Sonics, Nokia, Texas Instruments, MIPS, and UMC Launch OCP-IP to Standardize IP Core Socket Interface
Ian Mackintosh to Head New Semiconductor Industry Consortium Driving the Shift to "Plug and Play" SOC Design
PORTLAND, Ore.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 3, 2001--
Open Core Protocol International Partnership (OCP-IP) today
announced the launch of a new semiconductor industry standards
organization whose mission is to administer the support, promotion and
enhancement of a complete intellectual property (IP) core socket for
"plug and play" system-on-chip (SOC) design.
Sonics, Inc. (Mountain View, CA) is placing its Open Core Protocol
interface specification that defines complete IP core communications
requirements (data, control and test flows) into the organization as
"community source" property along with supporting "industrial grade"
tools and technology. In addition to Sonics, those companies
confirming their intent to be OCP-IP founding members and initial
Governing Steering Committee participants are: Nokia (NYSE:NOK - news),
Texas Instruments (NYSE:TXN - news), MIPS Technologies (Nasdaq:MIPS - news), and
United Microelectronics Corporation (NYSE:UMC - news).
OCP-IP is an independent, non-profit organization funded by annual
membership dues. Its three-tiered membership structure-Governing
Steering Committee members, Sponsor members, and Community
members-brings significant benefits for IP companies, integrated
device manufacturers, system companies, fabless semiconductor
suppliers, and design houses. The annual dues for Community
membership, which affords free access to all products and services, is
$10,000 per year. Membership benefits include eligibility for working
groups, access to community source products and services, and
participation in certification "plug-fests." A Membership Application
and supporting information is available now on the organization's web
site at www.ocpip.org.
Ian Mackintosh, a 25-year veteran of the semiconductor and
electronic design automation (EDA) industries, is OCP-IP's President.
Mackintosh is an ASIC pioneer with background in semiconductor design,
software development, and business management. He has actively served
on industry standards organizations and is currently the Chair for the
Virtual Socket Interface Alliance (VSIA) working group on Intellectual
Property Protection. He formerly served as a Steering Committee Member
for the Virtual Component Exchange (VCX). Since 1980, Mackintosh has
held various senior management positions with National Semiconductor,
VLSI Technology (now Philips), PMC-Sierra, Mentor Graphics and
start-up companies.
"The time is right for an organization fully dedicated to the
issue of 'plug and play' SOC design and promotion of an
industry-standard IP core socket," said Mackintosh. "If complex SOC
design is to become a mainstream engineering discipline, the
semiconductor industry must adopt a common IP core interface that
works with all the different bus structures and interconnect
technologies to facilitate reuse and improve time-to-market. The Open
Core Protocol is a complete specification that will be available to
the OCP-IP members and has been commercially adopted and proven in
production designs by world-class companies such as Broadcom
(Nasdaq:BRCM - news), Intel (VxTel) (Nasdaq:INTC - news), and PMC-Sierra
(Nasdaq:PMCS - news)."
Open Core Protocol Fulfills Vendors' IP Core Socket Requirements
Backing of OCP-IP by several major SOC design and manufacturing
vendors consolidates support around the Open Core Protocol as the
definitive specification for an industry-standard IP core socket (see
attached OCP-IP testimonials). Sonics has spent more than five years
developing the Open Core Protocol. It donated an early version of the
interface specification to the VSIA in 1997 for use in what has become
the Virtual Component Interface (VCI).
"We are excited to see industry efforts such as this that will
reduce the SOC integration effort, and will further the
interoperability of reuseable virtual components," said Tim O'Donnell
president of VSIA. "We are pleased that OCP-IP will be providing a
simple VCI-OCP bridge or 'veneer,' and in this way, OCP-IP is helping
lead the way for interface protocols to become interoperable. We also
welcome the offer to provide OCP verification suites via the OCP-VCI
bridge, and we look forward to continue working with OCP-IP in the
future."
Because the Open Core Protocol is bus-independent and addresses
data, control, and test flows, it is a highly qualified departure
point for the industry-standard IP core socket interface. OCP fully
de-couples an IP core's operation from its communication behavior and
truly enables independent IP core design and reuse. As the common
socket, OCP is flexible enough to work in SOCs with multiple
processors and bus interconnect structures.
To allow easy inclusion of the socket in all IP cores, the socket
standard must be accompanied by an implementation and validation tool
suite, test/packaging tool, C-level application programming interface,
bridge library, as well as technical support and certification program
services. Beyond donating its Open Core Protocol specification as
"community source" property, Sonics is also giving OCP-IP ownership of
all the aforementioned elements required for a complete standard.
OCP-IP will provide a complete solution of technology and support to
its members, while assuming responsibility for continuous enhancement
of the IP core socket specification and provision of services into the
future.
For more information about OCP-IP, visit its web site at
www.ocpip.com.
OCP-IP Testimonials
"Our customers are building complex SOCs involving multiple
MIPS-based CPU's, DSP's and other IP with high performance memory
interfaces. Such SOC designs require an open, standards-driven
interconnect model that allows functional scalability, frequency
scalability, and specialized bandwidth allocation in order to deliver
the highest performance while enabling IP reuse. MIPS Technologies is
pleased to participate in the OCP-IP governing steering committee with
other industry leaders to drive broad acceptance for this new
direction in SOC interconnect technology."
Kevin Meyer, Vice President of Marketing, MIPS Technologies,
Inc.
"UMC is dedicated to supporting efforts that help our customers
get to silicon fabrication quicker. As OCP-IP's mission is to develop
a standardized socket for plugging IP cores into SOC designs, it is
staged to ease the IP integration process, and thus benefit SOC
developers and foundries. Accordingly, we are pleased to be a founding
member."
Ed Wan, Vice President, Worldwide Field Engineering, UMC
"Open, common IP interfaces will become increasingly important as
the industry continues to move toward complex SOC designs. By
supporting open interfaces such as OCP-IP, TI will enable third
parties to quickly and easily design SOC products based on TI IP.
Moving ahead, OCP-IP will enable TI and third parties to easily and
quickly modify and enhance a proven hardware and software platform
such as TI's OMAP wireless architecture by connecting new IP and
consequently spinning off new platform derivatives for a dedicated
segment."
Yves Masse, OMAP Chief Architect, Texas Instruments
"The free exchange and common suitability of intellectual property
cores requires well-defined and readily adopted standards. OCP-IP
provides a well-supported core socket standard that allows us to focus
upon our system value-add and not be concerned with modifying core
interfaces."
Veijo Kontas, Director, BB and ASIC Development, Nokia
Note: A Photo is available at URL:
http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/photo.cgi?pw.120301/bb5
Contact:
Sonics, Inc.
Ian Mackintosh, 650/938-2500 ext. 106
ian@ocpip.org
or
VitalCom
Scott Seiden, 650/637-8212 ext. 208
scott@vitalcompr.com