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1 
2 # SEP-210803722 Libre-SOC 8 core
3
4 List of participants
5
6
7 |Part# |Contact |Participant Name |Country |Short Name |
8 |----- |------------- |--------------------- |--------- |------------- |
9 | 1 |David Calderwood |RED Semiconductor Ltd |UK |1/RED |
10 | 2 |Luke Leighton |The Libre-SOC Project |Netherlands |2/Libre-SOC |
11 | 3 |Marie-Minervé Louerat |Sorbonne Université (LIP6 Lab) |France |3/SU |
12 | 4 |Marie-Minervé Louerat |Sorbonne Université (CNRS Lab) |France |4/CNRS |
13 | 5 |Michiel Lenaars |NLnet |Netherlands |5/NLnet |
14 | 6 |James Lewis |Helix Technology Ltd |UK |6/Helix |
15
16
17 Please note: CNRS is an "Affiliated Entity" of Sorbonne Université
18
19
20 # 1 Excellence
21
22
23 ## 1.1 Objectives and ambition
24
25
26 Throughout this Grant Proposal, you will note that we are making
27 significant use of ideas from the early days of Computing. Due to
28 the limitations of physical technology at that time, these ideas were
29 categorised into "technology that was beyond delivery". Industry-standard
30 computing from then to today missed many of those opportunities and
31 has consequently ploughed narrow "technological ruts" in an incremental
32 fashion that has detrimentally impacted and constrained all world-wide
33 Computing end-users as a result. Modern hardware technology performance
34 is now allowing us to revisit the best of the "Sea of ideas" from the
35 history of the past 60 years of computing. Our Grant Application is
36 therefore based on firm, practical proven foundations, backed up by a
37 real-world customer requirement: Advanced high-accuracy GPS Sensor-Fusion,
38 to prove the core's capabilities and energy efficiency.
39
40
41 We have chosen to evolve core technology to develop a Next-Generation
42 Supercomputer-scale Microprocessor family based on an existing
43 2-decades-proven base (the Power ISA), with Advanced Cray-style Vectors,
44 providing energy-efficient advanced computational power by a unique
45 methodology not currently being achieved by any current general-purpose
46 computing device. We have been working on this strategy for over three
47 years and our grant application is now evolutionary but was revolutionary.
48
49
50 Libre-SOC has, for over three years, been backed by EU Funding through
51 NLnet and now NGI POINTER, and at the core of our work we have been
52 developing a novel Draft Vector ISA Extension to the OpenPOWER ISA,
53 called SVP64. https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/svp64/ and an enhanced
54 processor core architecture on which it will run.
55
56
57 As an aside we must acknowledge the research work of IBM labs who designed
58 and then Open-Licensed their Power ISA: the foundation on which we have
59 been building. Standing on the shoulders of greatness is never a bad
60 place to start.
61
62
63 SVP64 contains features and capabilities never seen in any Instruction
64 Set Architecture (ISA) of the past sixty years. With NLnet's help we have
65 TRL (3) implementations and simulations demonstrating a 75% reduction in
66 the program size of core algorithms for Video and Audio DSP Processing
67 (FFT, DCT, Matrix Multiply), and these still have room for optimisation,
68 which if
69 successfully expanded to general-purpose algorithms would result in huge
70 power savings if deployed in mass-volume end-user products.
71
72
73 Why we are leveraging the Power ISA as the fundamental basis instead of
74 "completely novel non-standard computing architecture" requires some
75 explanation, best illustrated by reference to other historic high
76 capability designs. Aspex Microelectronics ASP was a 4096-wide SIMD
77 Array of 2-bit processors. It could be programmed at a rate of one
78 instruction per 5-10 days. Elixent also had a similar 2D Grid Array of
79 4-bit processors. Both were ultra-power-efficient (2 orders of magnitude
80 for certain specialist tasks) but were impossible to program even for the
81 best programming minds and required critical assistance from a severely
82 limited pool of specialists for best exploitation. The Industry-standard
83 rate for general-purpose High-Level programming (C, C++) is around 150
84 lines of code per day, not 5-10 days per line of assembler. We seek to
85 deliver a much more accessible "general-purpose" Microprocessor that
86 contains Supercomputing elements and consequently stands a much more
87 realistic chance of general world-wide adoption (including Europe).
88
89
90 An additional insight: OpenRISC 1200 took 12 years to reach maturity.
91 The team developed the entire processor architecture, low-level software
92 and compiler technology, entirely from scratch. We considered this
93 approach and, due to the long timescales, rejected it, choosing
94 instead to leverage and be compatible with a pre-existing Open ISA:
95 OpenPOWER. We also considered RISC-V however it turns out to be too
96 simplistic (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24459041) and it is
97 far too late to retrospectively add Supercomputer-grade power-efficient
98 functionality to its design or instruction set. With the IBM-inspired
99 Power ISA already being a Supercomputer-grade ISA, it is a natural fit for
100 an energy-efficient Cray-style Vector upgrade, and comes with 25 years
101 of pre-existing software, libraries, compilers and customers. By being
102 backwards-compatible with the existing Power ISA 3.0 (which is now an
103 Open ISA managed by the OpenPOWER Foundation), European businesses will
104 benefit from that pre-existing decades-established stability and pedigree.
105
106
107 As hinted at, above: Great hardware is nothing without the corresponding
108 compiler technology and support libraries. Consequently we need to engage
109 with Compiler Service Companies (Embecosm Gmbh, Vrull.eu) to evaluate the
110 feasibility of adding Vectorisation support to gcc, llvm and low-level
111 standard libraries. Whilst Libre-SOC has already demonstrated TRL (3)
112 successful assembly-level SVP64 algorithms (MP3 CODEC in particular),
113 assembler is far too low-level for general-purpose compute. C, C++
114 and other programming language support is required to be evaluated
115 and developed. Also given that the Libre-SOC Core is being long-term
116 designed for energy-efficient 3D GPU and Video Processing workloads,
117 two 3D Vulkan Drivers (Kazan and MESA3D) need to be taken beyond
118 proof-of-concept (TRL 2/3).
119
120
121 We consider it strategically critical to develop processors in an entirely
122 transparent fashion. The current Silicon Industry chooses secrecy to mask
123 technology shortcuts and restrictive cross licencing, which inevitably and
124 systematically fails to provide trustable hardware: Intel's Management
125 Engine; Qualcomm making 40% of the world's smartphones vulnerable to
126 hacking; Apple drive-by Zero-day Wireless exploits; Super-Micro being
127 delisted from NASDAQ for failing to be able to prove the provenance of
128 all hardware and software components. We consider Libre / Open Hardware
129 ASICs and the full Libre/Open VLSI toolchain itself to be fundamental
130 to end-user trust and security as well as Digital Sovereignty.
131
132
133 In addition to this, Libre-SOC has already been developing Mathematical
134 Formal Correctness Proofs for the HDL of its early prototype designs,
135 which, in combination with unrestricted access to the HDL Source Code,
136 allow third parties including customers to perform their own verification
137 of the ASIC's purpose (as opposed to the customer having to trust a
138 manufacture that inherently has a direct conflict-of-interest in the form
139 of its Shareholders and profits). Furthermore, we aim to experiment with
140 built-in "tamper-checking" circuits that, on running a test programme on
141 our evaluation test bed, will provide an Electro-Magnetic "signature".
142 By publishing this "signature" and the test programs, customers can
143 verify that their purchased ASICs have the same EMF "signature" and can
144 detect immediately if the ASIC has been tampered with. In addition we
145 will continue existing (TRL 2) research into Hardware-level Speculative
146 Execution mitigation techniques. We feel that the full combination of
147 these objectives meets the Hardware Security requirements of this Call.
148
149
150 This strategy does not end with just the HDL: thanks (again) to NLnet
151 we have been collaborating already with Chips4Makers, LIP6 and CNRS
152 (all funded by EU Grants), to advance the state-of-the-art for European
153 VLSI Tool Technology, which is important to European Silicon Sovereignty.
154
155
156 https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2020/651992/EPRS_BRI(2020)651992_EN.pdf
157
158
159 We are however significantly concerned that the LIP6 Department, as
160 an Academic body, is inevitably underfunded, particularly when it is the
161 sole provider of Libre/Open VLSI Silicon-proven software in the whole
162 of Europe. This is why we have included an Engineering Supplement for
163 LIP6 and CNRS in the Libre-SOC budget, to contract engineering support
164 for them and to avoid employment complications due to the French Civil
165 Service Regulations, which lack the flexibility needed. These engineers,
166 who are in high demand, will work for Libre-SOC/RED Semiconductor Ltd
167 but be fully available to assist in the development work covered by the
168 grant being done by LIP6 and CNRS.
169
170
171 The consequential effect of this tool development will be to help
172 create VLSI tools that can be directly substituted for the existing
173 commercial (and geopolitically constrained) tools from companies such as
174 Cadence and Mentor, giving a Euro-centric independence from “technology
175 constraining” acts.
176
177
178 We are currently awaiting the return of our first 180 nm architecture
179 test ASIC (TRL 4) from TSMC, through IMEC. It is the first major
180 silicon in Europe of its size (5.1 x 5.9 mm^2 and 130,000 cells)
181 to be entirely developed using a Libre-Licensed VLSI ASIC toolchain,
182 and the world's first Power ISA 3.0 outside of IBM to reach Silicon in
183 over 12 years. We have already started to push (drive) the evolution of
184 Europe's only silicon-proven Libre/Open VLSI toolchain, something this
185 Grant application will support and will allow LIP6 and CNRS to enhance
186 it to lower geometries and larger ASIC sizes which will be critical to
187 European businesses' Digital and Silicon Sovereignty.
188
189 For the avoidance of confusion the use of the word "Cell" refers to a
190 bounded piece of electronic design that when used together, like bricks,
191 form larger more complicated electrical functions.
192
193 To help advance Digital Sovereignty, LIP6 and CNRS need to once
194 again push the boundaries of the Libre/Open VLSI toolchain, coriolis2
195 Place-and-Route, https://coriolis2.lip6.fr and HITAS/YAGLE Static Timing
196 Analyser https://www-soc.lip6.fr/equipe-cian/logiciels/tasyagle/ both
197 of which are, at the lower 360 and 180 nm geometries, at TRL 9, but are
198 at TRL 2 for lower geometries 90, 65, 45 nm and below.
199
200
201 Chips4Makers (also NLnet funded) created FlexLib Libre/Open Cell
202 Libraries which allows porting of Standard Cell Libraries to any geometry.
203 An NDA'd TSMC 180nm version of FlexLib was created for the Libre-SOC
204 180nm test ASIC. To achieve our objectives, RED Semiconductor,
205 Libre-SOC, LIP6 and CNRS will need to
206 create smaller geometry ports of FlexLib. These Cell Libraries need to
207 be tested in actual Silicon, and consequently we will be working with
208 IMEC as a sub-contractor and partner to deliver MPW Shuttle Runs for
209 these critical Libraries, using Libre-SOC Cores as a "proving-ground".
