correction
[crowdsupply.git] / updates / 023_2020mar26_decoder_emulator_started.mdwn
1 So many things happened since the last update they actually need to go
2 in the main update, even in summary form. One big thing:
3 [Raptor CS](https://www.raptorcs.com/)
4 sponsored us with remote access to a Monster spec'd TALOS II Workstation!
5
6 # Introduction
7
8 Here's the summary (if it can be called a summary):
9
10 * [An announcement](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/004995.html)
11 that we got the funding (which is open to anyone - hint, hint) resulted in
12 at least three people reaching out to join the team. "We don't need
13 permission to own our own hardware" got a *really* positive reaction.
14 * New team member, Jock (hello Jock!) starts on the coriolis2 layout,
15 after Jean-Paul from LIP6.fr helped to dramatically improve how coriolis2
16 can be used. This resulted in a
17 [tutorial](https://libre-riscv.org/HDL_workflow/coriolis2/) and a
18 [huge bug report discussion](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=178)
19 * Work has started on the
20 [POWER ISA decoder](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=186),
21 verified through
22 [calling GNU AS](https://git.libre-riscv.org/?p=soc.git;a=blob;f=src/soc/decoder/test/test_decoder_gas.py;h=9238d3878d964907c5569a3468d6895effb7dc02;hb=56d145e42ac75626423915af22d1493f1e7bb143) (yes, really!)
23 and on a mini-simulator
24 [calling QEMU](https://git.libre-riscv.org/?p=soc.git;a=blob;f=src/soc/simulator/qemu.py;h=9eb103bae227e00a2a1d2ec4f43d7e39e4f44960;hb=56d145e42ac75626423915af22d1493f1e7bb143)
25 for verification.
26 * Jacob's simple-soft-float library growing
27 [Power FP compatibility](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=258)
28 and python bindings.
29 * A Conference call with OpenPOWER Foundation Director, Hugh, and Timothy
30 Pearson from RaptorCS has been established every two weeks.
31 * The OpenPOWER Foundation is also running some open
32 ["Virtual Coffee"](https://openpowerfoundation.org/openpower-virtual-coffee-calls/)
33 weekly round-table calls for anyone interested, generally, in OpenPOWER
34 development.
35 * Tim sponsors our team with access to a Monster Talos II system with a
36 whopping 128 GB RAM. htop lists a staggering 72 cores (18 real
37 with 4-way hyperthreading).
38 * [Epic MegaGrants](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005262.html)
39 reached out (hello!) to say they're still considering our
40 request.
41 * A marathon 3-hour session with [NLNet](http://nlnet.nl) resulted
42 in the completion of the
43 [Milestone tasks list(s)](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/buglist.cgi?component=Milestones&list_id=567&resolution=---)
44 and a
45 [boat-load](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/thread.html)
46 of bug reports to the list.
47 * Immanuel Yehowshua is participating in the Georgia Tech
48 [Create-X](https://create-x.gatech.edu/) Programme, and is establishing
49 a Public Benefit Corporation in Atlanta, as an ethical vehicle for VC
50 Funding.
51 * A [Load/Store Buffer](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=216)
52 design and
53 [further discussion](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=257)
54 including on
55 [comp.arch](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comp.arch/cbGAlcCjiZE)
56 inspired additional writeup
57 on the
58 [6600 scoreboard](https://libre-riscv.org/3d_gpu/architecture/6600scoreboard/)
59 page.
60 * [Public-Inbox](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=181) was
61 installed successfully on the server, which is in the process of
62 moving to a [new domain name](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=182)
63 [Libre-SOC](http://libre-soc.org)
64 * Build Servers have been set up with
65 [automated testing](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005364.html)
66 being established
67
68 Well dang, as you can see, suddenly it just went ballistic. There's
69 almost certainly things left off the list. For such a small team there's
70 a heck of a lot going on. We have an awful lot to do, in a short amount
71 of time: the 180nm tape-out is in October 2020 - only 7 months away.
72
73 With this update we're doing something slightly different: a request
74 has gone out [to the other team members](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005428.html)
75 to say a little bit about what each of them is doing. This also helps me
76 because these updates do take quite a bit of time to write.
77
78 # NLNet Funding announcement
79
80 An announcement went out
81 [last year](https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/libreplanet-discuss/2019-09/msg00170.html)
82 that we'd applied for funding, and we got some great responses and
83 feedback (such as "don't use patented AXI4"). The second time, we
84 sent out a "we got it!" message and got some really nice private and
85 public replies, as well as requests from people to join the team.
