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    From: pai.ramanath at gmail.com<pai.ramanath@g...>
    Date: Thu Mar 30 08:42:47 CEST 2006
    Subject: [oc] Fw: Configurable processors gird for battle
    Top

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Ovidiu Lupas" <ovilup@m...>
    To: "opencores.org" <cores@o...>
    "prof. dr. Tiponut Virgil" <tiponut@e...>
    Date: Sat, 18 Dec 1999 09:10:58 +0200
    Subject: [oc] Fw: Configurable processors gird for battle

    >
    >
    >
    >
    > >
    > > Configurable processors gird for battle
    > > http://www.eet.com/story/OEG19991217S0069
    > >
    > > SAN FRANCISCO &#151; The emerging configurable-processor
    > market is
    > > heating up. Earlier this week, Zilog Inc. bought Production
    > Languages
    > > Corp., a pioneer in the field of configurable processors. And
    > on
    > > Monday (Dec. 20), Hewlett-Packard Co. and STMicroelectronics
    > will
    > > provide additional details about their collaborative effort to
    > bring
    > > push-button processor solutions to embedded-system design.
    > >
    > > Meanwhile, configurable-pro-cessor vendor Tensilica Inc.
    > (Sunnyvale,
    > > Calif.) is expected to announce a major deal soon with a large
    > > corporation that is speculated to be either HP or STM.
    > Tensilica
    > > declined this past week to comment on the pending deal.
    > >
    > > The moves signal a quickening interest in forging new
    > techniques that
    > > tackle both hardware and software design issues at high levels
    > of
    > > abstraction. To that end, Motorola Inc.'s Semiconductor
    > Products
    > > Sector has unveiled its semiconductor reuse standard (SRS) at
    > its Web
    > > site, aimed at simplifying system-on-chip (SoC) designs with
    > multiple
    > > blocks of logic.
    > >
    > > While the approaches differ, the configurable processors, as
    > well as
    > > Motorola's SoC design technology initiative, all hope to
    > streamline
    > > complex designs and shorten design cycles to just a few
    > months.
    > >
    > > Tom Starnes, in charge of DSP and microcontroller analysis at
    > > Dataquest Inc. (San Jose, Calif.), said that while many
    > engineers are
    > > attracted to the idea of developing a configurable processor,
    > > particularly one with unique instructions, that approach does
    > not
    > > always match up with the need for corporate prudence. The
    > established
    > > "black box" MPU architectures from vendors like ARM, IBM and
    > Motorola
    > > have defined instruction sets, support from multiple tool
    > vendors and
    > > a body of commercial software linked to them.
    > >
    > > "A company can always go out and find another software guy
    > that is
    > > familiar with, say, the MIPS architecture," said Starnes. "But
    > if
    > > someone has created a design with a unique instruction set,
    > then it
    > > is up to that company to maintain its software over time. That
    > is a
    > > tremendous responsibility that a company must bear. The new
    > guy may
    > > not be able to learn all the quirks of the guy who created the
    > > original design five years earlier."
    > >
    > > Also, while companies such as Production Languages Corp. (PLC;
    > Fort
    > > Worth, Texas) or Tensilica claim they can generate a
    > development tool
    > > set that matches the processor, the customer is limited to
    > that
    > > primary tool set. By contrast, anyone using an established
    > controller
    > > can choose from among several tool vendors and buy a tool set
    > tuned
    > > to that particular application, Starnes said.
    > >
    > > Configurable processors "could be said to be on the verge of
    > > something revolutionary. But there is a certain danger of
    > creating a
    > > kind of garage-shop atmosphere, with just a few people
    > controlling
    > > the technology," said Starnes. "That is why Zilog's move to
    > buy PLC
    > > really makes a lot of sense for Zilog."
    > > > > Zilog, which licensed PLC's technology last June, views > acquiring the > > company as a way of putting a firm foundation under its > strategy to > > supply the embedded market with products based on soft cores. > Working > > in defense electronics throughout much of the 1990s, > Production > > Languages developed a proprietary description language called > THISL > > (temporal hierarchical instruction set language) that > generates soft > > cores and development tool sets. The software based on THISL > is named > > Toolsmith. > > > > By generating "soft" processor cores with the appropriate set > of > > peripherals and development tools, Zilog expects to be able to > > quickly roll products for cell phones, Internet appliances and > other > > fast-moving markets where specifications can change quickly. > > > > PLC president David Fritz, 40, will join Zilog as a vice > president > > charged with developing new processing cores, with > communications as > > a primary focus. PLC's five principal engineers will form the > nucleus > > of a Zilog processor design center in the Dallas area. > > > > Zilog said it will use the PLC technology throughout its > customer > > base. Earlier this fall, Zilog announced its network processor > > initiative, Cartezian, which will use a 32-bit configurable > processor > > from Tensilica as the central processor and PLC cores as the > "edge," > > or interface, processors. > > > > Fritz said Zilog became serious about an acquisition in > October after > > PLC was able to use THISL to create a 16-bit, fixed-point DSP > core > > named Mosquito. Introduced at the fall DSP World show, > Mosquito can > > run as fast as 200 MHz and requires only 20,000 gates of > logic. > > > > Fritz said PLC engineers created the RISC-based Mosquito in > six > > weeks. The software description was implemented in an FPGA > that > > booted up successfully the first time. The core was tested on > an > > oscilloscope that "ran in lockstep with the simulation on the > show > > floor at DSP World," he said. > > > > "If Zilog is going to offer voice-over-Internet Protocol, a > fairly > > high-end DSP is required," Fritz said. "This will allow us to > match > > our silicon with the voice-over-IP opportunity." > > > > Fritz estimated that the die size penalty of a soft core, > compared > > with a custom-designed core, is "10 percent, going to 5 > percent. But > > what