"From the Transistor to the Web Browser" Wrote this a few years ago, wanted to put it online. Hiring is hard, a lot of modern CS education is really bad, and it's so hard to find people who understand the modern computer stack from first principles. Maybe if I ever get 12 free weeks again I'll offer this as a play at home course. I want to play too. Section 1: Cheating our way past the transistor -- 0.5 weeks So about those transistors -- Course overview. Describe how FPGAs are buildable using transistors, and that ICs are just collections of transistors in a nice reliable package. Understand the LUTs and stuff. Talk briefly about the theory of transistors, but all projects must build on each other so we can’t build one. On the first day the board and a kit is handed out. Building an FPGA board -- Board design, FPGA BGA reflow, FPGA flash, a 50mhz clock, a USB JTAG port and flasher(no special hardware, a little cypress usb mcu to do jtag), a few leds, a reset button, a serial port(USB-FTDI) also powering via USB, an sd card, expansion connector(ide cable?), and an ethernet port. Optional, expansion board, host USB port, NTSC TV out, an ISA port, and PS/2 connector on the board to taunt you. We provide a toaster oven and a multimeter thermometer to do reflow. Section 2: What language is hardware coded in? -- 0.5 weeks Talking to an FPGA(C, 200) -- A little code for the USB MCU to bitbang JTAG. A good warmup for the intensity of what’s to come. Blinking an LED(Verilog, 10) -- Getting all the Xilinx crap installed and your first bit file downloaded. Getting the simulator working. Learning Verilog. Building a UART(Verilog, 100) -- An intro chapter to Verilog, copy a real UART, introducing the concept of MMIO, though the serial port may be semihosting. Serial test echo program and led control. On the real board. Section 3: What is a processor anyway? -- 3 weeks Coding an assembler(Python, 500) -- Straightforward and boring, write in python. Happens in parallel with the CPU building. Teaches you ARM assembly. Initially outputs just binary files, but changed when you write a linker. Building a ARM7 CPU(Verilog, 1500) -- Break this into subchapters. A simple pipeline to start, decode, fetch, execute. How much BRAM do we have? We need at least 1MB, DDR would be hard I think, maybe an SRAM. Simulatable and synthesizable. Coding a bootrom(Assembler, 40) -- This allows code download into RAM over the serial port, and is baked into the FPGA image. Cute test programs run on this. Section 4: A “high” level language -- 3 weeks Building a C compiler(Haskell, 2000) -- A bit more interesting, cover the basics of compiler design. Write in haskell. Write a parser. Break this into subchapters. Outputs ARM assembly. Building a linker(Python, 300) -- If you are clever, this should take a day. Output elf files. Use for testing with QEMU, semihosting. libc + malloc(C, 500) -- The gateway to more complicated programs. libc is only half here, things like memcpy and memset and printf, but no syscall wrappers. Building an ethernet controller(Verilog, 200) -- Talk to a real PHY, consider carefully MMIO design. Writing a bootloader(C, 300) -- Write ethernet program to boot kernel over UDP. First thing written in C. Maybe don’t redownload over serial each time and embed in FPGA image. Section 5: Software we take for granted -- 4 weeks Building an MMU(Verilog, 1000) -- ARM9ish, explain TLBs and other fun things. Maybe also a memory controller, depending on how the FPGA is, then add the init code to your bootloader. Building an operating system(C, 2500) -- UNIXish, only user space threads. (open, read, write, close), (fork, execve, wait, sleep, exit), (mmap, munmap, mprotect). Consider the debug interface you are using, ranging from printf to perhaps a gdbremote stub into kernel. Break into subchapters. Talking to an SD card(Verilog, 150) -- The last hardware you have to do. And a driver FAT(C, 300) -- A real filesystem, I think fat is the simplest init, shell, download, cat, ls, rm(C, 250) -- Your first user space programs. Section 6: Coming online -- 1 week if you did everything else well Building a TCP stack(C, 500) -- Probably coded in the kernel, integrate the ethernet driver into the kernel. Add support for networking syscalls to kernel. (send, recv, bind, connect) telnetd, the power of being multiprocess(C, 50) -- Written in C, user can connect multiple times with telnet. Really just a bind shell. Space saving dynamic linking(C, 300) -- Because we can, explain how dynamic linker is just a user space program. Changes to linker required. So about that web(C, 500+) -- A “nice” text based web browser, using ANSI and terminal niceness. Dynamically linked and nice, nice as you want.