86 More on that when it happens.
87
88 # Coriolis2 experimentation started
89
90 Jock, a really enthusiastic and clearly skilled and experienced python
91 developer, has this to say about coriolis2:
92
93 As a humble Python developer, I understand the unique status and
94 significance of the Coriolis project, nevertheless I cannot help
95 but notice that it has a huge room for improvement. I genuinely hope
96 that my participation in libre-riscv will also help improve Coriolis.
97
98 This was the short version, with a much more
99 [detailed insight](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005478.html)
100 listed here which would do well as a bugreport. However the time it would
101 take is quite significant. We do have funding available from NLNet,
102 so if there is anyone that would like to take this on, under the supervision
103 of Jean-Paul at LIP6.fr, we can look at facilitating that.
104
105 One of the key insights that Jock came up with was that the coding style,
106 whilst consistent, is something that specifically has to be learned, and,
107 as such, being contrary to PEP8 in so many ways, creates an artificially
108 high barrier and learning curve.
109
110 Even particularly experienced cross-language developers such as
111 myself tend to be able to *read* such code, but editing it, when
112 commas separating list items are on the beginning of lines, results in
113 syntax errors automatically introduced *without thinking* because we
114 automatically add them *at the end* because it looks like one is missing.
115
116 This is why we insisted on PEP8 in the
117 [HDL workflow](http://libre-riscv.org/HDL_workflow) document.
118
119 Other than that: coriolis2 is actually extremely exciting to work with.
120 Anyone who has done manual PCB layout will know quite how much of a relief
121 it is to have auto-routing: this is what coriolis2 has by the bucket-load,
122 *as well* as auto-placement. We are looking at half a *million* objects
123 (Cells) to place. Without an auto-router / auto-placer this is just a
124 flat-out impossible task.
125
126 The first step was to
127 [learn and adapt coriolis2](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=178)
128 which was needed to find out how much work would be involved, as much as
129 anything else, in order to be able to accurately assign the fixed budgets
130 to the NLNet milestones. Following on from that, when Jock joined,
131 we needed to work out a compact way to express the
132 [layout of blocks](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=217#c44)
133 and he's well on the way to achieving that.
134
135 Some of the pictures from coriolis2 are
136 [stunning](bugs.libre-riscv.org/attachment.cgi?id=29). This was an
137 experimental routing of the IEEE754 FP 64-bit multiplier. It took
138 5 minutes to run, and is around 50,000 gates: as big as most silicon
139 ASICs that have formerly been done with Coriolis2, and 50% of the
140 practical size that can be handed in one go to the auto-place/auto-router.
141
142 Other designs using coriolis2 have been of the form where the major "blocks"
143 (such as FPMUL, or Register File) are laid-out automatically in a single-level
144 hierarchy, followed by full and total manual layout from that point onwawrds,
145 in what is termed in the industry as a "Floorplan".
146 With around 500,000 gates to do and many blocks being repeated, this approach
147 is not viable for us. We therefore need a *two* level or potentially three
148 level hierarchy.
149
150 [Explaining this](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=178#c146)
151 to Jean-Paul was amusing and challenging. Much bashing of heads against
152 walls and keyboards was involved. The basic plan: rather than have
153 coriolis2 perform an *entire* layout, in a flat and all-or-nothing fashion,
154 we need a much more subtle fine-grained approach, where *sub-blocks* are
155 laid-out, then *included* at a given level of hierarchy as "pre-done blocks".
156
157 Save and repeat.
158
159 This apparently had never been done before, and explaining it in words was
160 extremely challenging. Through a massive hack (actively editing the underlying
161 HDL files temporarily in between tasks) was the only way to illustrate it.
162 However once the lightbulb went on, Jean-Paul was able to get coriolis2's
163 c++ code into shape extremely rapidly, and this alone has opened up an
164 *entire new avenue* of potential for coriolis2 to be used in industry
165 for doing much larger ASICs. Which is precisely the kind of thing that
166 our NLNet sponsors (and the EU, from the Horizon 2020 Grant) love. hooray.
