Design News: Ncore’s Not Your Granny’s Coherent NoC (Network-on-Chip)
, 2024年03月27日
Things have evolved beyond all expectation since I designed my first ASIC.
At a Glance
- Arteris has announced the 3.6 release of the Ncore cache coherent NoC to support the latest Arm and RISC-V processors
- Pre-validated for use with Armv9 automotive cores, ISO 26262 certified Ncore offers a wide variety of automated FuSa features
I was just chatting with my chum Andy Nightingale, who is VP of Product Management and Marketing at Arteris IP.
What’s with the “IP” portion of the Arteris moniker? Well, in the context of system-on-chip (SoC) devices, the term intellectual property (IP) refers to the functional blocks that are combined to form the final device. The way this usually works is that most of the IPs—like processors, memory, controllers, peripherals, and communications functions—are sourced from trusted third-party vendors. This leaves the development team free to focus on integrating everything whilst also creating one or more of their own “secret sauce” IPs—like hardware accelerators or artificial intelligence (AI) engines—that will make this SoC stand proud in the crowd with respect to any competitive offerings.
In addition to providing chip-spanning network-on-chip (NoC) interconnect IP, which is used to connect the other IPs on the SoC together, Arteris IP also offers a suite of SoC integration automation and management tools, which greatly speeds the task of pulling all the IPs together and managing things like their hundreds-of-thousands (sometimes millions) of control and status registers (CSRs).
Andy was telling me that everyone at Arteris is currently bouncing off the walls with excitement because they’ve just announced the 3.6 release of their Ncore coherent Network-on-Chip (NoC).
To read the full article on Design News, click here.