extraneous spelling correction
[libreriscv.git] / shakti / m_class.mdwn
1 # Shakti M-Class Libre SoC
2
3 This SoC is a propsed libre design that draws in expertise from mass-volume
4 SoCs of the past six years and beyond, and is being designed to cover just
5 as wide a range of target embedded / low-power / industrial markets as those
6 SoCs. Pincount is to be kept low in order to reduce cost as well as increase
7 yields.
8
9 * See <http://rise.cse.iitm.ac.in/shakti.html> M-Class for top-level
10 * See [[pinouts]] for auto-generated table of pinouts (including mux)
11 * See [[peripheralschematics]] for example Reference Layouts
12 * See [[ramanalysis]] for a comprehensive analysis of why DDR3 is to be used.
13 * See [[todo]] for a rough list of tasks (and link to bugtracker)
14
15 ## Rough specification.
16
17 Quad-core 28nm RISC-V 64-bit (RISCV64GC core with Vector SIMD Media / 3D
18 extensions), 300-pin 15x15mm BGA 0.8mm pitch, 32-bit DDR3/DDR3L/LPDDR3
19 memory interface and libre / open interfaces and accelerated hardware
20 functions suitable for the higher-end, low-power, embedded, industrial
21 and mobile space.
22
23 A 0.8mm pitch BGA allows relatively large (low-cost) VIA drill sizes
24 to be used (8-10mil) and 4-5mil tracks with 4mil clearance. For
25 details see
26 <http://processors.wiki.ti.com/index.php/General_hardware_design/BGA_PCB_design>
27
28 [[shakti_libre_riscv.jpg]]
29
30 ## Die area estimates
31
32 * <http://hwacha.org/papers/riscv-esscirc2014-talk.pdf>
33 * 40nm 64-bit rocket single-core single-issue in-order: 0.14mm^2
34 * 40nm 16-16k L1 caches, 0.25mm^2
35 * <http://people.csail.mit.edu/beckmann/publications/tech.../grain_size_tr_feb_2010.pdf>
36
37 ## Targetting full Libre Licensing to the bedrock.
38
39 The only barrier to being able to replicate the masks from scratch
40 is the proprietary cells (e.g. memory cells) designed by the Foundries:
41 there is a potential long-term strategy in place to deal with that issue.
42
43 The only proprietary interface utilised in the entire SoC is the DDR3
44 PHY plus Controller, which will be replaced in a future revision, making
45 the entire SoC exclusively designed and made from fully libre-licensed
46 BSD and LGPL openly and freely accessible VLSI and VHDL source.
47
48 In addition, no proprietary firmware whatsoever will be required to
49 operate or boot the device right from the bedrock: the entire software
50 stack will also be libre-licensed (even for programming the initial
51 proprietary DDR3 PHY+Controller)
52
53 # Inspiration from several sources
54
55 The design of this SoC is drawn from at least the following SoCs, which
56 have significant multiplexing for pinouts, reducing pincount whilst at
57 the same time permitting the SoC to be utilised across a very wide range
58 of markets:
59
60 * A10/A20 EVB <http://hands.com/~lkcl/eoma/A10-EVB-V1-2-20110726.pdf>
61 * RK3288 T-Firefly <http://www.t-firefly.com/download/firefly-rk3288/hardware/FR_RK3288_0930.pdf>
62 * Ingenic JZ4760B <ftp://ftp.ingenic.cn/SOC/JZ4760B/JZ4760B_DS_REVISION.PDF>
63 LEPUS Board <ftp://ftp.ingenic.cn/DevSupport/Hardware/RD4760B_LEPUS/RD4760B_LEPUS_V1.3.2.PDF>
64 * GPL-violating CT-PC89e <http://hands.com/~lkcl/seatron/>,
65 and <http://lkcl.net/arm_systems/CT-PC89E/> this was an 8.9in netbook
66 weighing only 0.72kg and having a 3 HOUR battery life on a single 2100mAh
67 cell, its casework alone inspired a decade of copycat china clone
68 netbooks as it was slowly morphed from its original 8.9in up to (currently)
69 an 11in form-factor almost a decade later in 2017.
