Instruction Sets Want To Be Free: A Case for RISC-V
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UC Berkeley Computer Science Professor, David Patterson reviews 50 years of computer architecture to show there is now widespread agreement on instruction set architecture ISA. Unlike most other fields, despite this harmony there is no open alternative to proprietary offerings from ARM and Intel. In his talk he proposes RISC-V RISC Five, which targets Systems on a Chip SoC. It has: - A small base of 50 classic RISC instructions that run a full open-source software stack. - Opcodes reserved for tailoring an SoC to applications. - Standard instruction extensions optionally included in an SoC. - Incorporated, as an open ISA, community suggestions before extensions are finalized. - A foundation to evolve the RISC-V slowly based solely on technical reasons voted on by members vs. by companies that inflate ISAs rapidly for business as well as technical reasons; ARM and Intel average about 2 new instructions per month. - No restrictions: there is no cost, no paperwork, and anyone can use it. He concludes by recapping 10 RISC-V chips built using Agile methods in just 4 years, including how shockingly cheap it is today to manufacture 100 2x2-mm, 28-nm chips using Chisel, a new hardware design language that reduces design effort by greatly increasing reuse. 10/27/2015 http://www.cs.washington.edu/events/colloquia/search/details?id=2762 http://uwtv.org
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