02-22

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PCT/EP1995/003178 WO1996005671A1 (en) 1994-08-12 1995-08-10 Bidirectional buffer

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (1) US5859545A (en)
EP (1) EP0775399B1 (en)
DE (1) DE69515315T2 (en)
ES (1) ES2144138T3 (en)
GB (1) GB2292277B (en)
WO (1) WO1996005671A1 (en)

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US6185643B1 (en) 1997-11-15 2001-02-06 Cybex Computer Products Corporation Method and apparatus for extending the range between a computer and computer peripherals
US6078974A (en) * 1998-04-08 2000-06-20 Cybex Computer Products Corporation Method and apparatus for extension of bi-directional open collector signals in a multiplexed data transmission system
US6172523B1 (en) * 1998-09-30 2001-01-09 Lucent Technologies Inc. Apparatus and method for converting a non-logic-family signal level to a logic-family signal level
US6362654B1 (en) * 2000-08-17 2002-03-26 U.S. Philips Corporation Bidirectional repeater using high and low threshold detection
US6664815B2 (en) * 2000-12-08 2003-12-16 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Output driver circuit with current detection
JP4072424B2 (en) * 2002-12-02 2008-04-09 エルピーダメモリ株式会社 Memory system and control method thereof
US7692450B2 (en) * 2007-12-17 2010-04-06 Intersil Americas Inc. Bi-directional buffer with level shifting
US7737727B2 (en) * 2007-12-17 2010-06-15 Intersil Americas Inc. Bi-directional buffer for open-drain or open-collector bus
US7639045B2 (en) * 2008-05-23 2009-12-29 Intersil Americas Inc. Bi-directional buffer and method for bi-directional buffering that reduce glitches due to feedback
DE102008052403A1 (en) * 2008-10-21 2010-04-22 Continental Automotive Gmbh circuitry
IT1391688B1 (en) * 2008-10-30 2012-01-17 Indesit Co Spa ADAPTER DEVICE FOR BIDIRECTIONAL COMMUNICATION SYSTEM AND ITS RELATIVE SYSTEM
US9183713B2 (en) 2011-02-22 2015-11-10 Kelly Research Corp. Perimeter security system
CN109018835A (en) * 2018-09-05 2018-12-18 张晨光 A kind of photo resistance belt indulges this protective device
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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB9416380D0 (en) 1994-10-05
GB2292277B (en) 1998-11-18
GB2292277A (en) 1996-02-14
DE69515315T2 (en) 2000-10-26
ES2144138T3 (en) 2000-06-01
EP0775399B1 (en) 2000-03-01
EP0775399A1 (en) 1997-05-28
US5859545A (en) 1999-01-12
DE69515315D1 (en) 2000-04-06

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