this technology does is to raise the level of > abstraction, so > > that a designer can create an arbitrarily complex processor > that the > > designer could not fathom if he were limited to using VHDL or > Verilog > > descriptions." > > > > For example, to create Mosquito, the PLC design team ran > simulations > > that determined the DSP would be able to meet the performance > > requirements with a three-stage pipeline, rather than the > five-stage > > pipeline originally planned. The THISL language considers a > pipeline > > as an abstract object, and redefining the pipeline logic took > only a > > few days of work, Fritz said. > > > > Asked if the Dallas design group will move into the 32-bit > space now > > targeted by Tensilica's Xtensa core, he said, "there is > nothing > > stopping us." > > > > Fritz said his group has been charged by Zilog CEO Curtis > Crawford > > with the task of creating five new processor cores within the > next 24 > > months. The various product groups within Zilog could merge > the > > processor and DSP cores with Verilog descriptions of soft > > peripherals. > > > > Configurable VLIW designs > > > > Over the past two years, engineers from Hewlett-Packard and > > STMicroelectronics have striven to bring to the embedded world > the > > work that HP has done in developing VLIW-based concepts for > the IA-64 > > platform with Intel Corp. HP scientist Joseph (Josh) Fisher, > an > > acknowledged expert in VLIW, said the two companies will > position > > their VLIW hardware and software development environment > between > > full-custom and off-the-shelf design approaches. > > > > "Our technology provides the benefits of both. The driving > vision is > > the ability to turn a crank, and out comes a targeted > architecture > > for performance-hungry applications," Fisher said. > > > > Working with applications engineers from HP and STM, the > customer > > would first select the best architecture for the application > &#151; > > the HP/STM approach envisions a design described at the > > instruction-set architecture level. An HP tool would then spit > out > > VLIW-oriented architectures based on the designers' input, > along with > > a tool set and specialized VLIW compiler that HP calls the > most > > advanced in the world. > > > > The designer tweaks the design and recompiles to marry the > processor > > to a specific application, Fisher said. > > > > Loic Lietar, director of corporate strategic marketing for STM > (San > > Diego), said, "There are real-world architecture-explorer > > capabilities that allow immediate feedback on the quality of > the new > > design using a real tool chain." > > > > Fisher said the first chip to tape out next year from the > methodology > > is a digital still-image device to be used by HP. Silicon is > expected > > in the second half of 2000. In one of the important algorithms > keyed > > to the success of the device, the designer needed to devise a > > two-loop interchange in which the activity in one loop could > interact > > with and affect the activity of the other, and vice versa. To > do so > > threw the balance of integer adders to integer multipliers out > of > > whack, Fisher said. > > > > The designer needed to use 32 x 32-bit multipliers, but the > tool > > suggested performance would be slowed. So the multipliers were > > rewritten as 16 x 32. Another engineer on the project > suggested that > > would hurt performance even more, but that did not prove to be > the > > case, Fisher said. The instruction-level parallelism made up > for it. > > > > "Without the tool chain, he had no way of knowing this," > Fisher said. > > > > Aside from the digital imager, neither Fisher nor Lietar would > say > > what designs are being worked on. Since each design will > target a > > specific application, they declined to discuss speed or power > > consumption targets. > > > > "For a given application, we could build a much faster > processor than > > you can get with a general-purpose CPU," Fisher added. "It's > very > > extensible." > > > > Why evolve a new platform when so many flavors of > architectures exist > > for embedded applications? Changing times, answered Lietar. > "Today's > > applications are, in effect, obsolete" for the designer > looking to a > > product launch in 12 or 18 months, he said. "Will you run > video on a > > cell phone? You might. Or maybe still digital images." > > > > Perhaps the only applications for which the HP/STM approach > might not > > be valid would be in straight control, where performance is > not a > > high priority or where there is not enough information up > front for > > the designer to properly customize his processor. > > > > STM will take the technology and begin to sell SoC customers > on the > > concept. Lietar dismissed suggestions that such a tool in > STM's > > arsenal would cannibalize existing embedded solutions. > > > > "It's better to have two solutions to a problem than none," > Lietar > > said. "We have SoC customers that are looking for extensible > > architectures." > > > > Tensilica's mum > > > > Meanwhile, Bernie Rosenthal, vice president of marketing at > > Tensilica, declined to discuss the deal that's said to be > pending > > between his company and HP, STM or some other large > corporation. > > > > "We've concentrated on making our technology easy to use, so > that > > designers don't need to use internal pipelines and > > microarchitecture," he said. "They just need to describe it in > a very > > general sense." > > > > Rosenthal said the Zilog acquisition of PLC appeared designed > to > > tackle the lower end of the market, slots where Zilog and PLC > have > > developed 8- and 16-bit architectures. "The space is heating > up but > > that's good for everybody," he said. > > > > Over the next month, Tensilica plans to roll the second > generation of > > its development platform, which features more extensible > processors. > > > > For more technology news, visit http://www.eet.com > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- > > Want to send money instantly to anyone, anywhere, anytime? > > You can today at X.com - and we'll give you $20 to try it! > Sign > > up today at X.com. It's quick, free, & there's no > obligation! > > http://click.egroups.com/1/332/0/_/3462/_/945498280 > > > > -- Easily schedule meetings and events using the group > calendar! > > -- http://www.egroups.com/cal?listname=f-cpu&m=1 >

     
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