openc910
awesome-riscv
openc910 | awesome-riscv | |
---|---|---|
43 | 5 | |
1,128 | 125 | |
1.6% | - | |
2.6 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | over 1 year ago | |
Verilog | ||
Apache License 2.0 | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
openc910
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RISC-V must get its messaging right on open standard vs. open source
Not noted here is that the fastest RISC-V general purpose machines you can currently buy use the THead C910 core, which is:
1) Chinese
2) actually Open Source (except the vector unit): https://github.com/T-head-Semi/openc910
The fastest off the shelf RISC-V machine currently is the Milk-V Pioneer using the SG2042 SoC which has 64 C910 OoO cores running at 2.0 GHz, with 64 MB L3 cache and up to 128 GB RAM. The core, SoC, board, and PC are all made in China.
Of course this situation changes very fast. There will be several machines using SiFive's P550 cores in several months -- most from Chinese companies, or at least using Chinese SoC (SiFive's own HiFive Premier P550 board). And then at the end of the year the Milk-V "Oasis" (and others from at least Sipeed) using SiFive's P670 cores, but again in the Chinese SG2380 SoC.
There are a several US startups who started work on RISC-V core in 2021-2022 who will have much faster (Apple M1 class or better) cores, but those won't arrive in machines you can buy until 2025 or 2026.
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US Government reportedly ponders crimping China's use of RISC-V
> I'm pretty sure that SiFive isn't allowed to sell their RISC-V core designs to any Chinese company already.
The JH7110 SoC from the Chinese firm Starfive uses SiFive's U74 core. Eswin, also Chinese uses SiFive's P550 core in their upcoming EIC7700 SoC.
> All Chinese RISC-V core designs have been proprietary designs thus far.
There is the OpenC910 [1] and OpenXiangShan [2].
[1] https://github.com/T-head-Semi/openc910
- Lichee Console 4A – RISC-V mini laptop: Review, benchmarks and early issues
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Is RISC-V ready for HPC? Evaluating the 64-core Sophon SG2042 RISC-V CPU
Note that the C910 CPU cores used in this chip are in fact open source:
https://github.com/T-head-Semi/openc910
(C920 is just C910 plus RVV draft 0.7.1 vector unit which pretty much no software uses anyway, sadly)
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This CPU is FREE!
The Milk-V Pioneer uses a C910 CPU, which has been open sourced by t-head: https://github.com/T-head-Semi/openc910
- LTT
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China Deploys RISC-V Server in Commercial Cloud
More precisely, a Chinese university assembled a rack containing 48 [1] commercially available SBCs [2], each with a Chinese-designed and made SG2042 SoC with 64 C910 CPU cores. The C910 was designed in China in 2018/19 and open-sourced in October 2021, on Microsoft's github site.
https://github.com/T-head-Semi/openc910
The SG2042 is the most powerful RISC-V SoC available today.
In which direction is the technology transfer going?
[1] or possibly 24 dual-socket boards, shown at the RISC-V Summit China in August
[2] get your own here https://www.crowdsupply.com/milk-v/milk-v-pioneer
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Raspberry Pi receives strategic investment from Arm
For "coming down the pipeline" they're essentially free.
Today, the c910 is an Apache 2, hardware proven out of order core on GitHub here https://github.com/T-head-Semi/openc910 a little slower than an RPi3's core.
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Lichee Pi 4A: Serious RISC-V Desktop Computing [video]
Here is the source code* for the CPU:
https://github.com/T-head-Semi/openc910
* AFAIK they didn't opensource the pre ratification vector extension implementation they ship with the taped out chip.
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Beagleboard BeagleV-Ahead RISC-V brd released
The source RTL for the roughly Arm A72-equivalent cores used in this were open-sourced several years ago.
https://github.com/T-head-Semi/openc910
The same cores are used in the 64 core SG2042 workstation/server SoC.
awesome-riscv
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Rise: RISC-V Software Ecosystem – Linux Foundation Project
Github seems like a good option for this (or codeberg), creating something like awesome risc-v where other people can make suggestions and improvements.
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How many gates does a decent risc-v implementation take?
The lists out there are out of date, but this isn't a bad place to start.
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Yeah, RISC-V Is Actually a Good Design
In general, I've been seeing quite a few interesting open-source implementations; what RISC-V has brought to the table is a community and an ISA that open CPU implementors can get behind, and vice versa, which has led to a lot of advancements in open CPU development.
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What is needed for a processor other than instruction sets?
If you'd like to learn first-hand, why not look at a few open-source implementations for yourself? I think that's one of the incidental benefits of RV - people implementing their own FOSS cores with a shared instruction set!
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Russian Company Develops 32-Bit RISC-V Microcontroller
RISC-V is about to take off! https://github.com/drom/awesome-riscv
What are some alternatives?
riscv-boom - SonicBOOM: The Berkeley Out-of-Order Machine
JuiceVm - The juice virtual machine was born in 2020, with the goal of realizing the smallest virtual machine of RISC-V that can run the latest kernel mainline. At the beginning of the design, it runs on a platform with only 100 KB of RAM, which does not exceed the number of C99. Three-party dependence.
openc906 - OpenXuantie - OpenC906 Core
valgrind-riscv64 - Valgrind with support for the RISCV64/Linux platform.
XiangShan - Open-source high-performance RISC-V processor
GCC-Cross-Compiler - These are gcc cross compiler tools.
aosp-riscv - Patches & Script for AOSP to run on Xuantie RISC-V CPU [Moved to: https://github.com/T-head-Semi/riscv-aosp]
picorv32 - PicoRV32 - A Size-Optimized RISC-V CPU
seL4 - The seL4 microkernel
awesome-mango-pi-mq-pro - A curated list of awesome MangoPi MQ-Pro images, tools and resources
riscv-aosp - Patches & Script for AOSP to run on Xuantie RISC-V CPU
awesome-plotters - A curated list of code and resources for computer-controlled drawing machines and other visual art robots.