Microwatt is an open source soft processor core originally written in VHDL by Anton Blanchard at IBM, announced at the OpenPOWER Summit NA 2019[2] and published on GitHub in August 2019. It adheres to the Power ISA 3.0 instruction set and can be run on FPGA boards, booting Linux, MicroPython and Zephyr.[3][4][5][6][7][8]

Microwatt
General information
Launched2019-08-29[1]
Designed byIBM, OpenPOWER Foundation
Architecture and classification
ApplicationSoft core
Instruction setPower ISA 3.0
ppc64le
ppc64be
Physical specifications
Cores
  • 1

Design

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Microwatt is a tiny 64-bit bi-endian scalar integer processor core, implementing a subset of the Power ISA 3.0 instruction set. It has 32× 64-bit general purpose registers and 32x 64-bit floating-point registers. It uses Wishbone for the memory interface.[4]

The initial development was done in a couple of months, included the entire integer processing functionality of the instruction set; the bare minimum to make it compliant, with no memory management unit (MMU) and no floating-point unit.[4]

Later additions to the implementation includes JTAG debugger interface, divider instructions, 16 KB instruction and 32 KB data caches, a non-hypervisor-capable MMU, pipelining[4] and floating-point support.[9]

It's designed using VHDL 2008 and the GHDL simulation environment.[3]

Chiselwatt

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A sibling project called Chiselwatt is another open processor core implementing the Power ISA 3.0 instruction set, written in the Scala-based Chisel instead of VHDL.[10][11]

Implementations

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History

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It is the first processor written from scratch using the open Power ISA 3.0, and is released by the OpenPOWER Foundation as a reference design.

The project started as a demo, proof of concept and a reference implementation for the release of the opensource initiative regarding Power ISA 3.0.[15] The goal for Blanchard was to see if he could make it, and as a software developer, taking on a very low level hardware project was a challenge.[2][3]

Microwatt is set to be fabricated in 130 nm by Efabless "Open MPW Shuttle Program" in 2021.[16] As of February 2024, there has been no update on the progress of fabrication on Efabless's Microwatt project page.[17]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Williams, Chris (2019-08-29). "Get your royalty-free soft-core OpenPOWER processor core blueprints here. Extra, extra – read all about it". The Register.
  2. ^ a b OpenPOWER Summit NA 2019: Day 2 Keynote Demonstration: Anton Blanchard, IBM & Joe DeLaere, Xilinx
  3. ^ a b c "POWER OpenISA and Microwatt introduction" - Anton Blanchard (LCA 2020)
  4. ^ a b c d "Microwatt Microarchitecture" - Paul Mackerras (LCA 2020)
  5. ^ Microwatt and the POWER ISA support in Renode
  6. ^ Linux on Microwatt
  7. ^ OpenPOWER opens further
  8. ^ Day 2 keynote and OpenPOWER blows the doors off: Royalty-free, open soft-core (RISC-V sweating gallons)
  9. ^ Microwatt Floats
  10. ^ Chiselwatt's page on Github
  11. ^ Final Draft of the Power ISA EULA Released
  12. ^ Libre-SOC
  13. ^ "Raptor Announces Kestrel Open-Source, Open HDL/Firmware Soft BMC".
  14. ^ Kestrel SoftBMC Project
  15. ^ Big Blue open sources POWER chip instruction set
  16. ^ "Open MPW metadata for Microwatt". Archived from the original on 2021-02-28. Retrieved 2021-03-30.
  17. ^ "Efabless". Efabless. Retrieved 2024-02-16.
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