OpenCores

OpenCores is a community developing digital open-source hardware through electronic design automation (EDA), with a similar ethos as the free software movement. OpenCores hopes to eliminate redundant design work and slash development costs. A number of companies have been reported as adopting OpenCores IP in chips,[1][2] or as adjuncts to EDA tools.[3][4] OpenCores is also cited from time to time in the electronics press as an example of open source in the electronics hardware community.[5]

OpenCores has always been a commercially owned organization. In 2015, the core active users of OpenCores established the independent Free and Open Source Silicon Foundation (FOSSi Foundation), and registered the libreCores.org[6] website as the basis for all future development, independent of commercial control.

History

Damjan Lampret, one of the founders of OpenCores, stated on his website that it began in 1999.[7] The first public record of the new website and its objectives was in EE Times in 2000.[8] Then CNET News reported in 2001.[9] Through the following years it was supported by advertising and sponsorship, including by Flextronics.[1]

In mid-2007 an appeal was put out for a new backer,[10] and that November, Swedish design house ORSoC AB[11] agreed to take over maintenance of the OpenCores website.[12]

EE Times reported in late 2008 that OpenCores had passed the 20,000 subscriber mark.[13] In October 2010 it reached 95,000 registered users and had approximately 800 projects. In July 2012 it reached 150,000 registered users.

During 2015, ORSoC AB formed a joint venture with KNCMiner AB to develop bitcoin mining machines. As this became the primary focus of the business, they were able to spend less time with the opencores.org project. In response to the growing lack of commitment, the core OpenRISC development team set up the Free and Open Source Silicon Foundation (FOSSi), and registered the libreCores.org website as the basis for all future development, independent of commercial control.[14]

Licensing

In the absence of a widely accepted open source hardware license, the components produced by the OpenCores initiative use several different software licenses. The most common is the GNU LGPL, which states that any modifications to a component must be shared with the community, while one can still use it together with proprietary components. The less restrictive 3-clause BSD license is also used in some hardware projects, while the GNU GPL is often used for software components, such as models and firmware.

The OpenCores library

The library will consist of design elements from central processing units, memory controllers, peripherals, motherboards, and other components. Emerging semiconductor manufacturers could use the information and license designs for free.

The emphasis is on digital modules called "cores", commonly known as IP Cores. The components are used for creating both custom integrated circuits (ASICs) and FPGAs.

The cores are implemented in the hardware description languages Verilog, VHDL or SystemC which may be synthesized to either silicon or gate arrays.

The project aims at using a common non-proprietary system bus named Wishbone, and most components are nowadays adapted to this bus.

Among the components created by OpenCores contributors are:

OpenRISC ASIC

In April 2011 OpenCores opened donations[17] for a new project to develop a complete system on a chip design based on the OpenRISC processor and implement it into an ASIC-component. OpenCores affiliated with OpenCores, for example OpenSPARC and LEON.

gollark: It's good because it has cool features, not too much code, and a fairly nice UI.
gollark: Failure to justify opinion → absolutely wrong in all ways → Minoteaur best wiki-styled vaguely graph-structured server-rendered Nim-based note-taking application.
gollark: Why?
gollark: It's good.
gollark: What? No.

See also

References

  1. Andrew Orlowski, "Flextronics demos open source chips", The Register, 12 December 2003,
  2. Rick Merritt, "Vivace plans to release HD media processors", EE Times India (online edition), 20 April 2006 Archived 7 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Dylan McGrath, "Firm packages OpenCores IP with EDA tool", EE Times (online edition), 9 January 2006
  4. "OVP Simulator Smashes SystemC TLM-2.0 Performance Barrier", EDA Cafe, 5 February 2009
  5. Richard Goering, "Doors 'open' to hardware", EE Times (online edition), 6 June 2005
  6. libreCores.org
  7. http://www.lampret.com/
  8. Peter Clarke, "Free 32-bit processor core hits the Net", EE Times, 28 February 2000
  9. John G Spooner, "Open-source credo moves to chip design", CNET News, 27 March 2001
  10. Peter Clarke, "OpenCores website, brand up for sale", EE Times Europe (online edition), 25 June 2007
  11. ORSoC AB
  12. Peter Clarke, "Swedish design house agrees to maintain OpenCores", EE Times Europe (online edition), 28 November 2007
  13. Anne-Francoise Pele, "OpenCores records 20,000 users", EE Times Europe (online edition), 28 October 2008
  14. Announcement of FOSSi at ORConf2015, CERN, Genva. schedule Archived 8 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine and video
  15. risc16f84 https://opencores.org/projects/risc16f84
  16. zet86 https://opencores.org/projects/zet86
  17. Call for OpenRISC ASIC donations, 30 April 2011 Archived 1 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Official website
  • Greenbaum, Eli (2011). "Open Source Semiconductor Core Licensing" (PDF). Harvard Journal of Law & Technology (JOLT). Harvard. 25 (1): 131–157.
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