Early SPARC History
Dave joined Sun in 1985 as a software
engineering lead for Sunrise, later renamed SPARC. He coordinated the
development of compilers, third-party software ports, and the SunOS
(later renamed Solaris OS) port to SPARC, and served on the SPARC
Architecture Committee. Dave wrote the original SPARC assembler and
most of the peephole optimizer.
In 1986-87, Dave took over the SPARC architecture specification
version 7 and oversaw its transition to version 8. Simultaneously, he
led the Cross-Compiler Project, his first foray into the x86
architecture. "Not only could we cross-compile to 680x0, SPARC, and
x86, but also to an IBM mainframe target processor," Dave discloses
with a smile.
Subsequently, Dave remained involved in SPARC technology as he took
on other engineering assignments. In 1994, the SPARC architecture
specification version 9 (edited by Dave) was released by the SPARC
Architecture Committee through SPARC International.
Evolution in the 2000s
In 1999, Dave developed the
specification for Microprocessor Architecture for Java Computing (MAJC)
before rejoining the Architecture group in Sun's Microelectronics
division. "It was like coming home," he reminisces. He immediately
participated in the collaboration effort between Sun and Fujitsu
through a five-year contract to develop a common programmer's reference
specification for both companies' SPARC processors. "We met frequently:
in Japan, California, and Hawaii. It was fun!" says Dave.
"In the eight years since then, I've been teaming up with
implementation engineers to create a common UltraSPARC architecture for
the processors designed at Sun," Dave continues. "Before, problems
abounded, for example, the instruction-set documentation was scattered
around and hard to pinpoint. Through the years, we've added many
architectural features, which are now all documented in one spot. The
UltraSPARC Architecture specification now offers a `one-stop shop' for
our processor designers. We've also developed a process for smoothly
evolving the architecture over time."
OpenSPARC Project
In early 2006, Sun made SPARC technology open source in the form of the OpenSPARC Project. "OpenSPARC
is simultaneously the only open-source 64-bit processor and the only
open-source multithreaded processor in the world today," beams
Dave. The T2 processor—"the world's fastest commodity processor with
eight cores and eight threads per core," as spelled out on the
OpenSPARC site—was released in August 2007.
"The public can now access the UltraSPARC T1 and T2 processor source
code in RTL [register transfer level] form in addition to the source of
the simulation tools and verification suite. Some consider that suite
to be the most valuable part of the technology. All that cost Sun
hundreds of millions of dollars to develop, and it's now free for
anyone to download and build upon," elaborates Dave.
Furthermore, OpenSPARC technology, a robust tool for research and
class work, is now in use in classrooms at 27 universities worldwide,
with many more to come. Sun has established OpenSPARC Centers of Excellence
at a number of universities, including notable ones like University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Carnegie Mellon University, and Stanford
University. The company's recent agreement with China to promote chip
design through OpenSPARC technology in education, research, and
industry is another case in point.
"We occasionally hear that `SPARC is dead.' Well, it definitely
isn't: Architectures for general-purpose computing have sorted down to
x86, SPARC, and Power—and SPARC has been a major player for over 20
years! As an architecture with open-source implementations, SPARC can
go where the others can't, such as being adopted in universities across
the most populous country on earth," Dave adds.
"A Unique Position"
Dave sees OpenSPARC technology
occupying a unique position in the chip-design arena. "I could see it
becoming the hardware equivalent of Linux in software," he observes.
"Time will tell. Meanwhile, we're taking a heckuva good shot at it and
SPARC has already established itself as one of the three long-term
instruction-set architectures for general-purpose computing."
That's quite an accomplishment to write home about.
Read the original article: http://weblogs.java.net/blog/marinasum/archive/2008/03/evolution_of_sp.html