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by ncmncm
1727 days ago
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Idealizing, again. All of that is fine for somebody designing for a million-unit SSD, who doesn't need to read any of this, and for chip vendors selling to that person. But for each such somebody, literally thousands are stuck with whatever chip purchasing says they can get cheap enough off the shelf. Those chips will be exactly the ones that somebody else ordered 100M of without considering for even a second what the thousands of others whose experience they dictate need. And, it remains a fact that none of the RISC-V MCU chips I can buy off the shelf have any of the B extension instructions implemented. |
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As RISC-V extensions are developed using a cooperative process between domain experts at dozens of different companies and educational or scientific institutions it is obviously impossible and unproductive to attempt to do this in secret.
You can't buy a chip with the B extension because the B extension isn't ratified yet so anyone who claimed to make a B-compatible chip would be taking a risk that the spec might change incompatibly before ratification. The spec was frozen in June and the 45 day Public Comment phase was held in June/July. As far as I know, no issues were raised. The extension (actually three of them, covering different areas) will be ratified before the end of the year, along with several others including V.
That's obviously a very short time scale compared to making a chip. Any chip you can buy now would have been taped out in 2019 or the first part of 2020.
RISC-V is very new. If you want to ignore it until 2023 then feel free. Others find it useful how it is now.