RISC-V System-On-Chip Design

· · ·
· Elsevier
Ebook
600
Pages
Eligible
This book will become available on April 25, 2025. You will not be charged until it is released.

About this ebook

RISC-V Microprocessor System-On-Chip Design is written to be accessible to an advanced undergraduate audience with limited background. It explains concepts from operating systems, VLSI, and memory systems as necessary, and High school mathematics is sufficient preparation for most of the book, although the floating point and division chapters will be primarily of interest to those with a curiosity about computer arithmetic. Like Harris and Harris's Digital Design and Computer Architecture textbooks, this book will appeal to students with easy-to-read and complete explanations, sidebars, and occasional humor and cartoons.It comes with an open-source implementation and will include end-of-chapter problems to extend the RISC-V processor in various ways. Ancillary materials include a GitHub repository with complete open-source SystemVerilog code, validation code in C and assembly language, and code for benchmarking and booting Linux. - Covers detailed design for all components of a nontrivial microprocessor - Provides detailed explanations on the implementation of RISC-V microprocessors - Uses open-source SystemVerilog code and test cases for the entire processor, including single-issue and superscalar cores, multicore, all extensions (including multiplication/division, floating point, and atomic memory operations), and common peripherals - Enables users to build scripts to implement the processor on the open-source Skywater process

About the author

David Harris is the Harvey S. Mudd Professor of Engineering Design at Harvey Mudd College. He received his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Stanford University and his M.Eng. in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT. Before attending Stanford, he worked at Intel as a logic and circuit designer on the Itanium and Pentium II processors. Since then, he has consulted at Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard, Broadcom, and other design companies. David holds more than a dozen patents and is the author of three other textbooks on chip design, as well as many Southern California hiking guidebooks. When he is not working, he enjoys hiking, flying, and making things with his three sons.James Stine is the Edward Joullian Professor of Engineering at Oklahoma State University. His area of research is in computer arithmetic, memory architectures, and Electronic Design Automation (EDA) design flow. He is the author of numerous articles on optimization of architectures for use with computer arithmetic as well as interfacing to memory architectures. He is the author of three texts: Digital Datapath Computer Arithmetic with Verilog, Adder Architectures for VLSI Implementations and System on Chip Design Flow and Standard-Cell Library.Sarah L. Harris is an Assistant Professor of Engineering at Harvey Mudd College. She received her Ph.D. and M.S. in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University. Before attending Stanford, she received a B.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Brigham Young University. Sarah has also worked with Hewlett-Packard, the San Diego Supercomputer Center, Nvidia, and Microsoft Research in Beijing. Sarah loves teaching, exploring and developing new technologies, traveling, wind surfing, rock climbing, and playing the guitar. Her recent exploits include researching sketching interfaces for digital circuit design, acting as a science correspondent for a National Public Radio affiliate, and learning how to kite surf. She speaks four languages and looks forward to learning more in the near future.

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