210
211 https://europractice-ic.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Pricelist-EUROPRACTICE-General-MPW_8.pdf
212
213
214 In addition, NLnet, a Stichting / Foundation, has been so successful
215 in supporting "Works for the Public Good" that we feel that their approach
216 and service fulfilment are extremely relevant to this Call. During the
217 36 month duration of the proposal, NLnet is in a position to engage
218 with Libre/Open Hardware and Software developers which, for our team,
219 will mitigate the risk of unanticipated issues requiring specialist but
220 small-scope funding, that yet still meets the well-defined objectives
221 of this Call.
222
223 To put all of this to practical use, Helix Technologies, by defining
224 an advanced GPS Correlator, will set a Computational capability objective
225 for the core technology and be a Reference test-bed. Helix will then
226 be able to carry out the comparative studies which show that the core
227 technology meets significant performance/watt improvements. The ultimate
228 destination for some of these devices will be Satellites (Space).
229
230 Summary of why our work is pertinent to Call HORIZON-CL4-2021-DIGITAL-EMERGING-01-01:
231
232
233 * High-performance energy-efficient computing: SVP64 is a Cray-style Vector ISA. Cray-style Vector ISAs are known to produce smaller and more compact programs. Smaller programs means less L1 Cache misses, and overall, smaller L1 Caches are needed. This results inherently in greatly-reduced power consumption, whilst also remaining practical and general-purpose programmable.
234 * Targeted applications: We are developing a general-purpose Hybrid Architecture suitable for 3D, Video, Digital Signal Processing, Cryptographic applications, AI and many more. As it is general-purpose it covers all these areas. However in certain areas "specialist" instructions are needed (particularly 3D) and we seek additional funding to complete them. This includes Helix's high-accuracy GPS application which qualifies as a step-improvement in "Sensor fusion".
235 * Hardware-software co-design and Libre/Open Hardware-Software: as all participants are trained as Software Engineers, we inherently and automatically bring Software Engineering practices and techniques to Hardware design, and consequently achieve a far greater effectiveness and flexibility. Additionally, all participants are long-term contributors to Libre/Open Software and Hardware Projects. This shall continue throughout this Grant proposal. The involvement of RED Semiconductor Ltd brings further semiconductor hardware experience, bringing balance to the overall team.
236 * Moore's Law and changing Economics: as a general-purpose Cray-style Vector Supercomputer ISA, what we are designing may deploy either "Fast and Narrow" back-end (internal) micro-architecture, or "Slow and Wide": huge numbers of SIMD ALUs running at a much slower clock rate. The beauty and elegance of a Vector ISA is that, unlike SIMD ISAs such as AVX-512, NEON and to a partial extend SVE2, is that the programmer doesn't need to know about the internal micro-architecture, but their programs achieve the same throughput, even on larger geometries.
237 * Hardware-based security: We consider it deeply unwise to follow the false practice of "adding more complexity to achieve more security". Security is achieved through simplicity and transparency. Simplicity: we studied historic Supercomputer designs dating back to 1965 (CDC 6600) where pure pragmatism required simpler and more elegant designs. Transparency: Fully Libre/Open designs that customers can themselves verify by running Formal Correctness Proofs (where those tools are also Libre/Open Source). Fully Libre/Open VLSI toolchains and Cell Libraries (no possibility of insertion of spying at the Silicon level). "Tripwires" embedded into the silicon to gauge area-local EMF "Signatures". Additionally, we already have work underway into Out-of-Order Execution and seek to explore Speculative Execution Mitigation techniques at the hardware level, to increase security. These are practical achievable demonstrable ways to achieve Hardware-based trust.
238 * Security and Safety-critical Guidelines: Due to our overall approach, although potentially inherently achievable by others utilising our work as the basis for ongoing Research, the main participants consider it out of scope due to practical time constraints. Security Certification typically takes 5 to 7 years: The scope of this project is only 3. NLnet however may fund work that does indeed take into account these criteria.
239 * ASIC (Chip) prototyping: We are developing RTL including High-Level (core designs) as well as Low-Level (Cell Libraries). Nobody in any European Company will use a Cell Library if it has not been demonstrated as Silicon-Proven. As we already did with the 180nm ASIC, the best way to prove that a Cell Library (and an innovative approach - using Libre/Open VLSI toolchains) works is to do an actual ASIC.
240
241
242 Additional notes:
243
244
245 1. With regard to "Improve by two orders of magnitude the performance/watt for targeted Edge Applications", subject to Moore's Law and other limitations, such as geometry of devices we are moving in this direction, and whether we can achieve it will be subject to the available manufacturing processes we can afford during the scope of this Grant. We have already achieved one magnitude of improvement in simulation (TRL 3) of FFT, DCT and other DSP calculations. As already indicated above, the output of our design can be run on many different geometries of significantly-different performances.
246 2. You will note that a significant number of our technology collaborators and the technology and services that we rely on are already funded by EU Grants. Through RED Semiconductor Ltd, we are going to be the conduit to commercial realisation of value for this investment, with subsequent commercial benefits of employment and tax revenues across the EU. We know not to lose sight of the fact all EU funding is fundamentally focused on future commercial success.
247
248 Grant numbers:
249
250 * Fed4Fire.eu Grant Agreement No: 732638
251 * NLnet Grant Agreements No: 825310 and 825322
252 * NGI-POINTER. Grant agreement No: 871528
253 * StandICT.eu Grant agreement No: 951972.
254 * Sorbonne Université: 163 FP7 projects and 195 H2020 projects
255
256
257 ## 1.2 Methodology
258
259
260 * Everything that Libre-SOC does is published as Libre/Open Information at https://libre-soc.org/ - source code (https://git.libre-soc.org) is open and available under the LGPLv3+ License and other appropriate Libre/Open Licenses.
261 * LIP6 likewise discloses all source code at https://gitlab.lip6.fr/vlsi-eda
262 * LIP6's toolkit containing existing large-geometry Cell Libraries and test benches at https://gitlab.lip6.fr/vlsi-eda/alliance-check-toolkit.
263 * CNRS's HITAS/YAGLE is also Open Source https://www-soc.lip6.fr/equipe-cian/logiciels/tasyagle/.
264 * Symbiyosys and its subcomponents for Formal Correctness Proofs are Libre/Open https://symbiyosys.readthedocs.io/.
265 * GPS GNSS-SDR is also Open Source https://gnss-sdr.org/ and can be adapted for Helix's requirement
266 * Chips4Makers FlexLib is also Open Source https://gitlab.com/Chips4Makers but the NDA'd "ports" are not.
267 * To solve the above problem, all Libre/Open Developers will work with an Academic "Ghost" version, called C4M-FreePDK45 https://gitlab.com/Chips4Makers/c4m-pdk-freepdk45. This "ghost" version will allow full (parallel-track) collaboration between Libre/Open Developers and those Participants creating "real" GDS-II Files, without violating Foundry NDAs.
268
269
270 This methodology is based on an established process that has already
271 allowed us to deliver demonstrable software and hardware results,
272 the manifestation of which is our 180nm architecture test chip now
273 in manufacture. This has involved a significant amount of cooperative
274 development among the applicants, and others beyond, and the development
275 of core supporting technology that this grant application can now
276 efficiently build upon.
277
278
279 We refer to other supporting technology sources further in this
280 application and whilst they are not the core team they will critically
281 contribute to the overall success. In particular, these groups can be
282 supported by NLnet, whose "Works for the Public Good" remit is 100%
283 compatible with the full transparency objectives (that the project's
284 participants are already committed to) which will help by providing
285 additional non-core-team development on an on-demand basis, on the back
286 of NLnet's already-trusted commitment to fulfil European Union objectives
287 under Grant Agreements No 825310 and 825322.
288
289
290 Additionally, Libre-SOC is working closely with the OpenPOWER Foundation
291 ISA Working Group Chair, having attended regular bi-weekly meetings for
292 over 18 months. As mentioned above, the entirety of our work of greater
293 than 3 years on this Vector Extension, SVP64, is entirely transparent
294 and open: https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/svp64/. Both NLnet
295 (and StandICT.eu through a proposal under consideration at the time of
296 writing) are supporting our efforts to submit the Draft SVP64 and its
297 subcomponents through the RFC (Request for Change) process being developed
298 by the OpenPOWER Foundation. For long-term stability and impact it is a
299 necessary prerequisite that Draft SVP64 become an official part of the
300 Power ISA: this decision is however down to the OpenPOWER Foundation
301 and requires considerable preparation and planning, which this Grant
302 will help support.
303
304
305 One huge benefit of Libre-SOC's core being Power ISA 3.0 Compliant is that
306 IBM contributed a huge patent pool through the OpenPOWER EULA. Compliant
307 Designs enjoy the protection of this patent pool. By contributing SVP64
308 to the Power ISA it falls under this same umbrella. Libre-SOC shall be
309 entering into an agreement with the OpenPOWER Foundation, here, as part
310 of the ISA RFC process. European businesses clearly benefit from the
311 long-term stability of this arrangement.
312
313
314 Whilst we clearly need, ultimately, to prove our design's power-efficiency
315 in silicon, we would however consider it unwise and extremely costly to
316 tape-out to Silicon without having gone through a proper early-evaluation
317 process, weeding out ineffective strategies and designs. To that end, we
318 learned from Jeff Bush's work on the Nyuzi 3D core to perform estimates
319 on power consumption and clock cycles. This is a highly-effective
320 feedback process that allows identification and targeting of the most
321 urgent (inefficient) areas, and we have taken it on-board and adopted
322 it throughout the project.
323
324
325 Part of that involves Peter Hsu's cavatools (another NLnet Grant) which
326 is (at present) a cycle-accurate Simulator for RISC-V. A (new) NLnet
327 Grant (not yet approved at the time of writing) is targeted at porting
328 cavatools to the Power ISA. This proposal would allow NLnet-funded work to
329 be extended into 3D, Video, DSP and other areas, to simulate (test) out
330 the feasibility, power-efficiency and effectiveness of different Custom
331 SVP64 Extensions to the Power ISA, long before they reach actual Silicon.
332
333
334 # 2 Impact
335
336
337 ## 2.1 Project’s pathways towards impact
338
339
340 The core of modern computing is the capability of the computational
341 element of the systems and the microprocessors they are based around.
342 Every twenty years there has been a significant evolutionary step in the
343 technical concepts employed by these microprocessor devices. For example
344 the last big step was the concept of RISC (Reduced Instruction Set)
345 processors. These developments have been driven by many forces from
346 cost of devices to limitations of the available technology of the time.
347
348
349 The Libre-SOC core is capable of becoming the next significant step
350 change in microprocessor speed, technology, and reduction in equivalent
351 computational power (Watts).
352
353
354 To illustrate this, we need to go back in history to early computing.
355 The first microprocessors were reliant on expensive core then bipolar
356 memory and even with the advent of DRAMS (Dynamic Random-Access Memories)
357 the primary focus of microprocessor processor core designs was to
358 optimise the minimal use of memory and focus on the power of the core.
359 Over time, memory became cheaper and reliance on memory to improve
360 processing increased with techniques like RAMdisk stores were developed.
361 This cheap memory also resulted in the evolution of RISC and similar
362 computing technology concepts. Today the problem is epitomized by speed,
363 where microprocessors have evolved to be much faster than the fastest
364 memories, and to increase performance, the state of the art computing
365 requires coming full-circle: once again minimising the use of memory,
366 which is now a log jam, and looking again at the core optimisation
367 solutions devised in the 1960’s by luminaries such as Seymour Cray.
