|
Sun Microsystems, Inc. today
announced the OpenSPARC project to open source its new breakthrough
UltraSPARC(R) T1 processor design point. With more than 3.4 million
registered licenses of the Solaris 10 Operating System (OS) and 10,000
registered OpenSolaris community members, Sun is building on a long
history of sharing source code and creating communities and is the
first to create this new 64-bit, 32-thread rich SPARC/Solaris community
to spur innovation for massively-threaded systems and "system on a
chip" design. The program will be available in the first quarter of
2006.
Sun Microsystems, Inc. today
announced the OpenSPARC project to open source its new breakthrough
UltraSPARC(R) T1 processor design point. With more than 3.4 million
registered licenses of the Solaris 10 Operating System (OS) and 10,000
registered OpenSolaris community members, Sun is building on a long
history of sharing source code and creating communities and is the
first to create this new 64-bit, 32-thread rich SPARC/Solaris community
to spur innovation for massively-threaded systems and "system on a
chip" design. The program will be available in the first quarter of
2006.
Today, Sun also announced plans to publish specifications for the
UltraSPARC-based chip, including the source of the design expressed in
Verilog, a verification suite and simulation models, instruction set
architecture specification (UltraSPARC Architecture 2005) and a Solaris
OS port. The goal is to enable community members to build on proven
technology at a markedly lower cost and to innovate freely. The source
code will be released under an Open Source Initiative (OSI)-approved
open source license.
With this ground-breaking move to open source the UltraSPARC T1
code, Sun intends to significantly increase participation in processor
architecture development and application design and eliminate many of
the barriers to the next big build-out of the Internet. The program
will yield more collaboration and cooperation around hardware design
and is expected to help drive down the costs of implementing the design
in different technologies, while enabling bold new products to be
brought to market.
"This company was founded on the principles of openness, community
and competition. In our 23-year history, we've contributed more code to
the open source community than any other organization on earth," said
Scott McNealy, chairman and CEO, Sun Microsystems, Inc. "Today, we're
breaking new ground by extending the open source movement into the IT
hardware business and removing the barriers for adoption. We're
throwing open the doors of innovation for everyone to participate,
fostering new growth and economic opportunity for Sun and the Internet
of the future."
Having launched UltraSPARC 1 almost a decade ago as one of Sun's
founders and now a partner with venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins
Caufield and Byers, Bill Joy likes the idea that the processor code can
be available for future innovations. "It's great to see advanced
multi-core technology, like OpenSPARC, made available in this way for
collaboration, education and research," said Bill Joy.
"The SPARC architecture has a long history of being open. Sun's
open-sourcing of a 64-bit SPARC processor implementation opens SPARC in
a new and exciting way and paves the way for the next Internet
build-out," said Karen Anaya, CEO, SPARC International. "SPARC
International is delighted to see the devoted SPARC community expanding
to encompass an even broader range of SPARC implementations."
"Sun's move to open up the design of the new UltraSPARC 64-bit chip
is a new frontier for open source. We've long understood the benefits
of openness and sharing for driving innovation and quality in software
development, but it has yet to be tried for hardware design. While no
one expects garage hackers doing their own chip fabs, there's no
question that hardware designers can learn from each other's work as
readily as software designers, and that design elements taken from one
chip could more quickly advance the development of others. I'm hopeful
that Sun's leadership in this area will encourage similar moves from
other players," said Tim O'Reilly, founder and CEO, O'Reilly Media.
"Sun's decision to release Verilog source code for the UltraSPARC
hardware design under a free software license is a historic step," said
Eben Moglen, founding director of the Software Freedom Law Center. "The
future direction of hardware design will be charted through the same
principles of deep collaboration and free exchange of ideas that were
pioneered by the free software and open source communities. Sun is
showing its profound understanding of the forces shaping our
technological future in making this decision."
In conjunction with the OpenSolaris project, the OpenSPARC
initiative heralds the dawn of a new era of 64-bit industry-standard
computing where communities can leverage well-designed building blocks
to innovate and add value both at the hardware and software levels. In
addition, Sun is actively working with the open source community to
bring Linux and FreeBSD to the UltraSPARC T1 platform.
Sun continues to be a pioneer in the trend of open sourcing products
and technologies. Sun has committed to open sourcing its entire
software portfolio using industry-standard open source licensing models
to allow customers to have easy and broad access to all of its source
code. Many of the components of Sun's integrated software platform are
already available as open source, including the Solaris OS, the Sun
Java Application Server, the NetBeans software tools, and several key
underlying services like single sign-on capabilities and the ability to
connect multiple, independent applications in a standard way.
For more information on OpenSPARC, please go to http://www.opensparc.net/
Read original article at: http://www.sun.com/smi/Press/sunflash/2005-12/sunflash.20051206.4.html
|