167 Now if only we could actually go to a conference and talk about it.
168
169 # POWER ISA decoder and Simulator
170
171 TODO
172
173 # simple-soft-float Library and POWER FP emulation
174
175 The
176 [simple-soft-float](https://salsa.debian.org/Kazan-team/simple-soft-float)
177 library is a floating-point library Jacob wrote with the intention
178 of being a reference implementation of IEEE 754 for hardware testing
179 purposes. It's specifically designed to be written to be easier to
180 understand instead of having the code obscured in pursuit of speed:
181
182 * Being easier to understand helps prevent bugs where the code does not
183 match the IEEE spec.
184 * It uses the [algebraics](https://salsa.debian.org/Kazan-team/algebraics)
185 library that Jacob wrote since that allows using numbers that behave
186 like exact real numbers, making reasoning about the code simpler.
187 * It is written in Rust rather than highly-macro-ified C, since that helps with
188 readability since operations aren't obscured, as well as safety, since Rust
189 proves at compile time that the code won't seg-fault unless you specifically
190 opt-out of those guarantees by using `unsafe`.
191
192 It currently supports 16, 32, 64, 128-bit FP for RISC-V, along with
193 having a `DynamicFloat` type which allows dynamically specifying all
194 aspects of how a particular floating-point type behaves -- if one wanted,
195 they could configure it as a 2048-bit floating-point type.
196
197 It also has Python bindings, thanks to the awesome
198 [PyO3](https://pyo3.rs/) library for writing Python bindings in Rust.
199
200 We decided to write simple-soft-float instead
201 of extending the industry-standard [Berkeley
202 softfloat](http://www.jhauser.us/arithmetic/SoftFloat.html) library
203 because of a range of issues, including not supporting Power FP, requiring
204 recompilation to switch which ISA is being emulated, not supporting
205 all the required operations, architectural issues such as depending on
206 global variables, etc. We are still testing simple-soft-float against
207 Berkeley softfloat where we can, however, since Berkeley softfloat is
208 widely used and highly likely to be correct.
209
210 simple-soft-float is [gaining support for Power
211 FP](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=258), which requires
212 rewriting a lot of the status-flag handling code since Power supports a
213 much larger set of floating-point status flags and exceptions than most
214 other ISAs.
215
216 Thanks to RaptorCS for giving us remote access to a Power9 system,
217 since that makes it much easier verifying that the test cases are correct
218 (more on this below).
219
220 API Docs for stable releases of both
221 [simple-soft-float](https://docs.rs/simple-soft-float) and
222 [algebraics](https://docs.rs/algebraics) are available on docs.rs.
223
224 One of the really important things about these libraries: they're not
225 specifically coded exclusively for Libre-SOC: like softfloat-3 itself
226 (and also like the [IEEE754 FPU](https://git.libre-riscv.org/?p=ieee754fpu.git))
227 they're intended for *general-purpose* use by other projects. These are
228 exactly the kinds of side-benefits for the wider Libre community that
229 sponsorship, from individuals, Foundations (such as NLNet) and Companies
230 (such as Purism and Raptor CS) brings.
231
232 # OpenPOWER Conference calls
233
234 TODO
235
236 # OpenPower Virtual Coffee Meetings
237
238 The "Virtual Coffee Meetings", announced
239 [here](https://openpowerfoundation.org/openpower-virtual-coffee-calls/)
240 are literally open to anyone interested in OpenPOWER (if you're strictly
241 Libre there's a dial-in method). These calls are not recorded, it's
242 just an informal conversation.
243
244 What's a really nice surprise is finding
245 out that Paul Mackerras, whom I used to work with 20 years ago, is *also*
246 working on OpenPOWER, specifically
247 [microwatt](https://github.com/antonblanchard/microwatt), being managed
248 by Anton Blanchard.
249
250 A brief discussion led to learning that Paul is looking at adding TLB
251 (Virtual Memory) support to microwatt, specifically the RADIX TLB.
252 I therefore pointed him at the same resource
253 [(power-gem5)](https://github.com/power-gem5/gem5/tree/gem5-experimental)
254 that Hugh had kindly pointed me at, the week before, and did a
255 [late night write-up](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005445.html)
256
257 My feeling is that these weekly round-table meetings are going to be
258 really important for everyone involved in OpenPOWER. It's a community:
259 we help each other.