70 * A64 Reference Designs for example this: <http://linux-sunxi.org/images/3/32/Banana_pi_BPI-M64-V1_1-Release_201609.pdf>
71
72 TI Boards such as the BeagleXXXX Series, or the Freescale iMX6
73 WandBoard etc., are, whilst interesting, have a different kind of focus
74 and "feel" about them, as they are typically designed by Western firms
75 with less access or knowledge of the kinds of low-cost tricks deployed
76 to ingenious and successful effect by Chinese Design Houses. Not only
77 that but they typically know the best components to buy. Western-designed
78 PCBs typically source exclusively from Digikey, AVNet, Mouser etc. and
79 the prices are often two to **TEN** times more costly as a result.
80
81 The TI and Freescale (now NXP) series SoCs themselves are also just as
82 interesting to study, but again have a subtly different focus: cost of
83 manufacture of PCBs utilising them not being one of those primary focii.
84 Freescale's iMX6 is well-known for its awesome intended lifespan and support:
85 **ninteen** years. That does however have some unintended knock-on effects
86 on its pricing.
87
88 Instead, the primary input is taken from Chinese-designed SoCs, where cost
89 and ease of production, manufacturing and design of a PCB using the planned
90 SoC, as well as support for high-volume mass-produced peripherals is
91 firmly a priority focus.
92
93 # Target Markets
94
95 * EOMA68 Computer Card form-factor (general-purpose, eco-conscious)
96 * Smartphone / Tablet (basically the same thing, different LCD/CTP size)
97 * Low-end (ChromeOS style) laptop
98 * Industrial uses when augmented by a suitable MCU (for ADC/DAC/CAN etc.)
99
100 ## Common Peripherals to majority of target markets
101
102 * SPI or 8080 or RGB/TTL or LVDS LCD display. SPI: 320x240. LVDS: 1440x900.
103 * LCD Backlight, requires GPIO power-control plus PWM for brightness control
104 * USB-OTG Port (OTG-Host, OTG Client, Charging capability)
105 * Baseband Modem (GSM / GPRS / 3G / LTE) requiring USB, UART, and PCM audio
106 * Bluetooth, requires either full UART or SD/MMC or USB, plus control GPIO
107 * WIFI, requires either USB (but with power penalties) or better SD/MMC
108 * SD/MMC for external MicroSD
109 * SD/MMC for on-PCB eMMC (care needed on power/boot sequence)
110 * NAND Flash (not recommended), requires 8080/ATI-style Bus with dedicated CS#
111 * Optional 4-wire [[QSPI]] NAND/NOR for boot (XIP - Execute In-place - recommended).
112 * Audio over [[I2S]] (5-pin: 4 for output, 1 for input), fall-back to USB Audio
113 * Audio also over [[AC97]]
114 * Some additional SPI peripherals, e.g. connection to low-power MCU.
115 * GPIO (EINT-capable, with wakeup) for buttons, power, volume etc.
116 * Camera(s) either by CSI-1 (parallel CSI) or better by USB
117 * I2C sensors: accelerometer, compass, etc. Each requires EINT and RST GPIO.
118 * Capacitive Touchpanel (I2C and also requiring EINT and RST GPIO)
119 * Real-time Clock (usually an I2C device but may be on-board a support MCU)
120
121 ## Peripherals unique to laptop market
122
123 * Keyboard (USB or keyboard-matrix managed by MCU)
124 * USB, I2C or SPI Mouse-trackpad (plus button GPIO, EINT capable)
125
126 ## Peripherals common to laptop and Industrial Market
127
128 * Ethernet (RGMII or better 8080-style XT/AT/ATI MCU bus)
129
130 ## Augmentation by an embedded MCU
131
132 Some functions, particularly analog, are particularly tricky to implement
133 in an early SoC. In addition, CAN is still patented. For unusual, patented
134 or analog functionality such as CAN, RTC, ADC, DAC, SPDIF, One-wire Bus
135 and so on it is easier and simpler to deploy an ultra-low-cost low-speed
136 companion Micro-Controller such as the crystal-less STMS8003 ($0.24) or
137 the crystal-less STM32F072 or other suitable MCU, depending on requirements.