368 The Libre-SOC core is an optimal adoption of this category of core
369 processor performance enhancement.
370
371
372 Libre-SOC has the benefit that its development relies on fundamental
373 research that has been known and proven for nearly 60 years. SVP64 has
374 input from and takes on-board lessons learned from NEC SX-Aurora, Cray-I,
375 Mitch Alsup's MyISA 66000, RISC-V RVV Vectors, MRISC32, AVX-512, ARM
376 SVE2, Qualcomm Hexagon and TI's DSP range, as well as other more esoteric
377 Micro-architectures such as Aspex's Array-String Processor and Elixent's
378 2D Grid design.
379
380
381 As a Hybrid (merged) CPU-VPU-GPU Micro-architecture (similar to
382 ICubeCorp's IC3128) there is a huge reduction in the complexity
383 of 3D Graphics and Video Driver and overall hardware. NVidia, ARM
384 (MALI), AMD, PowerVR, Vivante: these are all dual (ISA-incompatible)
385 architectures with staggering levels of hardware-software complexity.
386 Like ICubeCorp's design, Libre-SOC 3D and Video binaries are executed
387 directly on the actual main (one) core.
388
389
390 The end-result here is, if deployed in mass-volume products world-wide
391 including for European end-users of ubiquitous Computing devices, a
392 significant energy saving results on a massive scale, particularly in
393 battery-operated (mobile, tablet, laptop) appliances. Demonstrating this
394 however requires, ultimately, that we actually create real silicon,
395 and measure its performance and power consumption.
396
397
398 ## 2.2 Measures to maximise impact - Dissemination,
399 exploitation and communication
400
401
402 As the Libre-SOC core is the result of a Libre/Open Source project
403 by default all of our development work has been published for the last
404 four years. This was also a requirement of our EU funding through NLnet.
405 In addition we have undertaken a full program of conference presentations,
406 technology awareness activities and cooperation with key bodies such as
407 the OpenPOWER Foundation and OpenPOWER Members (Libre-SOC is participating
408 in a world-wide Open University Course about the OpenPOWER ISA, an
409 activity led by IBM). Examples:
410
411
412 * https://openpowerfoundation.org/events/openpower-summit-2020-north-america/
413 * https://openpowerfoundation.org/libre-soc-180nm-power-isa-asic-submitted-to-imec-for-fabrication/
414
415
416 Marie-Minerve Louerat (CNRS) and Jean-Paul Chaput's and Professor
417 Galayko's (Sorbonne Université LIP6 Lab) Academic Publications will
418 continue https://www.lip6.fr/actualite/personnes-fiche.php?ident=P109
419 https://www.lip6.fr/actualite/personnes-fiche.php?ident=P98
420 https://www.lip6.fr/actualite/personnes-fiche.php?ident=P230 as will
421 their continued Conference participation (example: FOSDEM 2021 coriolis2
422 https://av.tib.eu/media/52401?hl=coriolis2)
423
424
425 Luke Leighton also releases videos of his Libre-SOC talks on
426 youtube https://www.youtube.com/user/lkcl and a full list of all
427 conferences (past and present) are maintained on the Libre-SOC website
428 https://libre-soc.org/conferences/
429
430
431 The Libre-SOC bugtracker (where we track our TODO actions) is
432 public access (https://bugs.libre-soc.org), and the Mailing
433 lists are also public access (https://lists.libre-soc.org).
434 LIP6's alliance/coriolis2 mailing lists are also public access
435 (https://www-soc.lip6.fr/wws/info/alliance-users)
436
437
438 These are ongoing activities that actively encourage world-wide Open
439 Participation, and shall remain so indefinitely. We will continue to
440 grow these activities along with a commercial thread of publicity by RED
441 Semiconductor Ltd to publicise and determine product family opportunities
442 where RED Semiconductor Ltd will focus on potential product and market
443 development built upon the Libre-SOC core technology.
444
445
446 ## 2.3 Summary
447
448
449 ### Specific needs
450
451
452 Modern computing technology is designed in secrecy and released to
453 the market without the ability of the user base to vet or validate.
454 When problems arise it is usually due to “discovery” and usually
455 driven by technical curiosity or malice. What is clear is that to those
456 on the inside these problems were visible from the outset, however
457 time resource and unwillingness to explore (and unethical Commercial
458 pragmatism) has left these vulnerabilities open to be exploited. As a
459 general principle we have taken the view that any new design should be
460 open to review and able to be corrected (every design has some bugs)
461 before mass adoption and the inevitable loss and crisis.
462
463
464 In practical terms: as indicated in sections above there have
465 been a number of security incidents involving ubiquitous computing
466 devices, impacting millions to hundreds of millions of end-users,
467 world-wide. Qualcomm failed last year to provide adequate secure firmware,
468 leaving 40% of the entire world's Android smartphones vulnerable to
469 attack. With the majority of smartphones being "fire-and-forget" products
470 with non-upgradeable firmware, the end-user's only solution is to throw
471 away a perfectly good electronics product and purchase a new one.
472 For Intel products - all Intel products - the exact same thing has
473 occurred (Master Firmware Key, Spectre, Meltdown), but at an unfixable
474 hardware level, and there are no replacement Intel products that can be
475 purchased in the market to "fix" their fundamental design flaws.
476
477
478 Not only that, but all of the ubiquitous Computing products (Apple, Intel,
479 IBM, NVidia, AMD being the most well-known) are 100% non-EU-based. As far
480 as EU Digital Sovereignty is concerned, this is an extremely serious
481 and alarming situation, compounded by critical Foundries and know-how
482 to run those Foundries also not being part of a Sovereign European remit.
483
484
485 If that was not enough, Foundries and the Semiconductor Industry requires
486 NDAs that at the minimum prohibit full publication of Academic results,
487 stifling innovation and research, in turn driving up the cost for EU
488 businesses of the cost of ASIC products by creating artificial cost,
489 overhead and knowledge barriers.
490
491
492 The entire Computing and Semiconductor Industry needs a new approach.
493
494
495 Taking the initiative, the end goal of the Libre-SOC/RED Semiconductor
496 Ltd project is therefore to deliver high performance, security auditable,
497 supercomputer class computing devices to the market. As this is not
498 currently available it will prompt a step change in low power (Watts)
499 high performance computing. This will be achieved through:
500
501
502 * Energy/Power consumption measurement: we need to verify that performance/watt is lowered
503 * Draft SVP64 inclusion in Power ISA: this is needed to indicate "Official long-term Status"
504 * Auditability and Transparency: needed for end-users and EU businesses to trust the hardware.
505 * Power ISA 3.0 Interoperability: to leverage over 2 decades of existing business software tools.
506 * FPGA and Simulator demonstrators: to demonstrate feasibility of the HDL and the ISA
507 * VLSI toolchain and Cell Library: MPW Shuttle runs are needed to reach "Silicon-proven" status
508 * NLnet mini-grants: Effectively this is a "Reserve" budget for the Project, managed by NLnet
509
510
511 ### Dissemination, exploitation and Communication
512
513 Energy/Power consumption measurement:
514
515
516 Just as Jeff Bush showed by publishing Nyuzi Research at Conferences we
517 shall follow the same proven incremental performance/watt measures and
518 procedures, and publish the results.
519
520 https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7095803/
521
522
523 Draft SVP64 inclusion in Power ISA:
524
525
526 We are already working with the OpenPOWER ISA Working Group, and have
527 already begun publishing the Draft SVP64 Specification as it is being
528 developed. This will become official RFCs (Request for Changes) leading
529 to adoption. This includes development of Compliance Test Suites,
530 low-level libraries, compilers etc. which shall be announced through
531 Conferences, Press Releases (by RED Semiconductor Ltd, NLnet and the
532 OpenPOWER Foundation) and standard Libre/Open development practices
533 (Mailing list Announcements).
534
535
536 Auditability and Transparency:
537
538
539 Using symbiyosys we have already established a number of Formal
540 Correctness Proofs for the TRL 3 HDL used in the 180nm ASIC: This
541 needs to be extended right the way throughout all future work and be
542 published for other OpenPOWER Foundation Members and European businesses
543 to be able to independently verify the correct functionality of not just
544 Libre-SOC ASIC designs but other Power ISA 3.0 compliant designs as well.
545 Libre-SOC HDL and the associated Formal Correctness Proofs are published
546 as-they-are-developed in real-time and consequently dissemination is
547 implicit and automatic.
548
549
550 For the Silicon-level "EMF signature" measurement system Libre-SOC
551 will define and publish Reference Standards, test applications and
552 methodology documentation. RED Semiconductor Ltd will establish
553 and make available a "expected results" database for its commercial
554 products, as part of its Product Application Documentation, so that
555 European Businesses may independently verify that their commercial
556 off-the-shelf RED Semiconductor Ltd products have not been tampered with
557 at the Silicon level. (It is beyond the scope of this Grant however RED
558 Semiconductor Ltd will publish its overall Quality Standards Strategy).
559 In concept, the "EMF Signature" strategy is very similar to Hewlett
560 Packard's "Signature Analysis Strategy" that has been around since
561 1949. https://www.hpl.hp.com/hpjournal/pdfs/IssuePDFs/1977-05.pdf
562
563
564 Power ISA 3.0 Interoperability:
565
566
567 Standing on the shoulders of Giants (IBM and other OPF Members in
568 this case) is always a good starting point. The familiarity and
569 decades-long-term stability of the existing Power ISA 3.0 gives us a vast
570 existing-established user audience to whom we can provide training and
571 experience upgrades from an existing high-level of knowledge. In this
572 we already have the cooperation of IBM (through the OpenPOWER University
573 Education Course that Libre-SOC has helped to create - to be first run
574 from 18th-29th October 2021).
575
576
577 We will take the Interoperability further at a practical level
578 by developing a Libre/Open Power ISA 3.0 "Compliance Test
579 Suite" that meets the OpenPOWER Foundation documented standards
580 (https://openpowerfoundation.org/openpower-isa-compliance-definition/)
581 and make it entirely public and available to all without limit, and invite
582 other OpenPOWER Foundation Members to participate in its development
583 and use. This will then be, again, announced through Press Releases
584 and Mailing List as well as Conference Presentations.
585
586
587 FPGA and Simulator demonstrators:
588
589
590 Again: all new software tools created, and existing ones used and modified
591 to both develop and use resultant devices will be published as an inherent
592 part of the OpenSource real time publishing strategy.
593
594
595 VLSI Toolchain and Cell Library verification:
596
597
598 Again: the results of the development are, to date and in the future,
599 part of Libre/Open Source projects, and are therefore fully-visible, even
600 though they are Hardware-related we treat them as Open Source Software.
601 Conference presentations shall therefore be given, announcements on
602 Mailing Lists, as part of the overall communications strategy.
603
604
605 In this particular case however, the communication has to involve the
606 results of the MPW Shuttle runs, testing the actual ASICs, because it
607 is critical to demonstrate and communicate that the Cell Libraries are
608 Silicon-Proven and that the VLSI tools were capable of successfully
609 creating that Silicon-Proven layout. However the caveat here: anything
610 involving NDA'd material as required by the Foundry has to remain
611 confidential (note that this is not something that can be addressed
612 within the funding scope of this Call)
613
614
615 NLnet mini-grants:
616
617
618 NLnet's website has already been established with communication facilities
619 for around 19 years. NLnet are experienced in the effective evaluation
620 and management of small-scale Grants. They are also extremely familiar
621 with the work that we are doing, and with the detail of EU Grant
622 Procedures. Following those procedures they will add a new section to
623 the website for Grant Proposals that inherently meet the objectives of
624 this Call, and will use their existing communications infrastructure to
625 maximum benefit.