260
261 # Sponsorship by RaptorCS with a TALOS II Workstation
262
263 TODO http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005291.html
264
265 # Epic Megagrants
266
267 Several months back I got word of the existence of Epic Games' "Megagrants".
268 In December 2019 they announced that so far they've given
269 [USD $13 million](https://www.unrealengine.com/en-US/blog/epic-megagrants-reaches-13-million-milestone-in-2019)
270 to 200 recipients, so far: one of them, the Blender Foundation, was
271 [USD $1.2 million](https://www.blender.org/press/epic-games-supports-blender-foundation-with-1-2-million-epic-megagrant/)!
272 This is an amazing and humbling show of support for the 3D Community,
273 world-wide.
274
275 It's not just "games", or products specifically using the Unreal Engine:
276 they're happy to look at anything that "enhances Libre / Open source"
277 capabilities for the 3D Graphics Community.
278
279 A full hybrid 3D-capable CPU-GPU-VPU which is fully-documented not just in
280 its capabilities, that [documentation](http://libre-riscv.org) and
281 [full source code](http://git.libre-riscv.org) kinda extends
282 right the way through the *entire development process* down to the bedrock
283 of the actual silicon - not just the firmware, bootloader and BIOS,
284 *everything* - in my mind it kinda qualifies in way that can, in some
285 delightful way, be characterised delicately as "complete overkill".
286
287 Interestingly, guys, if you're reading this: Tim, the CEO of RaptorCS
288 informs us that you're working closely with his team to get the Unreal
289 Engine up and running on the POWER architecture? Wouldn't that be highly
290 amusing, for us to be able to run the Unreal Engine on the Libre-SOC,
291 given that it's going to be POWER compatible hardware, as a test,
292 first initially in FPGA and then in 18-24 months, on actual silicon, eh?
293
294 So, as I mentioned
295 [on the list](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005262.html)
296 (reiterating what I put in the original application), we're happy with
297 USD $25,000, we're happy with USD $10 million. It's really up to you guys,
298 at Epic Games, as to what level you'd like to see us get to, and how fast.
299
300 USD $600,000 for example we can instead of paying USD $1million to a proprietary
301 company to license a DDR3 PHY for a limited one-time use and only a 32-bit
302 wide interface, we can contract SymbioticEDA to *design* a DDR3 PHY for us,
303 which both we *and the rest of the worldwide Silicon Community can use
304 without limitation* because we will ask SymbioticEDA to make the design
305 (and layout) libre-licensed, for anyone to use.
306
307 USD 250,000 pays for the mask charges that will allow us to do the 40nm
308 quad-core ASIC that we have on the roadmap for the second chip. USD
309 $1m pays for 28nm masks (and so on, in an exponential ramp-up). No, we
310 don't want to do that straight away: yes we do want to go through a first
311 proving test ASIC in 180nm, which, thanks to NLNet, is already funded.
312 This is just good sane sensible use of funds.
313
314 Even USD $25,000 helps us to cover things such as administration of the
315 website (which is taking up a *lot* of time) and little things that we
316 didn't quite foresee when putting in the NLNet Grant Applications.
317
318 Lastly, one of the conditions as I understood it from the Megagrants
319 process is that the funds are paid in "stages". This is exactly
320 what NLNet does for (and with) us, right now. If you wanted to save
321 administrative costs, there may be some benefit to having a conversation
322 with the [30-year-old](https://nlnet.nl/foundation/history/)
323 NLNet Charitable Foundation. Something to think about?
324
325 # NLNet Milestone tasks
326
327 Part of applying for NLNet's Grants is a requirement to create a list
328 of tasks, each of which is assigned a budget. On 100% completion of the task,
329 donations can be sent out. With *six* new proposals accepted, each of which
330 required between five (minimum) and *ninteen* separate and distinct tasks,
331 a call with Michiel and Joost turned into an unexpected three hour online
332 marathon, scrambling to write almost fifty bugreports as part of the Schedule
333 to be attached to each Memorandum of Understanding. The mailing list
334 got a [leeetle bit busy](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005003.html)
335 right around here.
336
337 Which emphasised for us the important need to subdivide the mailing list into
338 separate lists (below).
