SemiWiki: NoCs give architects flexibility in system-in RISC-V design
, 2023年11月16日
RISC-V tends to generate excitement over the possibilities for the processor core, any custom instruction extensions, and its attached memory subsystem. Those are all necessary steps to obtaining system-level performance. But is that attention sufficient? Architects who have ventured into larger system-on-chip (SoC) designs know how complicated interconnecting many IP blocks vying for data paths all at once can get. Arteris suggests a ‘system-in’ RISC-V design approach for solving system-level challenges instead of a ‘RISC-V out’ perspective.
De-facto specs can cross up designers quickly
“The typical cut point for starting an SoC design is a standard protocol like AXI,” says Frank Schirrmeister, VP of Solutions and Business Development for Arteris. “In that respect, RISC-V design is fundamentally the same as designing with other processor cores supporting AXI for their system interface.” Many peripheral IP blocks also support AXI. Broad support usually makes for a clear choice, but flexibility and optimization soon become factors at scale.