Freescale and CriticalBlue expand collaboration on multicore software development environments
Innovative extensions to CriticalBlue’s Prism solution planned for a range of current and future Freescale multicore platforms
AUSTIN, Texas – Dec. 2, 2010 – Freescale Semiconductor and CriticalBlue Limited have expanded their relationship with an alliance focused on streamlining embedded multicore software development for Freescale platforms. CriticalBlue’s Prism development environment will support a broader range of Freescale’s QorIQ and Power Architecture-based multicore products. In addition, the companies will co-develop tools, extensions and methods to help customers more easily migrate software developed for single core targets to multicore platforms, and to optimize parallel compute performance once the software has been migrated.
Many of Freescale’s QorIQ products include advanced accelerators capable of highly sophisticated communications packet processing. CriticalBlue will enhance its Prism toolset, enabling developers to fully leverage Freescale’s specialized QorIQ accelerators, while simultaneously optimizing the performance of on-chip cores.
The collaborative development program is expected to deliver highly productive tools engineered to help software developers identify and quickly quantify the benefits of more parallelization opportunities than ever before. The Prism solution will be enhanced to provide estimates of the impact of artifacts such as cache behavior, on-chip core pipelines and on-chip communication mechanisms; all of which are important when parallelizing software applications and can have a profound effect on end-product performance.
Prism is an award-winning Eclipse™-based embedded multicore programming system that allows software engineers to easily assess and realize the full potential of multicore processors without significant change to their development flow. Prism analyzes the behavior of code running on hardware development boards, virtual machines or platform simulators. It allows engineers to take their existing sequential code, and before making any changes, explore and analyze opportunities for concurrency.
“With CriticalBlue’s development tools, our multicore processor customers can attain optimal compute power and quickly identify high-leverage spots in the code to optimize their designs,” said Tim Tumilty, director of Developer Tools Technology at Freescale Semiconductor. “By further collaborating with CriticalBlue, Freescale is committed to extending Prism development technology so our customers can more easily leverage the exceptional performance and energy efficiency that our embedded processors offer.”
CriticalBlue’s support for Freescale platforms will expand beyond the signature eight-core P4080 QorIQ processor to include additional QorIQ and Power Architecture products. Software developers will be able to migrate, optimize and verify their existing single-core software applications for Freescale existing and future multicore platforms within a wide set of vertical markets including automotive, industrial, communications, networking and multimedia.
“Freescale has a leadership position and an impressive array of single and multicore devices that are well accepted across many application domains. It is typical of a market leader like Freescale to be proactive in wanting to deliver the best possible software development capabilities to their customers,” said David Stewart, chief executive officer of CriticalBlue. “The Freescale multicore platforms have some extremely innovative architectural features, and the development program we are working on now will enable end users to more easily make best use of them.”
Availability
Prism tools for several Freescale products are available today. The enhanced versions of CriticalBlue tools are planned for availability starting in 2011.
The Core-level Platform Support Package (PSP) for Prism targeting Freescale’s QorIQ processors is offered at a suggested retail price of $400 (USD) per month with an annual subscription agreement. Download a 30-day evaluation copy of Prism for Power Architecture-based QorIQ platforms at www.criticalblue.com/prism/eval.
About CriticalBlue
CriticalBlue is a pioneer of flexible, automated system design solutions that meet the increasing performance, power and cost demands associated with the delivery of advanced electronic products within today’s demanding design schedules. The increasing use of complex, multicore processor architectures has accelerated demand for CriticalBlue’s technology and expertise throughout all electronic industry sectors. Headquartered in Edinburgh, Scotland, with offices in San Jose, California, and Tokyo, Japan, the company has delivered multiple solutions for key aspects of embedded software design, including Prism, a multicore embedded software design environment, and Cascade, a software accelerator synthesis technology. The company is funded by European, U.S. Silicon Valley, Japanese venture capitalists and corporate investors. To learn more, please visit http://www.criticalblue.com/
About Freescale Semiconductor
Freescale Semiconductor is a global leader in the design and manufacture of embedded semiconductors for the automotive, consumer, industrial and networking markets. The privately held company is based in Austin, Texas, and has design, research and development, manufacturing or sales operations around the world. http://www.freescale.com/
|
Related News
- CriticalBlue and Freescale collaborate to streamline and simplify multicore software development
- Synopsys and ARM Expand Collaboration to Accelerate Software Development for ARM-based Designs
- CriticalBlue Provides Multicore Software Development Analysis Environment for OCTEON and OCTEON II Processors
- NEC Electronics and Wind River Expand Collaboration on Linux Solutions for Portable Audio/Visual Devices Market
- CriticalBlue Delivers Prism, The First Embedded Multicore Development System to Leverage Unmodified Sequential Software
Breaking News
- Frontgrade Gaisler Unveils GR716B, a New Standard in Space-Grade Microcontrollers
- Blueshift Memory launches BlueFive processor, accelerating computation by up to 50 times and saving up to 65% energy
- Eliyan Ports Industry's Highest Performing PHY to Samsung Foundry SF4X Process Node, Achieving up to 40 Gbps Bandwidth at Unprecedented Power Levels with UCIe-Compliant Chiplet Interconnect Technology
- CXL Fabless Startup Panmnesia Secures Over $60M in Series A Funding, Aiming to Lead the CXL Switch Silicon Chip and CXL IP
- Cadence Unveils Arm-Based System Chiplet
Most Popular
- Cadence Unveils Arm-Based System Chiplet
- CXL Fabless Startup Panmnesia Secures Over $60M in Series A Funding, Aiming to Lead the CXL Switch Silicon Chip and CXL IP
- Esperanto Technologies and NEC Cooperate on Initiative to Advance Next Generation RISC-V Chips and Software Solutions for HPC
- Eliyan Ports Industry's Highest Performing PHY to Samsung Foundry SF4X Process Node, Achieving up to 40 Gbps Bandwidth at Unprecedented Power Levels with UCIe-Compliant Chiplet Interconnect Technology
- Arteris Selected by GigaDevice for Development in Next-Generation Automotive SoC With Enhanced FuSa Standards
E-mail This Article | Printer-Friendly Page |