Mail Archives: geda-user/2015/02/04/01:39:43
Hello John!
Quoting Ouabache Designworks <z3qmtr45 AT gmail DOT com>:
>>
>> So let us start to bring the Idea of a common platform for EDA to reality.
>> I don't like vaporware :-)
>>
>>
>>
> I read a very interesting databit from a eda blogger (Daniel Payne) who
> cited a report that for every $1 we spend on EDA tools
> (Synopsys,Mentor,Cadence etc) that we spend $3 on supporting
> those tools and getting them to work together. Everybody is spending a huge
> amount to create their very own custom tool flows that does basicly what
> everybody elses tool flows do.
Your are right, I guess. But it is not only the flow which takes so
much effort -
the libraries with all the circuits, symbols, simulation models and footprints
are nearly everywhere "in-house" solutions based on "vendor lock-ins".
In the field of ASIC developing, the ratio you mentioned is even
higher for sure.
> This is the ideal problem for an open source solution. We all need to do
> the same thing. We are all currently spending a huge effort to create our
> own unique solutions. The problems are really not that hard. Our toolflows
> and scripts are not critical IP that we cannot share. If you wanted to
> create a tool flow that was better than 75% of all the toolflows out then
> then that is not hard to do.
d'accord
> If we could get all the eda teams currently supporting their own tool flows
> to contribute to a single open source solution then we would all be a lot
> better off.
Well, everybody has it's own solution. With own pit falls, with own
advantages.
> It is time for EDA users to realize that big EDA can not and will not solve
> this problem for us. We need a grass roots effort to rally around and
> support an open source EDA tool flow solution with a completely free
> tool set.
Sure.
> We got to start talking to each other and sharing ideals and problems.
> There is no money in this for Big EDA so don't expect any help from them
> but we need this. This could be the "Linux" of the EDA world.
So, which requirements do you/we have?
I dream of
- symbols clearly dedicted to standards (IEC, ISO, IEEE, ...)
- reliable simulation models of all tastes (Spice, IBIS, Verilog, BSDL, ...)
- tool-independend and accurate (generic) footprints (M4 is great!)
- an open-source Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA)
- well documented FPGA Configurations
- a vendor independend F/OSS tool chain to configure the FPGAs
- more current technology libaries for the Magic Toolkit
(http://opencircuitdesign.com)
Regards,
Hagen Sankowski
--
"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary
safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." Benjamin Franklin (1775)
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