138 For high-speed interconnect it may be wired up as an SPI device, and for
139 lower-speed communication UART would be the simplest and easiest means of
140 two-way communication.
141
142 This technique can be deployed in all scenarios (phone, tablet, laptop,
143 industrial), and is an extremely low-cost way of getting RTC functionality
144 for example. The cost of, for example, dedicated I2C sensors that provide
145 RTC functionality, or ADC or DAC or "Digipot", are actually incredibly
146 high, relatively speaking. Some very simple software and a general-purpose
147 MCU does the exact same job. In particularly cost-sensitive applications,
148 DAC may be substituted by a PWM, an RC circuit, and an optional feedback
149 loop into an ADC pin to monitor situations where changing load on the RC
150 circuit alters the output voltage. All done entirely in the MCU's software.
151
152 An MCU may even be used to emulate SPI "XIP" (Execute in-place) NAND
153 memory, such that there is no longer a need to deploy a dedicated SPI
154 NOR bootloader IC (which are really quite expensive). By emulating
155 an SPI XIP device the SoC may boot from the NAND Flash storage built-in
156 to the embedded MCU, or may even feed the SoC data from a USB-OTG
157 or other interface. This makes for an extremely flexible bootloader
158 capability, without the need for totally redoing the SoC masks just to
159 add extra BOOTROM functions.
160
161 ## Common Internal (on-board) acceleration and hardware functions
162
163 * 2D accelerated display
164 * 3D accelerated graphics
165 * Video encode / decode
166 * Image encode / decode
167 * Crypto functions (SHA, Rijndael, DES, etc., Diffie-Hellman, RSA)
168 * Cryptographically-secure PRNG (hard to get right)
169
170 ### 2D acceleration
171
172 The ORSOC GPU contains basic primitives for 2D: rectangles, sprites,
173 image acceleration, scalable fonts, and Z-buffering and much more.
174
175 <https://opencores.org/project,orsoc_graphics_accelerator>
176
177 ### 3D acceleration
178
179 * MIAOW: ATI-compatible shader engine <http://miaowgpu.org/>
180 * ORSOC GPU contains some primitives that can be used
181 * SIMD RISC-V extensions can obviate the need for a "full" separate GPU
182 * Nyuzi (OpenMP, based on Intel Larabee Compute Engine)
183 * Rasteriser <https://github.com/jbush001/ChiselGPU/tree/master/hardware>
184 * OpenShader <https://git.code.sf.net/p/openshader/code>
185 * GPLGPU <https://github.com/asicguy/gplgpu>
186
187 ### Video encode / decode
188
189 * video primitives <https://opencores.org/project,video_systems>
190 * MPEG decoder <https://opencores.org/project,mpeg2fpga>
191 * Google make free VP8 and VP9 hard macros available for production use only
192
193 ### Image encode / decode
194
195 partially covered by the ORSOC GPU
196
197 ### Crypto functions
198
199 TBD
200
201 ### Cryptographically-secure PRNG
202
203 TBD
204
205 # Proposed Interfaces
206
207 * Plain [[GPIO]] multiplexed with a [[pinmux]] onto (nearly) all other pins
208 * RGB/TTL up to 1440x900 @ 60fps, 24-bit colour
209 * 2x 1-lane [[SPI]]
210 * 1x 4-lane (quad) [[QSPI]]
211 * 4x SD/MMC (1x 1/2/4/8-bit, 3x 1/2/4-bit)
212 * 2x full UART incl. CTS/RTS
213 * 3x UART (TX/RX only)
214 * 3x [[I2C]] (in case of address clashes between peripherals)
215 * 8080-style AT/XT/ATI MCU Bus Interface, with multiple (8x CS#) lines
216 * 3x [[PWM]]-capable GPIO
217 * 32x [[EINT]]-cable GPIO with full edge-triggered and low/high IRQ capability
218 * 1x [[I2S]] audio with 4-wire output and 1-wire input.