626
627
628 ### Expected results
629
630
631 Energy/Power consumption measurement:
632
633
634 We anticipate in the actual ASIC a significant measurable reduction in
635 performance/watt. Early predictions shall be based on Instruction-level
636 Simulations, but these need to be validated against the "real thing".
637 Due to the iterative process (outlined by Jeff Bush) we simply cannot
638 state exactly in advance the full magnitude of improvement that will
639 occur. The process itself, and how it was successfully applied, however,
640 will be considered to be part of the results themselves as part of
641 publications online and at Conferences.
642
643
644 Draft SVP64 inclusion in Power ISA:
645
646
647 The ultimate outcome here is that SVP64 becomes an officially-adopted
648 part of the OpenPOWER ISA, including a full compliance test suite,
649 documentation in a future revision of the official Power ISA Technical
650 Reference Manual. This process is, however, by necessity and being an
651 extremely important responsibility of the OpenPOWER Foundation (not of
652 any of the Participants), very slow and outside of our control, and may
653 take longer than the 36 month duration of the Grant to complete.
654
655
656 Therefore, the critical Milestone shall be our submission to the
657 OpenPOWER Foundation's ISA Working Group, as well as the development of
658 the required Compliance Test Suites. Both of these shall be published
659 under appropriate Libre/Open Licenses.
660
661
662 Auditability and Transparency:
663
664
665 We will have completed the Formal Correctness Proofs and published them
666 and the results of running them against the Libre-SOC HDL. We will also
667 have received the ASICs back from MPW Shuttle runs, which will contain
668 "EMF detection" wires routed strategically throughout it, and run the
669 pre-arranged unit tests that will create "Signatures" that shall be
670 recorded and published. This task is another critical reason why we
671 need actual Silicon, because only with an ASIC can we demonstrate the
672 viability of Signature Analysis (and similar) Strategies for ASICs.
673
674
675 Power ISA 3.0 Interoperability:
676
677
678 We will have completed an implementation of the Compliance Test
679 Suite as a Libre-Licensed application that can test multiple different
680 implementations: FPGA, Simulators (including our own as well as qemu), and
681 actual Silicon implementations including IBM POWER9, POWER10, Microwatt.
682 In addition we will have extended our own interoperability "Test API"
683 that allows comparisons of any arbitrary user-generated application
684 against any other arbitrary Power ISA compliant devices (whether FPGA,
685 Simulator, or Silicon): the OpenPOWER Compliance Test Suite implementation
686 shall simply be one of those applications.
687
688
689 We expect the Libre-SOC core to pass the full OpenPOWER ISA 3.0 Test
690 Suite, and the results to be published. We will also communicate with
691 OpenPOWER Foundation Members and make them aware of the existence of
692 the Test Suite and document how it may be used to test their own Power
693 ISA 3.0 implementations for Compliance.
694
695
696 FPGA and Simulator demonstrators:
697
698
699 Successful software simulation (emulation) of the augmented Power 3.0 ISA
700 with the Draft SVP64 Extensions, and successful demonstration of the HDL
701 of a multi-core SMP processor implementing the same, running in a large
702 FPGA (the size of the commercially-available FPGAs constraining what
703 is possible, here). Each shall help verify the other's correctness.
704 This will be a rapid iterative cycle of development and shall always
705 produce early results, feeding back to continued improvement.
706
707
708 VLSI Toolchain and Cell Library verification:
709
710
711 Multiple demonstrator 2-core ASICs and a proven path to an 8-core ASIC
712 (as we anticipate that the 8-core is likely to be beyond the scope of the
713 Grant due to Silicon costs). Where the 2-core ASIC MPW is multi-purpose
714 (proving the HDL, proving the VLSI toolchain, proving the Cell Library)
715 and shall use the FPGA and Simulations to check its correctness before
716 proceeding, the 8-core shall remain in FPGA only, due to cost, but a
717 VLSI Layout for the 8-core will still be attempted, in order to "test
718 the limits" of the VLSI tools. If funding was available we could take
719 the 8-core to full MPW rather than just to FPGA and GDS-II. As the 8
720 core Layout develops, if it (and the coriolis2 toolchain) progresses
721 to viability in the 36 months one option might be for RED Semiconductor
722 to apply for a EUR 500,000 NLnet mini-grant, payment terms to meet
723 requirements set by IMEC, from their budget allocated under this proposal.
724
725
726 NLnet mini-grants:
727
728
729 NLnet will receive and review potentially hundreds of small Grant
730 Proposals to ensure that they meet both the Call's Objectives and meet
731 NLnet's responsibilities as a Stichting / Foundation to fund "Works
732 for the Public Good". They shall request that the successful Grant
733 Applicant create Milestones and that Grant Applicant communicate those
734 results, thus requiring that it is the Grant Applicant that fulfils the
735 requirement herein. This process is already established and already in
736 effect under Grant Agreements No 825310 and 825322.
737
738
739 In the case of the Participants, if we need "reserve" budgets for
740 unforseen activities, we commit to following that exact same procedure
741 and thus also shall meet the Objectives of this Call (examples include
742 the MPW 8-core, above). We are aware that new technology beneficial to
743 the project may not be currently apparent but will be available within
744 the 36 months duration, and the methodology of funding it through NLnet
745 may prove optimal and a cost-effective use of EU funds, as NLnet would
746 (as they do now) only draw the budget down as needed.
747
748
749 ### Target groups
750
751
752 Due to our Open real time publishing of the Libre-SOC project, our work
753 can be forked by anyone at any time as a starting point or as a building
754 block for new projects, potentially taking the ideas and concepts in any
755 direction. These can be individuals or teams and they can be academics
756 or industrialists, the point being that if we trigger a step change in
757 the technology everyone should be able to benefit.
758
759
760 This is in addition to our own commercialisation plans.
761
762
763 Open Source methodology leads to Open standards which leads to Open
764 understanding and rapid adoption of new ideas in academia and industry.
765 The Eurocentric nature and benefit of the work should not be overlooked
766 either.
767
768
769 ### Outcomes
770
771
772 As the development chain includes elements of commercialisation, beyond
773 the immediate benefit to similar projects by the enhancement of the
774 Libre/Open Source tool chain and the educational uplift provided directly
775 and by example to other groups and European businesses and Educational
776 Establishments planning Software-to-Silicon projects, the most direct
777 outcome will be the availability, as devices in the market through RED
778 Semiconductor Ltd, of a new concept in supercomputing power that is also
779 completely security auditable and transparent.
780
781
782 We are already aware of a commercial venture formed recently, who are
783 aware and already benefiting from our work over the last three years to
784 improve the Software-to-Silicon toolchain, that is now focusing on the
785 finessing of the toolchain and its human interface to widen access to the
786 methodology and IMEC are using our architectural test chip, currently in
787 production, to validate and test their new cloud based chip design suite.
788 The outcomes are already happening and are bound to magnify.
789
790
791 ### Impacts
792
793
794 We believe the market demand for our step change in core architecture
795 thinking is so great it will force the world's leading microprocessor
796 companies to follow. The result will be a greater step change in the
797 performance and security of computer hardware across the world.
798
799
800 Additionally the confirmation of Silicon-proven Cell Libraries and
801 a European-led functional Libre-Licensed VLSI toolchain in lower
802 geometries will significantly reduce the cost of ASIC development for
803 European businesses and reduce to zero the risk of critical dependence
804 on non-Sovereign (geo-politically constrained) Commercial VLSI tools
805 and Cell Libraries.
806
807
808 # 3 Quality and efficiency of the implementation
809
810 Work Packages:
811
812
813 1. NLnet
814 2. SVP64 Standards
815 3. Power ISA Simulator and Compliance Test Suite
816 4. Compilers and Libraries
817 5. Enhancement of Libre-SOC HDL
818 6. EMF Signature Hardware security
819 7. Cell Libraries
820 8. Improve Coriolis2 for smaller geometries
821 9. VLSI Layout, Tape-outs and ASIC testing
822 10. Project Management
823 11. Helix GPS Application
824
825
826 # 3.1 Work plan and resources
827
828 [[!img 2021-10-19_09-50.png size="550px" ]]
829
830 Tables for section 3.1
831
832
833 Table 3.1a: List of work packages
834
835
836 |Wp# |Wp Name |Lead # |Lead Part# Name |Pe Months|Start |End |
837 |----- |------------- |------------ |--------- |--- |----- |--------- |
838 |1 |NLnet |5 |NLnet |18 |1 |36 |
839 |2 |SVP64 |2 |Libre-SOC |21 |1 |36 |
840 |3 |Sim/Test |2 |Libre-SOC |64 |1 |18 |
841 |4 |Compilers |1 |RED |32 |1 |36 |
842 |5 |HDL |2 |Libre-SOC |193 |1 |36 |
843 |6 |EMF Sig |4 |4/CNRS |84 |1 |18 |
844 |7 |Cells |2 |Libre-SOC |109 |1 |24 |
845 |8 |Coriolis2 |3 |3/SU |338 |1 |36 |
846 |9 |Layout |3 |3/SU |220 |8 |36 |
847 |10 |Mgmt, Fin, Legal |1 |RED |185 |1 |36 |
848 |11 |Helix GPS Cor. |6 |Helix |248 |1 |36 |
849 | | | |Total months |1512 | | |
850
851 ## 1. NLnet
852
853 Table 3.1b(1)
854
855 |Work Package Number |1 |
856 | ---- | -------- |
857 |Lead beneficiary |NLnet |
858 |Title |NLnet mini-grants |
859 |Participant Number |5 |
860 |Short name of participant |NLnet |
861 |Person months per participant |18 |
862 |Start month |1 |
863 |End month |36 |
864
865
866 Objectives:
867
868
869 To manage the people who put in supplementary (by timescale) proposals
870 intended to support the core objectives of our proposal, ensuring that
871 those proposals also honour and meet the objectives outlined in the
872 original call:
873
874 https://ec.europa.eu/info/funding-tenders/opportunities/portal/screen/opportunities/topic-details/horizon-cl4-2021-digital-emerging-01-01
875
876
877 This will allow us to address and deploy new ideas and concepts not
878 immediately available to us at the time of this submission, and have
879 them properly vetted by an Organisation both familiar with our work,
880 and already trusted by the EU to fulfil the same role for other EU Grants.
881
882
883 Description of work:
884
885
886 These descriptions effectively mirror the light-weight grant mechanism
887 NLnet manages for the NGI research and development calls (EU Grants
888 825310 and 825322) and does not deviate from those pre-established
889 procedures except to define the context of the work to be carried out
890 by the Grant Recipient to fall within the criteria defined by this call
891 (HORIZON-CL4-2021-DIGITAL-EMERGING-01-01) not those of the previous Grants
892
893
894 * To include on the NLnet website a dedicated Call for mini-grant (EUR 50,000) Proposals, meeting the criteria of this existing Call (HORIZON-CL4-2021-DIGITAL-EMERGING-01-01) where the wording shall be written by NLnet and approved by the EU.
