Across several projects, nearly EUR 400,000 worth of additional funding
applications were put in, and around EUR 200,000 to 250,000 of those have
been approved. The RISC-V Foundation's continued extreme unethical
actions have led us to consider using Power ISA.
### NLnet Grants
[NLnet](http://nlnet.nl) were first approached eighteen months ago, with
an initial application to develop the core of a privacy-respecting trustable
processor. Whilst NLnet's primary focus of the past fifteen years has been
software, they have funded reverse-engineering for
[Osmocon BB](https://nlnet.nl/project/sdr-phy/) and for
[OpenBSC](https://nlnet.nl/project/iuh-openbsc/) so are no strangers to
hardware. The problem with software is: if the hardware cannot be trusted,
then no amount of trustable, open and transparent software will help.
The [additional proposals](https://libre-riscv.org/nlnet_proposals/)
expand on the core, to cover:
* formal mathematical correctness proofs for the entire processor, including
the FPU (no more Intel Pentium FPDIV bugs...)
* a special video acceleration focus, adding video decode instructions
* an additional 3D driver based on AMDVLK or MESA
* some funding to be able to properly develop and document ISA standards
* a Wishbone streaming enhancement to add A/V timecode stamps to Wishbone B4,
and to develop independent libre-licensed peripherals as examples
* two interrelated proposals to develop libre cell Libraries
([Chips4Makers](http://chips4makers.io/)), to be used by a team at
[LIP6.fr](http://lip6.fr) using the Alliance / Coriolis2 ASIC layout
tools; Additional funding will go to the nmigen team for ASIC
improvements and special integration with Coriolis2
The goal here is to get to a working, commercially viable 180 nm
single-core ASIC at around 300 to 350 MHz, suitable for use as a
high-end embedded controller. Staf from Chips4Makers will act as the
"NDA firebreak" between us and TSMC. (Side note: Staf ran a [Crowd
Supply campaign](https://www.crowdsupply.com/chips4makers/retro-uc),
and the NLnet funding will help him to realise that project and
perhaps re-start a new campaign for the Retro-uC one day).
All of these have been approved by NLnet, and, crucially, the external
independent review process successfully completed for each. The exact
amounts of each grant is to be confirmed, with each being possible to be
up to the limit of EUR 50,000 for each sub-project.
Part of the process was a little tricky, initially: the independent reviewers
expressed surprise at the amounts being requested for *sub*-tasks when the
initial application back in December 2019 was so small, relative to
the intended goal. The reason was very simple: both Jacob
and I have unique low-income circumstances that simply do not need European /
Western style living expenses. Whereas, when we get to much more specialist
tasks (such as formal mathematical proofs, video assembly-level drivers,
and so on), these fields are so specialized that finding people who are good
*and* who are able to exist on student or southeast-asia-level funding is just not
practical.
Therefore, we made sure that the calculations were based around an approximate
EUR 3,000 per month budget per person, bearing in mind that due to
international tax agreements
that apply to Charitable Organisations such as NLnet
(more information about this here,
this being donations, that's equivalent to a
"wage" of approximately nearly twice that amount (three times if, as a
business, you have to take into consideration corporation tax / employee
insurance as well).
We now need to find people willing to help do the work. What is
really nice is that NLnet will donate money to them for completion of that work!
Therefore, if you've always wanted to work on a 3D processor, its drivers
and its source code, do get in touch.
### PowerPC
This is a
[long story](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2019-October/003035.html)
that was picked up by
[Phoronix](https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Libre-RISC-V-Eyeing-POWER)
before we had a chance to make any kind of real "announcement." However,
we're always really grateful to Michael for his coverage of the Libre SoC,
as it always sparks some insightful, useful, and engaging discussions.
The summary is this: Libre and Open contributors to RISC-V have been
disregarded for several years. **Long** before I joined the RISC-V
mailing lists, it was *well-known* within that small and tightly-knit
community that if you were not associated directly with UC Berkeley, you were
basically not welcome. Caveat: if you signed the NDA-like agreement
which conflicts directly with, for example, the Debian Charter and
the whole purpose of libre licenses, then you got a "voice" and you
got access to the closed and secretive RISC-V resources and mailing
lists.
Michael puts it extremely well: I have absolutely no problem with the
ISA itself, it's the abuse of power and the flagrant ignoring and abuse
of basic tenets of trademark law that are just completely untenable.