219 * 3x USB2 (ULPI for reduced pincount) each capable of USB-OTG support
220 * [[DDR]] DDR3/DDR3L/LPDDR3 32-bit-wide memory controller
221 * [[JTAG]] for debugging
222
223 Some interfaces at:
224
225 * <https://github.com/RoaLogic/apb4_gpio>
226 * <https://github.com/sifive/sifive-blocks/tree/master/src/main/scala/devices/>
227 includes GPIO, SPI, UART, JTAG, I2C, PinCtrl, UART and PWM. Also included
228 is a Watchdog Timer and others.
229 * <https://github.com/sifive/freedom/blob/master/src/main/scala/everywhere/e300artydevkit/Platform.scala>
230 Pinmux ("IOF") for multiplexing several I/O functions onto a single pin
231 * <https://bitbucket.org/casl/c-class/src/0e77398a030bfd705930d0f1b8b9b5050d76e265/src/peripherals/?at=master>
232 including AXI, DMA, GPIO, I2C, JTAG, PLIC, QSPI, SDRAM, UART (and TCM?).
233 FlexBus, HyperBus and xSPI to be added.
234
235 List of Interfaces:
236
237 * [[CSI]]
238 * [[DDR]]
239 * [[JTAG]]
240 * [[I2C]]
241 * [[I2S]]
242 * [[PWM]]
243 * [[EINT]]
244 * [[FlexBus]]
245 * LCD / RGB/TTL [[RGBTTL]]
246 * [[SPI]]
247 * [[QSPI]]
248 * SD/MMC and eMMC [[sdmmc]]
249 * Pin Multiplexing [[pinmux]]
250 * Gigabit Ethernet [[RGMII]]
251 * SDRAM [[sdram]]
252
253 List of Internal Interfaces:
254
255 * [[AXI]]
256 * [[wishbone]]
257
258 # Items requiring clarification, or proposals TBD
259
260 ## Core Voltage Domains from the PMIC
261
262 See [[peripheralschematics]] - what default (start-up) voltage can the
263 core of the proposed 28nm SoC cope with for short durations? The AXP209
264 PMIC defaults to a 1.25v CPU core voltage, and 1.2v for the logic. It
265 can be changed by the SoC by communicating over I2C but the start-up
266 voltage of the PMIC may not be changed. What is the maximum voltage
267 that the SoC can run at, for short durations at a greatly-reduced clock rate?
268
269 ## 3.3v tolerance
270
271 Can the GPIO be made at least 3.3v tolerant?
272
273 ## Shakti Flexbus implementation: 32-bit word-aligned access
274
275 The FlexBus implementation may only make accesses onto the back-end
276 AXI bus on 32-bit word-aligned boundaries. How this affects FlexBus
277 memory accesses (read and write) on 8-bit and 16-bit boundaries is
278 yet to be determined. It is particularly relevant e.g. for 24-bit
279 pixel accesses on 8080 (MCU) style LCD controllers that have their
280 own on-board SRAM.
281
282 ## Confirmation of GPIO Power Domains
283
284 The proposed plan is to stick with a fixed 1.8v GPIO level across all
285 GPIO banks. However as outlined in the section above, this has some
286 distinct disadvantages, particularly for e.g. SRAM access over FlexBus:
287 that would often require a 50-way bi-directional level-shifter Bus IC,
288 with over 100 pins!
289
290 ## Proposal / Concept to include "Minion Cores" on a 7-way pinmux
291
292 The lowRISC team first came up with the idea, instead of having a pinmux,
293 to effectively bit-bang pretty much all GPIO using **multiple** 32-bit
294 RISC-V non-SMP integer-only cores each with a tiny instruction and data
295 cache (or, simpler, access to their own independent on-die SRAM).