339
340 # Georgia Tech CREATE-X
341
342 TODO
343
344 # LOAD/STORE Buffer and 6600 design documentation
345
346 A critical part of this project is not just to create a chip, it's to
347 *document* the chip design, the decisions along the way, for both
348 educational, research, and ongoing maintenance purposes. With an
349 augmented CDC 6600 design being chosen as the fundamental basis,
350 [documenting that](https://libre-riscv.org/3d_gpu/architecture/6600scoreboard/)
351 as well as the key differences is particularly important. At the very least,
352 the extremely simple and highly effective hardware but timing-critical
353 design aspects of the circular loops in the 6600 were recognised by James
354 Thornton (the co-designer of the 6600) as being paradoxically challenging
355 to understand why so few gates could be so effective. Consequently,
356 documenting it just to be able to *develop* it is extremely important.
357
358 We're getting to the point where we need to connect the LOAD/STORE Computation
359 Units up to an actual memory architecture. We've chosen
360 [minerva](https://github.com/lambdaconcept/minerva/blob/master/minerva/units/loadstore.py)
361 as the basis because it is written in nmigen, works, and, crucially, uses
362 wishbone (which we decided to use as the main Bus Backbone a few months ago).
363
364 However, unlike minerva, which is a single-issue 32-bit embedded chip,
365 where it's perfectly ok to have one single LD/ST operation per clock,
366 and not only that but to have that operation take a few clock cycles,
367 to get anything like the level of performance needed of a GPU, we need
368 at least four 64-bit LOADs or STOREs *every clock cycle*.
369
370 For a first ASIC from a team that's never done a chip before, this is,
371 officially, "Bonkers Territory". Where minerva is doing 32-bit-wide
372 Buses (and does not support 64-bit LD/ST at all), we need internal
373 data buses of a minimum whopping **2000** wires wide.
374
375 Let that sink in for a moment.
376
377 The reason why the internal buses need to be 2000 wires wide comes down
378 to the fact that we need, realistically, 6 to eight LOAD/STORE Computation
379 Units. 4 of them will be operational, 2 to 4 of them will be waiting
380 with pending instructions from the multi-issue Vectorisation Engine.
381
382 We chose to use a system which expands the first 4 bits of the address,
383 plus the operation width (1,2,4,8 bytes) into a "bitmap" - a byte-mask -
384 that corresponds directly with the 16 byte "cache line" byte enable
385 columns, in the L1 Cache. These bitmaps can then be "merged" such
386 that requests that go to the same cache line can be served *in the
387 same clock cycle* to multiple LOAD/STORE Computation Units. This
388 being absolutely critical for effective Vector Processing.
389
390 Additionally, in order to deal with misaligned memory requests, each of those
391 needs to put out *two* such 16-byte-wide requests (see where this is going?)
392 out to the L1 Cache.
393 So, we now have eight times two times 128 bits which is a staggering
394 2048 wires *just for the data*. There do exist ways to get that down
395 (potentially to half), and there do exist ways to get that cut in half
396 again, however doing so would miss opportunities for merging of requests
397 into cache lines.
398
399 At that point, thanks to Mitch Alsup's input (Mitch is the designer of
400 the Motorola 68000, Motorola 88120, key architecture on AMD's Opteron
401 Series, the AMD K9, AMDGPU and Samsung's latest GPU), we learned that
402 L1 cache design critically depends on what type of SRAM you have. We
403 initially, naively, wanted dual-ported L1 SRAM and that's when Staf
404 and Mitch taught us that this results in half-duty rate. Only
405 1-Read **or** 1-Write SRAM Cells give you fast enough (single-cycle)
406 data rates to be useable for L1 Caches.
407
408 Part of the conversation has wandered into
409 [why we chose dynamic pipelines](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005459.html)
410 as well as receiving that
411 [important advice](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2020-March/005354.html)
412 from both Mitch Alsup and Staf Verhaegen.
413
414 (Staf is also [sponsored by NLNet](https://nlnet.nl/project/Chips4Makers/)
415 to create Libre-licensed Cell Libraries, busting through one of the -
416 many - layers of NDAs and reducing NREs for ASIC development: I helped him
417 put in the submission, and he was really happy to do the Cell Libraries
418 that we will be using for LibreSOC's 180nm test tape-out in October 2020.)
419
420 # Public-Inbox and Domain Migration
421
422 As mentioned before, one of the important aspects of this project is
423 the documentation and archiving. It also turns out that when working
424 over an extremely unreliable or ultra-expensive mobile broadband link,
425 having *local* (offline) access to every available development resource
426 is critically important.