895 * To analyse and vet the Proposals to ensure that they match the criteria, through a multi-stage process including validating appropriateness to the Libre-SOC Project and running each application through an Independent Review by the EU.
896 * To notify successful Applicants, to ensure that they sign a Memorandum of Understanding with attached pre-agreed Milestones, and to fulfil Requests for Payment on 100% successful completion of those same pre-agreed Milestones.
897 * To produce Audit and Transparency Reports and to engage the services of Auditors to ensure compliance.
898
899
900 Deliverables:
901
902
903 Again these deliverables are no different from NLnet's existing
904 deliverables to the EU under Grant Agreements 825310 and 825322
905
906
907 * 1.1. A functioning Call-for-Proposals on the NLnet website.
908 * 1.2. Inclusion of the new CfP within the existing NLnet infrastructure
909 * 1.3. Progress Reports and Independent Audit Reports to the EU
910
911
912 ## 2. SVP64 Standards, RFC submission to OPF ISA WG
913
914
915 Table 3.1b(2)
916
917
918 |Work Package Number |2 |
919 | ---- | -------- |
920 |Lead beneficiary |Libre-SOC |
921 |Title |SVP64 Standards, RFC submission to OPF ISA WG |
922 |Participant Number |2 |
923 |Short name of participant |Libre-SOC |
924 |Person months per participant |21 |
925 |Start month |1 |
926 |End month |36 |
927
928
929 Objectives:
930
931
932 To advance Draft SVP64 Standards, to work with the OpenPOWER Foundation
933 ISA Working Group to comply with deliverable requirements as defined
934 by the OPF ISA WG within their Request For Change (RFC) Process, and to
935 deliver them.
936
937
938 Description of work:
939
940
941 * Extend Draft SVP64 into other areas necessary for fulfilment of this Call (including Zero-Overhead Loop Control)
942 * Prepare SVP64 Standards Documentation for RFC Submission, including identifying appropriate subdivisions of work.
943 * Create presentations and explanatory material for OpenPOWER Foundation ISA WG Members to help with their Review Process
944 * Complete OPF ISA WG RFC submission requirements and submit the RFCs (Note: Compliance Test Suites are also required but are part of Work Package 3)
945 * Publish the results of the decision by the ISA WG (whether accepted or not) and adapt to feedback if necessary
946 * Repeat for all portions of all SVP64 Standards.
947
948
949 Deliverables:
950
951
952 Note: some of these deliverables may not yet be determined due to
953 the OpenPOWER Foundation having not yet finalised and published its
954 procedures, having not yet completed their Legal Review. In addition,
955 although we can advise and consult with them, it will be the OPF ISA
956 WG who decides what final subdivisions of SVP64 are appropriate (not
957 the Participants). This directly impacts and determines what the actual
958 Deliverables will be: They will however fit the following template:
959
960
961 * 2.1. Publish report on appropriate subdivisions of SVP64 subdivisions into multiple distinct OPF RFCs
962 * 2.2. Publish presentations and explanatory materials to aid in the understanding of SVP64 and its value
963 * 2.3. Attend Conferences to promote SVP64 and its benefits
964 * 2.4. Complete the documentation and all tasks required for each SVP64 RFC and submit them to the OPF
965 * 2.5. For each RFC, publish a report on the decision and all other permitted information that does not fall within the Commercial Confidentiality Requirements set by the OpenPOWER Foundation (these conditions are outside of our control).
966
967
968 ## 3. Power ISA Simulator and Compliance Test Suite
969
970
971 Table 3.1b(3)
972
973
974 |Work Package Number |3 |
975 | ---- | -------- |
976 |Lead beneficiary |Libre-SOC |
977 |Title |Power ISA Simulator and Compliance Test Suite |
978 |Participant Number |2 |1 |
979 |Short name of participant |Libre-SOC |RED |
980 |Person months per participant |32 |32 |
981 |Start month |1 |
982 |End month |18 |
983
984
985 Objectives:
986
987
988 To advance the state-of-the-art in high-speed (near-real-time)
989 hardware-cycle-accurate ISA Simulators to include the Power ISA and the
990 SVP64 Draft Vector Extensions, and to create Test Suites and Compliance
991 Test Suites with a view to aiding and assisting OpenPOWER Foundation
992 Members including other European businesses and Academic Institutions
993 to be able to check the interoperability and compliance of their Power
994 ISA designs, and to have a stable base from which to accurately and
995 cost-effectively test out experimental energy-efficient and performance
996 advancements in computing, in close to real-time, before committing to
997 actual Silicon.
998
999
1000 Description of work:
1001
1002
1003 1. Supplement the work under NLnet "Assure" Grant No 2021-08-071 (part of EU Grant no 957073) to further advance a cavatools port to the Power ISA 3 with newer Draft SVP64 features not already covered by NLnet 2021-08-071 (Note: this particular NLnet Grant has not yet been approved at the time of writing)
1004 2. Advancement of the Hardware-Cycle-Accuracy for Out-of-Order Execution simulation in cavatools, and the addition of other appropriate Hardware models.
1005 3. Addition of other relevant Libre-SOC Draft Power ISA Extensions in cavatools for 3D, Video, Cryptography and other relevant Extensions.
1006 4. Advancement of the Libre-SOC (TRL 3/4) "Test API" to other Simulators, HDL Simulators and existing ASICs (IBM POWER 9/10) and designs (Microwatt)
1007 5. Implement Compliance Test Suite suitable for Libre-SOC according to OpenPOWER Foundation requirements (for Work Package 2: SVP64 Standards)
1008 6. Develop an SVP64 Compliance Test Suite suitable for submission to the relevant OpenPOWER Workgroup, to a level that meets their requirements.
1009
1010
1011 Deliverables:
1012
1013
1014 * 3.1. Delivery of an updated version of cavatools with new Draft SVP64 features
1015 * 3.2. Delivery of a version of cavatools with hardware-accurate models including Out-of-Order Execution
1016 * 3.3. Delivery of additional co-simulation and co-execution options to the Libre-SOC "Test API" including at least IBM POWER 9 (and POWER 10 if access can be obtained), and Microwatt.
1017 * 3.4. Delivery of an implementation of a Compliance Test Suite that meets the OpenPOWER Foundation's criteria
1018 * 3.5. Delivery of the documentation and an implementation of a Compliance Test Suite for Draft SVP64 Extensions for submission to the relevant OpenPOWER Foundation Workgroup.
1019 * 3.6. Public reports on all of the above at Conferences and on the Libre-SOC website.
1020
1021
1022 ## 4. Compilers and Software Libraries
1023
1024
1025 Table 3.1b(4)
1026
1027 |Work Package Number |4 |
1028 | ---- | -------- |
1029 |Lead beneficiary |RED Semiconductor Ltd |
1030 |Title |Compilers and Software Libraries |
1031 |Participant Number |1 |2 |
1032 |Short name of participant |RED |Libre-SOC |
1033 |Person months per participant |20 |12 |
1034 |Start month |1 |
1035 |End month |36 |
1036
1037
1038 Objectives:
1039
1040
1041 To create usable prototype compilers including the advanced Draft SVP64
1042 Vector features suitable for programmers using C, C++ and other High-level
1043 Languages, and to provide the base for the 3D Vulkan Drivers (IR -
1044 Intermediate Representation). To advance the 3D Vulkan Drivers with Draft
1045 SVP64 support. To add support for SVP64 Vectors into low-level software
1046 such as libc6, u-boot, the Linux Kernel and other critical infrastructure
1047 necessary for general-purpose computing software development.
1048
1049
1050 Description of work:
1051
1052
1053 * Feasibility Study of each of the Compilers and Libraries
1054 * Draft SVP64 Vector support in the gcc compiler
1055 * Draft SVP64 Vector support in the llvm compiler
1056 * Advancement of the Kazan 3D Vulkan Driver including using Draft SVP64
1057 * Advancement of the MESA3D Vulkan Driver including using Draft SVP64
1058 * Draft SVP64 Vector and Libre-SOC core support in low-level software including: libc6, u-boot, Linux Kernel.
1059
1060
1061 Deliverables:
1062
1063
1064 * 4.1. Feasibility report on the viability and scope of achievable work within the available respective budgets for each deliverable
1065 * 4.2. Prototype compilers for each of gcc, llvm, Kazan and MESA3D meeting the scope of achievable work defined in the Feasibility study, delivered in source code form under appropriate Libre-Licenses and including unit test bench source code demonstrating successfully meeting the objectives
1066 * 4.3. Prototype ports of libc6, u-boot, Linux Kernel and other software demonstrated to meet the scope of achievable work, delivered in source code form under appropriate Libre-Licenses with unit tests.
1067 * 4.4. Public reports on the above and presentations at suitable Conferences
1068
1069
1070 ## 5. Enhancement of Libre-SOC HDL
1071
1072
1073 Table 3.1b(5)
1074
1075
1076 |Work Package Number |5 |
1077 | ---- | -------- |
1078 |Lead beneficiary |Libre-SOC |
1079 |Title |Enhancement of Libre-SOC HDL |
1080 |Participant Number |2 |1 |3 |
1081 |Short name of participant |Libre-SOC |RED |3/SU |
1082 |Person months per participant |94 |83 |27 |
1083 |Start month |1 |
1084 |End month |36 |
1085
1086
1087 Objectives:
1088
1089
1090 To create progressively larger processor designs, implementing the
1091 Power ISA 3, augmented by Draft SVP64 Cray-style Vectors, in order to
1092 act as real-world test cases for coriolis2 VLSI.
1093
1094
1095 Description of work:
1096
1097
1098 1. Review and potentially revise the existing Libre-SOC SIMD ALU HDL library, for optimisation and gate-level efficiency.
1099 2. Review and revise the existing Libre-SOC IEEE754 Floating-Point HDL Library, for the same, to scale up to meet commercial performance/watt in targeted 3D GPU workloads.
1100 3. Implement Out-of-order Multi-issue Execution Engine using Mitch Alsup's advanced Scoreboard design
1101 4. Implement Speculative Execution Models and Checkers to ensure resistance from Spectre, Meltdown and other hardware security attacks
1102 5. Implement advanced 3D and Video Execution Engines and Pipelines (Texture caches, Z-Buffers etc.)
1103 6. Integrate advanced "Zero-Overhead-Loop-Control" (TRL9) features deployed successfully by STMicroelectronics into the Libre-SOC Core
1104 7. Implement fully-automated "Pinmux" and Peripheral / IRQ Fabric Generator suitable for System-on-a-Chip semi-automated HDL.
1105 8. Implement large-scale Memory Management Unit (MMU), IOMMU, SMP-aware L1 Caches and L2 Cache suitable for multi-core high-performance Vector throughput
1106 9. Formal Correctness Proofs and Modular Unit Tests for all HDL.
1107 10. Implement Verification, Validation and Simulations for HDL
1108
1109
1110 Deliverables:
1111
1112
1113 * 5.1. Advanced HDL SIMD Library with appropriate documentation, unit tests and Formal Correctness Proofs, suitable for general-purpose wide adoption outside of Libre-SOC's use-case, under appropriate Libre Licenses
1114 * 5.2. Advanced HDL IEEE754 Library with appropriate documentation, unit tests and Formal Correctness Proofs, , suitable for general-purpose wide adoption outside of Libre-SOC's use-case, under appropriate Libre Licenses
1115 * 5.3. Advanced Libre-SOC SMP-capable Core, capable of multi-issue Out-of-Order Execution and implementing the Power ISA and Draft SVP64 Custom Extensions, with full unit tests and appropriate Formal Correctness Proofs.
