Comment by xpuente

2 days ago

No: RISC is open ARM is closed.

I suspect that many projects—such as BOOM—have stalled as a consequence of this situation. If it continues, the long-term impact will be highly detrimental for everyone involved, including stakeholders in Western countries.

RISC-V the ISA is open; RISC-V implementations need not be. There's no reason to believe that any truly high-performance implementations will be usefully open.

  • There are also many high-performance Chinese implementations that are open-source (e.g., XuanTie C910, XiangShan, etc.).

    While achieving an open-core design comparable to Zen 5 is unlikely in the near term, a sustained open-source collaborative effort could, in the long run, significantly change the situation. For example, current versions of XiangShan are targeting ~20 SPECint 2006/GHz (early where at ~9).

    • Yeah, but then the US doesn't get to spy on you anymore ;)

      Stuff tends to stay open until a new leader emerges. Then the closed source shell appears.

      We've seen this with the hyperscalers and in a million other places.

      Use open to pressure and weed out incumbents and market leaders. Then you're free to do whatever.

      So we'd be replacing NSA spying with MSS spying.

  • And since China has such a lead, you'll be using their implementations.

    That's why this is geopolitical.

    The DoD and Five Eyes prefer ARM, where the US maintains a strong lead.