This is EDASkel, a collection of code intended to represent the "skeleton" of an EDA application. This consists of basic example implementations of a number of things you normally need in such an app, such as: 1) A Tcl shell (with your custom commands installed) 2) A GUI to display design data 3) Infrastructure like a build system, parsers for various file formats, interfaces to databases, unit tests, user-controllable logging etc. 4) Implementations of various well-known algorithms built on top of quality open-source libraries (e.g., Boost Graph Library for graphs, Boost.Polygon or CGAL for computational geometry, possibly some numerics or matrix libraries) It's still a work in progress but I hope that by sharing what I've learned with others, and learning from them, we can have better software, faster. Please share your feedback with me so I can improve this code. Thanks and Regards, Jeff Trull edaskel@att.net Building EDASkel ---------------- You need a recent copy of Boost (at least 1.53 - download from www.boost.org) and of Qt (4.6.2). You need to have at least 'program_options' library compiled. The steps are as follows: (cd to this directory) mkdir build cd build cmake -DBOOST_ROOT=~/boost_1_53_0 .. # assuming you downloaded boost into your homedir make If the build succeeded you should be able to do: make test to run all the unit tests, or try one of the sample apps, for example the design viewer: apps/sv --lef /path/to/file.lef --def /path/to/file.def You may find that compiling the LEF/DEF parsers is very slow. It seems to be limited by physical memory size - I recommend at least 4GB, unless you can run the build overnight. They are in a separate module, so once built, they won't change as you experiment with the code, and incremental compiles will be much faster.