1116 * 5.4. "Peripheral" HDL including PHYs+Controllers including Pinmux / Fabric Inter-connect Autogenerator
1117 * 5.5. Verification, Validation and Simulation of HDL
1118 * 5.6. Appropriate publications and reports on all of the above at Conferences and on the Libre-SOC website.
1119
1120
1121 ## 6. EMF Signature Hardware security
1122
1123
1124 Table 3.1b(6)
1125
1126
1127 |Work Package Number |6 |
1128 | ---- | -------- |
1129 |Lead beneficiary |CNRS |
1130 |Title |EMF Signature Hardware security |
1131 |Participant Number |3 |4 |2 |1 |
1132 |Short name of participant |3/SU |4/CNRS |Libre-SOC |RED |
1133 |Person months per participant |35 |11 |13 |25 |
1134 |Start month |1 |
1135 |End month |18 |
1136
1137
1138 Objectives:
1139
1140
1141 To create a Electro-Magnetic "Signature" system that threads all the
1142 way through an ASIC VLSI layout that is sensitive to localised signal
1143 conditions, without adversely impacting the ASIC's behavioural integrity.
1144 For the "Signature" system to be sufficiently sensitive to change its
1145 output depending what program the ASIC is running at the time, in real
1146 time. To integrate the "threading" into the coriolis2 VLSI toolchain
1147 such that the "Signature" system's deployment is fully automatic.
1148 To demonstrate its successful functionality through a small (low-cost,
1149 large geometry) MPW test runs prior to deployment in the larger ASIC at
1150 lower geometries.
1151
1152
1153 Description of work:
1154
1155
1156 * Feasibility study of different types of EMF "Signature" systems (including Hewlett Packard's 1949 technique) and the design of the test methodology.
1157 * Design the Mixed Analog / Digital Cells required
1158 * Design and implement an automated integration and layout module in coriolis2 to deploy the Signature System on any ASIC.
1159 * Create a suitable VLSI layout with an existing small example alliance-check-toolkit HDL design, with the Signature System threaded through it, and test the resultant MPW ASIC
1160 * Work with the Libre-SOC and VLSI Layout team to deploy the "Signature" system in the smaller geometry layout, ensuring for security reasons that only authorised access to the System is allowed, and help test the resultant MPW ASIC.
1161 * Publish the results in an Academic Paper as well as present at Conferences
1162
1163
1164 Deliverables:
1165
1166
1167 * 6.1. Feasibility and test methodology Report
1168 * 6.2. Mixed Analog / Digital Cells for the Signature System
1169 * 6.3. SPICE Simulation report on the expected behaviour of the "Signature" system
1170 * 6.4. coriolis2 module for automated deployment of Signature System within any ASIC
1171 * 6.5. small ASIC in large geometry and test report on the results
1172 * 6.6. large Libre-SOC ASIC in small geometry with Signature System and test report on its behaviour
1173 * 6.7. Academic Paper on the whole system.
1174
1175
1176 ## 7. Cell Libraries
1177
1178
1179 Table 3.1b(7)
1180
1181
1182 |Work Package Number |7 |
1183 | ---- | -------- |
1184 |Lead beneficiary |Libre-SOC |
1185 |Title |Cell Libraries for smaller geometries |
1186 |Participant Number |3 |2 |1 |
1187 |Short name of participant |3/SU |Libre-SOC |Red |
1188 |Person months per participant |33 |13 |63 |
1189 |Start month |1 |
1190 |End month |24 |
1191
1192
1193 Objectives:
1194
1195
1196 To create, simulate, and test in actual silicon the low-level Cell
1197 Libraries in multiple geometries needed for advancing Libre/Open VLSI,
1198 using this proposals' other Work Packages as a test and proving platform,
1199 with a view to significantly reducing the cost for European Businesses in
1200 the creation of ASICs, for European Businesses and Academic Institutions
1201 to be able to publish the results of Security Research in full without
1202 impediment of Foundry NDAs, and to aid and assist in meeting the Digital
1203 Sovereignty Objectives outlined in EPRS PE 651,992 of July 2020.
1204
1205
1206 Description of work:
1207
1208
1209 Please Note: Work Packages 7, 8 and 9 are highly interdependent and
1210 will cross fertilise their results in an iterative manner as the design
1211 complexity increases, starting from smaller rapid-prototype test ASIC
1212 layouts and progressing to full designs.
1213
1214
1215 * Analog PLL, ADC and DAC Cells
1216 * Differential-pair Transmit / Receiver Cell
1217 * LVDS (current-driven) Transmit / Receiver Cell
1218 * Advanced GPIO IO Pad Cell (w/ Schottky etc.)
1219 * Clock Gating Cell
1220 * SR NAND Latch Cell
1221 * Standard Cells (MUX, DFF, XOR, etc)
1222 * SERDES Transmit / Receiver Cell (Gigabit / Multi-Gigabit)
1223 * Other Cells to be developed as required for other Work Packages
1224
1225
1226 Deliverables:
1227
1228
1229 * 7.1. Design of all Cells needed
1230 * 7.2. SPICE Model Simulations of all Cells
1231 * 7.3. Creation of Test ASIC Layouts and submission for MPW Shuttles in various geometries
1232 * 7.4. Generate and publish reports (Academic and others) and disseminate results
1233
1234
1235 ## 8. Improve Coriolis2 for smaller geometries
1236
1237
1238 Table 3.1b(8)
1239
1240
1241 |Work Package Number |8 |
1242 | ---- | -------- |
1243 |Lead beneficiary |Sorbonne Université (LIP6 Lab) |
1244 |Title |Improve Coriolis2 for smaller geometries |
1245 |Participant Number |3 |2 |1 |
1246 |Short name of participant |3/SU |Libre-SOC |RED |
1247 |Person months per participant |112 |128 |98 |
1248 |Start month |1 |
1249 |End month |36 |
1250
1251
1252 Objectives:
1253
1254
1255 To improve coriolis2 for lower geometries (to be decided on evaluation)
1256 such that it performs 100% DRC-clean (Design Rule Check) GDS-II files
1257 at the chosen geometry for the chosen Foundry, for each ASIC.
1258
1259
1260 Note: Commercial "DRC" will confirm that the GDS-II layout meets timing,
1261 electrical characteristics, ESD, spacing between tracks, sizes of vias
1262 etc. and confirms that the layout will not damage the Foundry's equipment
1263 during Manufacture.
1264
1265
1266 Description of work:
1267
1268
1269 Please Note: Work Packages 7, 8 and 9 are highly interdependent and
1270 will cross fertilise their results in an iterative manner as the design
1271 complexity increases, starting from smaller rapid-prototype test ASIC
1272 layouts and progressing to full designs.
1273
1274
1275 * The main focus (absolute priority) should be put on timing closure
1276 that becomes critical in the lower nodes. And if we can only achieve
1277 this alone, it will be a great success. That entails:
1278 - Improve the clock tree (change from H-Tree to a dynamically
1279 balanced one).
1280 - Improve High Fanout Net Synthesis.
1281 - Prevent hold violations.
1282 - Resizing of the gates (adjust power).
1283 - Logical resynthesis along the critical path, if needed.
1284 - Add a whole timing graph infrastructure.
1285 * To be able to implement those features has deep consequences on P&R:
1286 - We must have an "estimator" of the timing in the wires
1287 (first guess: Elmore).
1288 - The placer algorithm SimPL needs to be upgraded/rewritten
1289 to take on more additional constraints (adding and resizing
1290 gates on the fly).
1291 * Better power supply. Control of IR-drop.
1292 * Protection against cross-coupling.
1293 * During all that process, we must work on a stable database.
1294 So correct speed bottleneck only in algorithms built upon it,
1295 not the DB itself. For this kind of design, it is acceptable
1296 to run a full day on a high end computer.
1297 * Start a parallel project about to redesign the database (providing a backward
1298 compatibility API to Hurricane). But we must not make depend the timing closure
1299 on the database Rewrite.
1300
1301
1302 Deliverables:
1303
1304
1305 The key deliverables are measured by the successful passing of DRC
1306 (Design Rule Checks) against Commercial VLSI tools (Mentor, Synopsis), and
1307 is so critically inter-dependent on all components working 100% together
1308 that there can only be one deliverable, here, per ASIC Layout. Completion
1309 of sub- and sub-sub-tasks shall however be recorded in an easily-auditable
1310 Standard Libre/Open Task Tracking Database (gitlab, bugzilla) and
1311 appropriate structured progress reports created. As is the case with
1312 all Libre/Open Projects, "continuous" delivery is inherent through the
1313 ongoing publication of all source code in real-time. Full delivery is
1314 expected around 30 months.
1315
1316
1317 * 8.1. Coriolis2 VLSI improvements
1318 * 8.2. multiple small test ASIC layouts, to be added to LIP6 alliance-check-toolkit, potentially to be taped out and act as a preliminary test of prototype Cell Libraries
1319 * 8.3. large 2-core ASIC layout to be specifically taped-out in an MPW Shuttle Run
1320 * 8.4. Very large 8-core ASIC layout, not necessarily to be taped-out (MPW) due to size and cost, designed to push the limits.
1321 * 8.5. Academic and other reports
1322
1323
1324 ## 9. VLSI Layout, Tape-outs and ASIC testing
1325
1326
1327 Table 3.1b(9)
1328
1329
1330 |Work Package Number |9 |
1331 | ---- | -------- |
1332 |Lead beneficiary |Sorbonne Université (LIP6 Lab) |
1333 |Title |VLSI Layout, Tape-outs and ASIC testing |
1334 |Participant Number |3 |2 |1 |
1335 |Short name of participant |3/SU |Libre-SOC |RED |
1336 |Person months per participant |64 |94 |62 |
1337 |Start month |8 |
1338 |End month |36 |
1339
1340
1341 Objectives:
1342
1343
1344 To create 100% DRC-clean VLSI Layouts, to perform the necessary
1345 Validation of HDL as to its correctness at the transistor level, to
1346 submit them for MPW Shuttle Runs at the appropriate geometry through IMEC,
1347 and to test the resultant ASICs. This to confirm that the advancements
1348 to the entire coriolis2 VLSI Toolchain is in fact capable of correctly
1349 producing ASICs at both smaller geometries than it can already do,
1350 and at much larger sizes than it can already handle. To publish reports
1351 that serve to inform European Businesses and Academic Institutions of
1352 the results such that, if successful, those Businesses will potentially
1353 save hugely on the cost of development of ASICs, and the dependence
1354 on geo-political commercial tools is mitigated and the EU's Digital
1355 Sovereignty Objectives met.
1356
1357
1358 Description of work:
1359
1360
1361 Please Note: Work Packages 7, 8 and 9 are highly interdependent and
1362 will cross fertilise their results in an iterative manner as the design
1363 complexity increases, starting from smaller rapid-prototype test ASIC
1364 layouts and progressing to full designs.
