FROM THE EDITOR
We at FPGA Journal would like to wish all of you
the happiest of holiday seasons. This week we have part one of our
two-part discussion on design tools for FPGA. This article looks at
tools from third-party sources such as commercial EDA companies and
examines the reasons many design teams choose those tools over the
FPGA vendor-supplied suites. In a few weeks, we’ll look at the other
side of the coin and see just how good the programmable logic
vendors’ tools are getting.
Thanks for reading! If
there's anything we can do to make our publications more useful to
you, please let us know at: comments@fpgajournal.com
Kevin
Morris – Editor FPGA and Programmable Logic
Journal |
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3rd Party EDA
Tools from Other Sources
Why would you spend tens of thousands of dollars on
commercial electronic design automation (EDA) tools for your design team
when they can get a decent suite of tools almost for free from their FPGA
vendor? This question is probably asked daily in design teams around the
world. As you might expect, it also comes up every now and then in the
strategic planning rooms at EDA companies. The EDA company version of the
question has a slight twist, however: “Should we invest millions to
develop FPGA tools if FPGA vendors may be giving away similar tools almost
for free before we have a chance to recover our development costs?” For
many EDA companies, the answer is a resounding “no.”
A few, however, don’t like the implications of that
answer. Around the world, electronics companies are shifting development
investments away from ASIC technologies to alternatives such as FPGA and
structured ASIC. As the money moves away from ASIC, the traditional
ASIC-based EDA ecosystem is shrinking. With the other EDA segments
relatively flat, the EDA industry needs to find a new market for growth
over the next decade. Despite the apparent iron grip of the FPGA vendors,
many in EDA feel that FPGA and structured ASIC are the two areas most
likely to experience explosive growth in design tools.
If FPGA is the most likely high-growth tool market and is
already dominated by the FPGA vendors themselves, where does commercial
EDA stake its claim? How do companies trying to make their living from
tool revenue alone compete with FPGA vendors who can afford to give tools
away almost for free in order to lock in lucrative silicon sales?
Obviously commercial EDA has to find a way to justify the additional cost
of their tools when compared with the silicon-subsidized alternatives. [more]
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