Not only that: one well-paid employee of SiFive has *repeatedly* engaged
in defamation attacks for over eighteen months. Even raising a formal
complaint through the newly-established relationship with the Linux
Foundation failed to keep that individual under control. Also adversely
impacted was the newly-established Open Graphics Alliance initiative,
which was independently started by Pixilica back in October,
proposed at SIGGRAPH 2019 and welcomed by world-leading 3D industry
experts.
At some point you just have to appreciate that to continue to support
an unethical organisation is itself unethical, and thus I made the
decision to reach out to MIPS and Power. The MIPS website didn't even
work, so I gave up there immediately. The Open Power Foundation on
the other hand, I was both delighted and surprised to hear back from
a former colleague when I was in Canberra, 20 years ago: Hugh Blemings.
Hugh is extremely knowledgeable, highly intelligent, and completely
understands Libre and Open principles. We had only 15 minutes to
talk before he had to focus on preparing for the upcoming Open Power
Conference: in that short time, we covered:
* the need for ISANS / ISAMUX "breakout" system. Hugh even said,
without prompting, that the scheme I quickly described would
allow full software-level ISA emulation and that that was a really
good and necessary thing. With this **formally** in place as part
of an officially-approved Power ISA Standard, not only could our team
expand the Power ISA in a safe and controlled fashion, so could other
adopters of the Power ISA.
* that the core OpenPower members had *already been discussing* how to make
sure that new Libre teams with a commercial focus could join and not
have any transparency / patent / NDA / royalty / licensing conflicts
of interest. The only major thing that the other members particularly
wanted was a "public relations blackout period," right around the time
of announcement of new standards, which sounds perfectly reasonable
to me.
* that IBM will be providing a royalty-free unlimited license grant
for *all* of its patents, as long as firstly the licensees do not
make any effort to assert patents **against** IBM, and secondly,
as long as implementations are fully-compliant with the OpenPower
standards.
* that there is discussion underway as to the creation and maintenance
of formal compliance test suites, just as there is today with the
RISC-V ISA.
* that the use of a certification mark - not a service mark or a trade mark -
is the most appropriate thing for ISA standards. I mentioned this
only briefly however it takes a lot more than 15 minutes to properly
explain, so I am not going to push it: Hugh is doing so much fantastic
work already.
It was a very busy and positive conversation, where it is clear that
we caught them at just the right time in the process. Consequently,
my discussion with Hugh was just at the right time. Without that,
the existing OpenPower members might never have really truly believed
that any Libre **commercial** project would ever in fact come forward
and that the steps the OpenPower members were taking were purely hypothetical.
Out of the blue (pun intended), I contact Hugh and highlight that no,
it's not hypothetical.
The next step, then, will be to wait until mid-january when people come
back from holiday, and wait for the announcement of the OpenPower
license agreement. Hugh reassures me that there's nothing spectacularly
controversial in it, and given his long-standing experience of several
decades with the Libre and Open Communities, I cannot think of a reason
why it would not be possible to sign it. We just have to see.
The timing here with NLnet is just on the edge: we have to create a
full list of milestones and assign a fixed budget to each (then later
subdivide them into sub-tasks under that milestone). This is a leeeetle
bit challenging when we have not yet reviewed the OpenPower agreement,
however, given that the majority of the tasks are ISA-independent, it
will actually work out fine.
The only other major thing: what the heck do we do with the libre-riscv.org
domain? As you can see on the mailing list decision, we decided to go
with a *userspace* RV64GC dual-ISA front-end. **Userspace** RISC-V POSIX
(Linux / Android) applications will work perfectly well, as will **userspace**
PowerISA POSIX applications, however the **kernel** (supervisor) space will
be entirely PowerISA.
The video and 3D acceleration opcodes will be **entirely in the Power
ISA**. We are sick and tired of the RISC-V Foundation's intransigence
and blatant mismanagement. Therefore, we will comply to the absolute
minimal letter with RV64GC for the benefit of our users, backers, and
sponsors who will be expecting RISC-V Compliance. However, RISC-V and the
RISC-V ISA itself will no longer receive the benefit of the advancements
and innovation that we have received funding and support to develop.
So, the assembly-code being written by hand for the video acceleration
side, as well as the 3D drivers for Kazan and MESA, will "flip" from RV64GC
RISC-V over to the Power ISA, which will be fully 3D accelerated with advanced
Simple-V Vector operations, then return back to userspace RISC-V RV64GC ISA
to continue serving the user application.
Next steps for us include setting up a foundation under which the processor
can be developed, and to look towards the next major funding step: USD 10M
to 20M.