427
428 Hence why we are going to the trouble of installing public-inbox, due
429 to its ability to not only have a mailing list entirely stored in a
430 git repository, the "web service" which provides access to that git-backed
431 archive can be not only mirrored elsewhere, it can be *run locally on
432 your own offline machine*. This in combination with the right mailer
433 setup can store-and-forward any replies to the (offline-copied) messages,
434
435 Now you know why we absolutely do not accept "slack", or other proprietary
436 "online oh-so-convenient" service. Not only is it highly inappropriate for
437 Libre Projects, not only do we become critically dependent on the Corporation
438 running the service (yes, github has been entirely offline, several times),
439 if we have remote developers (such as myself, working from Scotland last
440 month with sporadic access to a single Cell Tower) or developers in emerging
441 markets where their only internet access is via a Library or Internet Cafe,
442 we absolutely do not want to exclude or penalise such people, just because
443 they have less resources.
444
445 Fascinatingly, Linus Torvals is *specifically*
446 [on record](https://www.linuxjournal.com/content/line-length-limits)
447 about making sure that "Linux development does not favour wealthy people".
448
449 We are also, as mentioned before, moving to a new domain name. We'll take
450 the opportunity to fix some of the issues with HTTPS (wrong certificate),
451 and also do some
452 [better mailing list names](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/show_bug.cgi?id=184)
453 at the same time.
454
455 TODO (Veera?) bit about what was actually done, how it links into mailman2.
456
457 # OpenPOWER HDL Mailing List opens up
458
459 It is early days, however it is fantastic to see responses from IBM with
460 regards to requests for access to the POWER ISA Specification
461 documents in
462 [machine-readable form](http://lists.mailinglist.openpowerfoundation.org/pipermail/openpower-hdl-cores/2020-March/000007.html)
463 I took Jeff at his word and explained, in some detail,
464 [exactly why](http://lists.mailinglist.openpowerfoundation.org/pipermail/openpower-hdl-cores/2020-March/000008.html)
465 machine readable versions of specifications are critically important.
466
467 The takeaway is: *we haven't got time to do manual transliteration of the spec*
468 into "code". We're expending considerable effort making sure that we
469 "bounce" or "bootstrap" off of pre-existing resources, using computer
470 programs to do so.
471
472 This "trick" is something that I learned over 20 years ago, when developing
473 an SMB Client and Server in something like two weeks flat. I wrote a
474 parser which read the packet formats *from the IETF Draft Specification*,
475 and outputted c-code.
476
477 This leaves me wondering, as I mention on the HDL list, if we can do the same
478 thing with large sections of the POWER Spec.
479
480 # Build Servers
481
482 TODO
483
484 # Conclusion
485
486 I'm not going to mention anything about the current world climate: you've
487 seen enough news reports. I will say (more about this through the
488 [EOMA68](https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68/micro-desktop) updates) that
489 I anticipated something like what is happening right now, over ten years
490 ago. I wasn't precisely expecting what *has* happened, just the consequences:
491 world-wide travel shut-down, and for people - the world over - to return to
492 local community roots.
493
494 However what I definitely wasn't expecting was a United States President
495 to be voted in who was eager and, frankly, stupid enough, to start *and
496 escalate* a Trade war with China. The impact on the U.S economy alone, and the
497 reputation of the whole country, has been detrimental in the extreme.
498
499 This combination leaves us - world-wide - with the strong possibility that
500 seemed so "preposterous" that I could in no way discuss it widely, let alone
501 mention it on something like a Crowdsupply update, that thanks to the
502 business model on which their entire product lifecycle is predicated,
503 in combination with the extremely high NREs and development costs for
504 ASICs (custom silicon costs USD $100 million, these days), several
505 large Corporations producing proprietary binary-only drivers for
506 hardware on which we critically rely for our internet-connected way
507 of life **may soon go out of business**.
508
509 Right at a critical time where video conferencing is taking off massively,
510 your proprietary hardware - your smartphone, your tablet, your laptop,
511 everything you rely on for connectivity to the rest of the world, all of
512 a sudden **you may not be able to get software updates** or, worse,
513 your products could even be
514 [remotely shut down](https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/apr/05/revolv-devices-bricked-google-nest-smart-home)
515 **without warning**.
516
517 I do not want to hammer the point home too strongly but you should be
518 getting, in no uncertain terms, exactly how strategically critical, in
519 the current world climate, this project just became. We need to get it
520 accelerated, completed, and into production, in an expedited and responsible
521 fashion.
522