1365
1366
1367 * To create VLSI Layouts using Libre-SOC HDL
1368 * To prepare and submit GDS-II Files to IMEC under appropriate MPW Shuttle Runs
1369 * To develop a Test jig, including custom test socket and supporting test software for each ASIC and to produce an appropriate report
1370 * To publish Academic Papers and other materials, on websites and at Conferences, on the results of each Tape-out.
1371
1372
1373 Deliverables:
1374
1375
1376 Note that due to the strong inter-dependence, these are the same Deliverables as Work Package 8.
1377
1378
1379 * 9.1. Multiple small test ASIC layouts, to be added to LIP6 alliance-check-toolkit, potentially to be taped out and act as a preliminary test of prototype Cell Libraries
1380 * 9.2. Large 2-core ASIC layout to be specifically taped-out in an MPW Shuttle Run
1381 * 9.3. Very large 8-core ASIC layout, not to be taped-out due to size and cost, designed to push the limits.
1382 * 9.4. Academic and other reports
1383
1384
1385 ## 10. Management
1386
1387
1388 Table 3.1b(10)
1389
1390
1391 |Work Package Number |10 |
1392 | ---- | -------- |
1393 |Lead beneficiary |RED |
1394 |Title |VLSI Layout, Tape-outs and ASIC testing |
1395 |Participant Number |1 |3 |2 |5 |
1396 |Short name of participant |RED |3/SU |Libre-SOC |NLnet |
1397 |Person months per participant |116 |12 |15 |42 |
1398 |Start month |1 |
1399 |End month |36 |
1400
1401
1402 Objectives:
1403
1404
1405 * Achieve competent management and control of the project
1406 * Account for activities and spending, and generate reports
1407 * Oversee legal relationships within the group and with external organisations
1408
1409
1410 Description of work:
1411
1412
1413 With a multi discipline project across five organisations it is
1414 essential that there is management and direction, as well as adequate
1415 training of new individuals introduced within each team. Each individual
1416 organisation will be responsible for their own activities with a central
1417 focus being maintained by RED Semiconductor Ltd and Libre-SOC jointly.
1418
1419
1420 Deliverables:
1421
1422
1423 * 10.1. Management, Administration and Training team
1424 * 10.2. Reporting
1425
1426
1427 ## 11. Helix GPS Correlator
1428
1429
1430 Table 3.1b(11)
1431
1432
1433 |Work Package Number |11 |
1434 | ---- | -------- |
1435 |Lead beneficiary |Helix |
1436 |Title | |
1437 |Participant Number |1 |6 | |
1438 |Short name of participant |RED |Helix | |
1439 |Person months per participant |136 |112 | |
1440 |Start month |1 |
1441 |End month |36 |
1442
1443
1444 Objectives:
1445
1446
1447 To focus the Libre-SOC 2-core ASIC onto a real-word customer
1448 requirement: GPS. To integrate both an FPGA as an early prototype and
1449 the final ASIC into a Demonstrator connecting to Helix's high-accuracy
1450 GPS Antenna Arrays. To confirm functionality, and confirm energy savings
1451 (performance/watt) compared to other solutions.
1452
1453 This programme will enable Helix to research, specify and ultimately
1454 realise, test and deploy a PNT processor single-chip that enables
1455 encrypted millimetre precision GNSS position and <nanosecond time data
1456 to be delivered from today’s GNSS constellations, and to be ready for
1457 next generation LEO (low earth orbit) PNT constellations being planned.
1458
1459 Helix’s comprehensive anti-jamming/spoofing and self-correcting
1460 capabilities will be designed into the same chip, enabling single-die
1461 total solution to accurate/resilient PNT, allowing Helix to integrate
1462 the electronics functionality into its antennas to create an ultra-
1463 compact ultra-low-power PNT solution that can be utilised globally
1464 in the next wave of applications like autonomous vehicles, urban air
1465 mobility, micro-transportation, and critical communications network
1466 synchronisation where market size runs into the tens or hundreds of
1467 million units per year.
1468
1469 Description of work:
1470
1471
1472 1. Scoping Report by Helix to research a Technical Architecture and the full Mathematical Requirements
1473 2. Creating from Scoping an agreed definition of the GPS ASIC requirement, by Helix, to be given to Libre-SOC and RED.
1474 3. Software, Hardware, Documentation, FPGA Prototypes, Test and QA for the Libre-SOC 2-core to be focussed on GPS as a real-word customer Application.
1475 4. Software Development and Hardware compatibility design through the GPS Antenna Arrays, and testing to confirm functionality in both FPGA and ASIC. To confirm reduction in performance/watt of the ASIC.
1476 5. Reporting
1477
1478
1479 Deliverables:
1480
1481
1482 * 11.1 Scoping Report
1483 * 11.2 NRE: Adapt 2-core to working demonstrator GPS Application
1484 * 11.3 Helix Management of NRE
1485 * 11.4 Helix Internal Engineering for GPS Antenna connectivity and testing.
1486 * 11.5 Reports
1487
1488
1489 ## Table 3.1c List of Deliverables
1490
1491 Essential deliverables for effective project monitoring.
1492
1493 |Deliv. #|Deliverable name |Wp # | Lead name |Type |Diss. |Del Mon |
1494 |------ |----------- |------ | ------- |------ |----------- | ---- |
1495 |1.3 |Reports |1 |5/NLnet |R |PU |12/24/36 |
1496 |2.4 |SVP64 RFCs |2 |2/Libre-SOC |R |PU |multiple |
1497 |3.4 |Compliance |3 |1/RED |R |PU |24 |
1498 |3.6 |Reports |3 |1/RED |R |PU |24/36 |
1499 |4.1 |Feasibility |4 |1/RED |R |PU |3 |
1500 |4.4 |Reports |4 |1/RED |R |PU |12/24/36 |
1501 |5.3 |Libre-SOC Core |5 |2/Libre-SOC |OTHER|PU |18 |
1502 |5.5 |HDL Validation |5 |2/Libre-SOC |R |PU |18 |
1503 |5.6 |Reports |5 |2/Libre-SOC |R |PU |12/24/36 |
1504 |6.1 |Feasibility |6 |4/CNRS |R |PU |3 |
1505 |6.7 |Academic Paper |6 |4/CNRS |R |PU |36 |
1506 |7.2 |SPICE Models |7 |4/CNRS |DATA |PU |12 |
1507 |7.4 |Academic Papers |7 |4/CNRS |R |PU |36 |
1508 |8.3 |2-core readiness |8 |3/SU |R |PU |15 |
1509 |8.5 |Academic Papers |8 |3/SU |R |PU |36 |
1510 |9.2 |2-core GDS-II |9 |3/SU |OTHER|PU |26 |
1511 |9.4 |Academic Papers |9 |3/SU |R |PU |36 |
1512 |10.2 |Reporting |10 |1/RED |R |PU |12/24/36 |
1513 |11.2 |Requirements |11 |6/Helix |R |PU |12 |
1514 |11.5 |Reporting |11 |6/Helix |R |PU |12/24/36 |
1515
1516 ## Table 3.1d: List of milestones
1517
1518 List of Milestones:
1519
1520 |M/stone #|Milestone name |WP# |Due date |Means of verification |
1521 |------ | ------ | ----- | ------ | ------ |
1522 |2.4 |SVP64 RFCs |2 |multiple |OpenPOWER Foundation ISA WG |
1523 |3.1 |cavatools/SVP64 |3 |12 |Deliverable 3.5 (Compliance tests) |
1524 |4.2 |compilers |4 |24 |Deliverable 4.3 (software tests) |
1525 |5.3 |Libre-SOC Core |5 |18 |Deliverable 5.5 (HDL Validation) |
1526 |6.2 |Signature Cells |6 |12 |Deliverables 6.3 / 6.5(SPICE, ASIC) |
1527 |7.1 |Cell designs |7 |12 |Deliverables 7.2 / 7.3 (SPICE, ASIC) |
1528 |8.1 |coriolis2 |8 |18 |Deliverables 8.2-8.4 |
1529 |9.1 |coriolis2 ongoing|9 |12 |Deliverables 9.2-9.3 (ASICs) |
1530 |6.7 |Academic report |6 |36 |self-verifying (peer review) |
1531 |7.4 |Academic report |7 |36 |self-verifying (peer review) |
1532 |8.5 |Academic report |8 |36 |self-verifying (peer review) |
1533
1534
1535 ## Table 3.1e: Critical risks for implementation
1536
1537
1538 Risk level: (i) likelihood L/M/H, (ii) severity: Low/Medium/High
1539
1540
1541 |Description of risk |Wp# |Proposed risk-mitigation measures |
1542 |----------------- | ----- | ------ |
1543 |loss of personnel |1-11 |L/H key-man insurance |
1544 |4/CNRS availability |7 |H/H Additional personnel from 1/RED, at market rates |
1545 |Unforeseen Technical |2-11 |L/H 5/NLnet "reserve" mini-grant budget (Wp#1) |
1546 |Geopolitical adversity |4,6-9,11 |M/H Use lower geometries, or switch Foundry (via IMEC) |
1547 |Access to Foundries |4,6-9,11 |M/M Use IMEC as a Sub-contractor |
1548 |Pandemic |1-11 |L/H current mitigation continued (isolation of teams) |
1549 | | | |
1550
1551
1552
1553
1554 ## Table 3.1f: Summary of staff effort
1555
1556
1557 |Part#/name |Wp1 |Wp2 |Wp3 |Wp4 |Wp5 |Wp6 |Wp7 |Wp8 |Wp9 |Wp10 |Wp11 |Total |
1558 |------------- |----- |----- |----- |----- |----- |----- |----- |----- |----- |----- |----- |----- |
1559 |1/RED | | |32 |20 |94 |25 |63 |98 |62 |116 |136 |646 |
1560 |2/Libre-SOC | |21 |32 |12 |72 |13 |13 |128 |94 |15 | |400 |
1561 |3/SU | | | | |27 |35 |33 |112 |64 |12 | |283 |
1562 |4/CNRS | | | | | |11 | | | | | |11 |
1563 |5/NLnet |18 | | | | | | | | |42 | |60 |
1564 |6/Helix | | | | | | | | | | |112 |112 |
1565 |Totals |18 |21 |64 |32 |193 |84 |109 |338 |220 |185 |248 |1512 |
1566
1567
1568 ## 3.1g Subcontracting
1569
1570 These are the subcontracting costs for the participants
1571
1572 ### Table 3.1g: 1/RED ‘Subcontracting costs’ items
1573
1574 |Cost EUR |description and justification |
1575 | ----- | ------ |
1576 |60000 |feasibility and scope studies for compilers |
1577 |1500000 |gcc compiler (1) |
1578 |1500000 |llvm compiler (1) |
1579 |500000 |Kazan Vulkan 3D compiler (1) |
1580 |500000 |MESA 3D Vulkan compiler (1) |
1581 |400000 |libc6, u-boot, linux kernel software (1) |
1582 |50000 |smaller (180/130 nm) ASIC MPWs (IMEC) (2) |
1583 |280000 |larger (low geometry) ASIC MPWs (IMEC) (2) |
1584 |4790000 | total |
1585
1586 (1) These software and compiler costs are to develop extremely specialist
1587 software, where it is Industry-standard normal to spend EUR 25 million
1588 to achieve TRL (9). Contracting of an extremely small pool of specialist
1589 Companies (Embecosm Gmbh, Vrull.EU) is therefore Industry-standard normal
1590 practice. All of the Compiler / Software Contracting shall be with
1591 Companies that are part of the European Union.
1592
1593 (2) IMEC is one of Europe's leading Sub-contractors for ASIC MPW Shuttle
1594 runs, and they handle the NDA relationships with Foundries that are almost
1595 impossible to otherwise establish.
