skywater-pdk
quibble
skywater-pdk | quibble | |
---|---|---|
27 | 10 | |
2,841 | 2,010 | |
0.6% | - | |
2.3 | 7.3 | |
8 months ago | 5 months ago | |
Python | C | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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skywater-pdk
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Ask HN: Open-Source Simple CPU?
Preferably Intel compatible or able to run Linux? Something I can build in my garage or in a simple microprocessor fab.
https://github.com/google/skywater-pdk
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Libre Silicon – Free semiconductors for everyone
It looks neat, but the process node is 1 um with 3 metal layers.
The open Skywater PDK is 130 nm : https://github.com/google/skywater-pdk (though I don't know how reliable the PDK is?)
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Ask HN: How to start a fabless chip company targeting a modern process node?
From working in a somewhat related discipline, the PDKs for the high end nodes (think tsmc N16 and lower) are quite hard to obtain and require your org to pass security audit. In addition to that the cadence licenses are priced very much for a big-org rather than a startup.
Does your chip absolutely need a modern node? I'm assuming you've seen the open source skywater pdk, but here it is just in case. https://github.com/google/skywater-pdk
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Cadence Genus&Innovus
If you need a free PDK, check out: https://github.com/google/skywater-pdk
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DIY-Thermocam: The Affordable and Easy-to-Build Thermal Camera for Everyone
That would be really neat, but I haven't seen anyone even make a CMOS imager on SKY130.
https://github.com/google/skywater-pdk
One could make an array of thermopiles, like the hacker that made their own imager out of discrete diodes (digiOBSCURA) . But each pixel would cost $7.
https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/excelitas-technol...
One might be able to make an array of thermistors (possibly with active cooling using a peltier) like the diycamera (digiOBSCURA) below. Might be an application of combining many RC oscillators in a tree and recovering the signal with an FFT. I have a gut feeling this is possible, but haven't show it.
https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/panasonic-electro...
https://github.com/IdleHandsProject/diycamera (digiOBSCURA)
One could experiment with microbolometers on tinytapeout. https://elicit.org/search?q=cmos+microbolometer
https://tinytapeout.com/
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Riscv board running quake II using a Radeon card.
Unlike x86_64 which can only legally be produced by two and one-quarter companies, RISC-V is a permissively open-sourced ISA so anyone can make a chip. Literally, you can download Verilog of Berkeley Rocket cores from Github and run it on an FPGA, or prep it to send to SkyWater to fab at 130nm.
- NCSU Free 45nmPDK
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Making open source hardware design a reality
Taping out an actual chip inevitably involves IP that's not yours, e.g. the standard cell library and other 'physical' IP like memories and flash. You cannot open source that as it is not yours and in general the owners of it won't want to open source it either (though there are exceptions e.g. the Skywater 130nm PDK https://github.com/google/skywater-pdk).
In OpenTitan we've built all the 'logical' IP ourselves from the ground up. This is the Verilog RTL you can see in our repository but you need the 'physical' IP to make a real chip. We haven't built any physical IP so we need to get it from the traditional industry sources which means traditional industry licensing (i.e. very much not open).
- Cadence market share?
- Compiling Code into Silicon
quibble
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WinBtrfs – an open-source btrfs driver for Windows
Not in its own. You also need a different boot loader. The author has an implementation called Quibble [0] that also supports btrfs.
[0] https://github.com/maharmstone/quibble
- Life with dual boot
- Installing Windows bare metal on a ZFS volume
- [Dual boot] Upgrading to Windows 11 caused GRUB not to show on startup
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Anyone using openzfs on Windows on a daily basis? Can ZVOLs be used to back WSL?
A custom bootloader for windows that works for WinBTRFS and others may eventually allow booting on mostly/entirely ZFS instead of symlinking user folders to a dataset or whatever. If ZFS isn’t ready yet, I’ll just try WinBTRFS instead.
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ZFSBootMenu – A boot loader to manage ZFS boot environments for Linux
It's not ZFS, but let's check this with btrfs https://github.com/maharmstone/quibble
- "file extensions are hints as to what might be in the file, not a standard."
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Anyone think it's possible to force load Win 11 on a Dell Venue 8 Pro?
See this project: https://github.com/maharmstone/quibble/issues/2
- Gabe Newell Pushes Back Against Closed Platforms, Says Openness is 'PC's Superpower'
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Installing windows on BTRFS
It is technically possible, but you'll need to use an alternate boot loader for that: https://github.com/maharmstone/quibble
What are some alternatives?
openlane - OpenLane is an automated RTL to GDSII flow based on several components including OpenROAD, Yosys, Magic, Netgen and custom methodology scripts for design exploration and optimization.
btrfs - WinBtrfs - an open-source btrfs driver for Windows
RocksDB - A library that provides an embeddable, persistent key-value store for fast storage.
zfs - OpenZFS on Linux and FreeBSD
gssi - Stuff I worked on while at GSSI (L'Aquila, Italy)
ZFSin - OpenZFS on Windows port
PeakRDL-uvm - Generate UVM register model from compiled SystemRDL input
openzfs - OpenZFS on Linux and FreeBSD
Verilog.jl - Verilog for Julia
MediaCreationTool.bat - Universal MCT wrapper script for all Windows 10/11 versions from 1507 to 21H2!
chisel - Chisel: A Modern Hardware Design Language
zfsbootmenu - ZFS Bootloader for root-on-ZFS systems with support for snapshots and native full disk encryption