296 The reasoning behind this is: if it's a dedicated core, it's not really
297 bit-banging any more. The technique is very commonly deployed, typically
298 using an 8051 MCU engine, as it means that a mass-produced peripheral may
299 be firmware-updated in the field for example if a Standard has unanticipated
300 flaws or otherwise requires updating.
301
302 The proposal here is to add four extra pin-mux selectors (an extra bit
303 to what is currently a 2-bit mux per pin), and for each GPIO bank to map to
304 one of four such ultra-small "Minion Cores". For each pin, Pin-mux 4 would
305 select the first Minion core, Pin-mux 5 would select the second and so on.
306 The sizes of the GPIO banks are as follows:
307
308 * Bank A: 16
309 * Bank B: 28
310 * Bank C: 24
311 * Bank D: 24
312 * Bank E: 24
313 * Bank F: 10
314
315 Therefore, it is proposed that each Minion Core have 28 EINT-capable
316 GPIOs, and that all but Bank A and F map their GPIO number (minus the
317 Bank Designation letter) direct to the Minion Core GPIOs. For Banks
318 A and F, the numbering is proposed to be concatenated, so that A0 through
319 A15 maps to a Minion Core's GPIO 0 to 15, and F0 to F10 map to a Minion
320 Core's GPIO 16 to 25 (another alternative idea would be to split Banks
321 A and F to complete B through E, taking them up to 32 I/O per Minion core).
322
323 With careful selection from different banks it should be possible to map
324 unused spare pins to a complete, contiguous, sequential set of any given
325 Minion Core, such that the Minion Core could then bit-bang anything up to
326 a 28-bit-wide Bus. Theoretically this could make up a second RGB/TTL
327 LCD interface with up to 24 bits per pixel.
328
329 For low-speed interfaces, particularly those with an independent clock
330 that the interface takes into account that the clock changes on a different
331 time-cycle from the data, this should work perfectly fine. Whether the
332 idea is practical for higher-speed interfaces or or not will critically
333 depend on whether the Minion Core can do mask-spread atomic
334 reads/writes from a register to/from memory-addressed GPIO or not,
335 and faster I/O streams will almost certainly require some form of
336 serialiser/de-serialiser hardware-assist, and definitely each their
337 own DMA Engine.
338
339 If the idea proves successful it would be extremely nice to have a
340 future version that has direct access to generic LVDS lines, plus
341 S8/10 ECC hardware-assist engines. If the voltage may be set externally
342 and accurate PLL clock timing provided, it may become possible to bit-bang
343 and software-emulate high-speed interfaces such as SATA, HDMI, PCIe and
344 many more.
345
346 # Testing
347
348 * cocotb
349 * <https://github.com/aoeldemann/cocotb> cocotb AXI4 stream interface
350
351 # Research (to investigate)
352
353 * <https://level42.ca/projects/ultra64/Documentation/man/pro-man/pro25/index25.1.html>
354 * <http://n64devkit.square7.ch/qa/graphics/ucode.htm>
355 * <https://dac.com/media-center/exhibitor-news/synopsys%E2%80%99-designware-universal-ddr-memory-controller-delivers-30-percent> 110nm DDR3 PHY
356 * <https://bitbucket.org/cfelton/minnesota> myhdl HDL cores
357 * B Extension proposal <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!topic/isa-dev/zi_7B15kj6s>
358 * Bit-extracts <https://github.com/cliffordwolf/bextdep>
359 * Bit-reverse <http://programming.sirrida.de/bit_perm.html#general_reverse_bits>
360 * Bit-permutations <http://programming.sirrida.de/bit_perm.html#c_e>
361 * Commentary on Micro-controller <https://github.com/emb-riscv/specs-markdown/blob/develop/improvements-upon-privileged.md>
362 * P-SIMD <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!topic/isa-dev/vYVi95gF2Mo>
363
364 >
365 [[!tag cpus]]