1596
1597 https://europractice-ic.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Pricelist-EUROPRACTICE-General-MPW_8.pdf
1598
1599 ### Table 3.1g: 5/NLnet ‘Subcontracting / Sub-Grant costs’ items
1600
1601
1602 |Cost EUR |description and justification |
1603 | ----- | ------ |
1604 |5000000 |NLnet "mini-grants" |
1605
1606
1607 ## Purchase costs
1608
1609 These are the purchasing costs for the participants
1610
1611 ### Table 3.1h: 1/RED Purchase Costs
1612
1613
1614 | |Cost EUR |Justification |
1615 | ------ | ----- | ------ |
1616 |travel / subst |48000 |3yr World-wide travel to conferences/meetings/interviews |
1617 |equipment |140000 |High-end Servers for Layouts, High-end FPGAs for testing |
1618 |Other/Good/work/Svc. |90000 |Legal/Accountancy/Insurance +prof. business services |
1619 |remaining purch. cst. | | |
1620 |Total |278000 | |
1621
1622
1623 ### Table 3.1h: 2/Libre-SOC Purchase costs
1624
1625
1626 | |Cost EUR |Justification |
1627 | ------ | ----- | ------ |
1628 |travel / subst |48000 | |
1629 |equipment |90000 |High-end Servers for Layouts, FPGA Boards for testing |
1630 |Other/Good/work/Svc. |12000 |I.T. Management of Libre-SOC Server |
1631 |remaining purch. cst. | | |
1632 |Total |150000 | |
1633
1634
1635 ### Table 3.1h: 3/SU Purchase costs
1636
1637
1638 | |Cost EUR |Justification |
1639 | ------ | ----- | ------ |
1640 |travel / subst | | |
1641 |equipment |100000 |High-end Servers for Layouts, Simulations |
1642 |Other/Good/work/Svc. |10500 |Office Administration |
1643 |remaining purch. cst. | | |
1644 |Total |110500 | |
1645
1646
1647 ### Table 3.1h: 5/NLnet
1648
1649
1650 | |Cost EUR |Justification |
1651 | ------ | ----- | ------ |
1652 |travel / subst |48000 |3yr EU-wide travel to conferences and meetings |
1653 |equipment | | |
1654 |Other/Good/work/Svc. | | |
1655 |remaining purch. cst. | | |
1656 |Total |48000 | |
1657
1658
1659 # 3.2 Capacity of participants and consortium as a whole
1660
1661
1662 The majority of the consortium have been working together for over
1663 three years on the precursor technical development of the Libre-SOC core
1664 project, the evolution of which is the lynch-pin and "proving-ground"
1665 of this grant application. The public record of their achievements
1666 and team involvement can be found in their public Open Source record
1667 https://libre-soc.org/.
1668
1669 The Libre-SOC team are internationally experienced software professionals
1670 who have strong familiarity with state of the art software to silicon
1671 technologies. They have been supported by two of the co-applicants labs
1672 CNRS and LIP6 (The applicants being Sorbonne Université and Affiliated
1673 Entity, CNRS), and many other European based technology development
1674 groups, which each provide key elements of the project from specialist
1675 programs such as coriolis2, alliance, HITAS, YAGLE and more, and the
1676 manufacturing expertise of Imec. Their versatility and experience with
1677 Libre/Open Source Software also means that they can adapt to unforeseen
1678 circumstances and can navigate the ever-changing and constantly-evolving
1679 FOSS landscape with confidence.
1680
1681 The above is critically important in light of the requirement to
1682 demonstrate access to critical infrastructure, resources and the
1683 ability to fulfil: with the sole exception of NDA'd Foundry PDKs
1684 (Physical Design Kits), the entirety of this project is Libre/Open
1685 Source, both in the tools it utilises, components that it uses, and
1686 the results that are generated. With there being no restriction on
1687 the availability of Libre/Open Source software needed to complete the
1688 project, the Participants correspondingly have no impediment. We also
1689 have a proven strategy to deal with the NDA's: a "parallel track" where
1690 at least one Participant (Sorbonne Université, LIP6 Lab) has signed
1691 TSMC Foundry NDAs, and consequently there is no impediment there, either.
1692
1693 Sorbonne Université (SU) is a multidisciplinary, research-intensive
1694 and world class academic institution. It was created on January 1st
1695 2018 as the merger of two first-class research intensive universities,
1696 UPMC (University Pierre and Marie Curie) and Paris-Sorbonne. Sorbonne
1697 Université is now organized with three faculties: humanities, medicine
1698 and science each with the wide-ranging autonomy necessary to conduct
1699 its ambitious programs in both research and education. SU counts 53,500
1700 students, 3,400 professor-researchers and 3,600 administrative and
1701 technical staff members. SU is intensively engaged in European research
1702 projects (163 FP7 projects and 195 H2020 projects). Its computer
1703 science laboratory, LIP6, is internationally recognized as a leading
1704 research institute.
1705
1706 LIP6 is a Joint Research Unit of both SU (Sorbonne Université)
1707 and CNRS. Both entities invest resources within LIP6 so CNRS is then
1708 an Affiliated Entity linked to SU. According to SU-CNRS agreement
1709 regarding LIP6, SU, as a full partner, manages the grant for its
1710 Affiliated Entity, CNRS.
1711
1712 RED Semiconductor Ltd has been established as a commercialisation vehicle,
1713 sharing the Libre principles of the core Libre-SOC team and bringing
1714 Semiconductor industry commercial management and technology experience.
1715 This includes the founders of two successful semiconductor companies
1716 and a public company chairman. There is also a cross directorship of
1717 Luke Leighton (of Libre-SOC) giving the company an extensive technology
1718 market and leadership experience.
1719
1720 NLnet is a Netherlands based public benefit organisation that brings
1721 to the table over 35 years of European internet history and well over
1722 two decades of unique real-world experience in funding and supporting
1723 bottom up internet infrastructure projects around the world - engaging
1724 some of the best independent researchers and developers. NLnet has
1725 funded essential work on important infrastructure parts of the internet,
1726 from the technologies with which the answers from the DNS root of the
1727 internet can now be trusted, all the way up to key standards for email
1728 security, transport layer security, email authenticity, and a lot more
1729 - on virtually every layer of the internet, from securing core routing
1730 protocols to browser security plugins, from firmware security to open
1731 source LTE networks.
1732
1733 Most recently NLnet is hosting the NGI0 Discovery, NGI0 PET and NGI
1734 Assure open calls as part of the Next Generation Internet research and
1735 development initiative, of which NLnet supports 300+ open source software,
1736 open hardware and open standards projects to build a more resilient,
1737 sustainable and trustworthy internet.
1738
1739 NLnet, a Stichting / Foundation, has been Libre-SOC’s funding source
1740 from the beginning and fundamentally understands our technology and
1741 direction of travel. As well as providing augmentation under existing
1742 EU Grants funding for technology opportunities that we will benefit from
1743 but are yet to be identified, they are a fundamental sounding board that
1744 will be invaluable to the project moving forward.
1745
1746 Helix develops antennas and electronic systems for PNT (Position,
1747 Navigation, Timing) applications. Markets include defence/security,
1748 asset tracking, autonomous systems/vehicles/drones/robotics, critical
1749 infrastructure (network sync – 5G, V2X, etc), fintech (blockchain
1750 timestamping) and many other industrial applications.
1751
1752 Helix solutions defend against the vulnerabilities and threats to
1753 global dependency on GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite Systems), where
1754 disruption to services would cost the world’s major economies £10s
1755 of Billions every single day. Our patented technology enables filtering
1756 antennas to mitigate multi-path, RF and electrical interference and
1757 reduce the impact of jamming and spoofing, meaning that the receiver
1758 electronics becomes a streamlined high performance, low-power/low-cost
1759 correlator/processor to deliver highly accurate and resilience x,y,z
1760 and time data as its output. We are developing sophisticated anti-
1761 jamming/spoofing hardware that uses targeted nulling to ignore jamming,
1762 and enable system-level resilience. This capability can be co-designed
1763 with the receiver chipset for ultimate resilience.
1764
1765 Regarding the extreme high-end computing resources necessary to complete
1766 the exceptionally-demanding task of VLSI development and Layout, we
1767 find that high-end modern laptops and desktop computers (with 64 to
1768 256 GB of RAM) are perfectly adequate. However in the event that our
1769 immediately-accessible computing resources are not adequate, both Sorbonne
1770 Université (LIP6 and CNRS) and Libre-SOC qualify for access to Fed4Fire
1771 (https://www.fed4fire.eu/- grant agreement No 732638) which gives us
1772 direct access to large clusters (100+) high-end servers. Additionally,
1773 we are specifying some of these high-end computers in our budget, and
1774 the software to run on them is entirely Libre-Licensed and within our
1775 combined experience to deploy.
1776
1777 We have established that Embecosm Gmbh and Vrull.eu are some of the
1778 world's leading experts in Compiler Technology. We will put out to
1779 tender a Contract with an initial evaluation phase, followed by a TRL
1780 4/5 Research phase for the prerequisite compilers (gcc, llvm, Kazan,
1781 MESA3D) necessary to support the core design work.
1782
1783 The OpenPOWER Foundation is a part of the Linux Foundation,
1784 and is directly responsible for the long-term protection
1785 and evolution of the Power ISA. Members include IBM, Google,
1786 NVidia, Raptor Engineering, University of Oregon and many more.
1787 https://openpowerfoundation.org/membership/current-members/.
1788
1789 The Chair of the newly-formed ISA Working Group is Paul Mackerras, and
1790 the Technical Chair is Toshaan Bharvani. Both of these people have
1791 been kindly attending bi-weekly meetings with the Libre-SOC Team for
1792 over 18 months, and we have kept them apprised of ongoing developments,
1793 particularly with the Draft SVP64 ISA Extension. They are both going
1794 out of their way to regularly advise us on how to go about a successful
1795 RFC Process for SVP64, and we deeply appreciate their support.
1796
1797 Helix Technology's involvement, as a potential customer and potential
1798 user of the Libre-SOC technology, will give focus to the deliverable of
1799 the project. They have world-leading expertise in Antenna Technology,
1800 and in the mathematics behind the Signal Processing required for
1801 GNSS/GPS. We have deliberately selected them to ensure the ambition of
1802 our overall project.
1803
1804 We therefore have a cohesive cooperative team of experience from concept
1805 to customer product and a supporting cast of specialist technical support
1806 that are an established practiced team.
1807
1808 As a last point: the creation of the teams for this project is critical
1809 for RED Semiconductors Limited and Libre-SOC. We have the benefit of
1810 having the core of an International Technology Headhunter Research
1811 Team amongst the directors of RED Semiconductor Limited, giving us
1812 the capability to ensure the project is fully manned in the required
1813 timescales without the need to externally resource recruitment services,
1814 and this is included in RED’s management manpower.
1815