To get started using Chipyard, see the documentation on the Chipyard documentation site: https://chipyard.readthedocs.io/
Chipyard is an open source framework for agile development of Chisel-based systems-on-chip. It will allow you to leverage the Chisel HDL, Rocket Chip SoC generator, and other Berkeley projects to produce a RISC-V SoC with everything from MMIO-mapped peripherals to custom accelerators. Chipyard contains processor cores (Rocket, BOOM, Ariane), accelerators (Hwacha), memory systems, and additional peripherals and tooling to help create a full featured SoC. Chipyard supports multiple concurrent flows of agile hardware development, including software RTL simulation, FPGA-accelerated simulation (FireSim), automated VLSI flows (Hammer), and software workload generation for bare-metal and Linux-based systems (FireMarshal). Chipyard is actively developed in the Berkeley Architecture Research Group in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department at the University of California, Berkeley.
- Chipyard Documentation: https://chipyard.readthedocs.io/
- Chipyard Basics slides: https://fires.im/micro19-slides-pdf/02_chipyard_basics.pdf
- Chipyard Tutorial Exercise slides: https://fires.im/micro19-slides-pdf/03_building_custom_socs.pdf
- Join the Chipyard Mailing List: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/chipyard
- If you find a bug, post an issue on this repo
- See CONTRIBUTING.md
These publications cover many of the internal components used in Chipyard. However, for the most up-to-date details, users should refer to the Chipyard docs.
- Generators
- Sims
- Tools
- VLSI
- Hammer: E. Wang, et al., ISQED'20. PDF.