/OpenROAD-flow

OpenROAD's top level repo pointing to stable tool versions, sample designs, and an example flow

Primary LanguageTclOtherNOASSERTION

OpenROAD Flow

Gitter

OpenROAD Flow is a full RTL-to-GDS flow built entirely on open-source tools. The project aims for automated, no-human-in-the-loop digital circuit design with 24-hour turnaround time.

Contents

Code Organization

This repository serves as an example RTL-to-GDS flow using the OpenROAD tools. The two main components are:

  1. tools: This directory contains the source code for the entire openroad app (via submodules) as well as other tools required for the flow. The script build_openroad.sh in this repository will automatically build the OpenROAD toolchain.

  2. flow: This directory contains reference recipes and scripts to run designs through the flow. It also contains platforms and test designs.

Installation

Dependencies

  • OpenROAD*
  • TritonRoute*
  • Yosys*
  • KLayout

*At this time, we strongly recommend using the build_openroad.sh script to install OpenROAD, TritonRoute, and Yosys. Due to the early development stage, the API changes frequently and it is otherwise difficult to ensure compatibility between tool and OpenROAD Flow versions.

Be sure to check for nested dependencies when installing from source! You may reference the Dockerfiles and READMEs for the dependencies:

OpenROAD-flow/tools/OpenROAD/Dockerfile
OpenROAD-flow/tools/yosys/Dockerfile
OpenROAD-flow/tools/TritonRoute/Dockerfile

Prebuilt Binaries

Prebuilt binaries are not available at this time. We aim to create automated releases in the near future.

Building from Source

Building dependencies from scratch can take up to an hour.

Option 1: Docker

This build option leverages a multi-step docker flow to install the tools and dependencies to a runner image. To follow these instructions, you must have docker installed, permissions to run docker, and docker container network access enabled. This step will create a runner image tagged as openroad/flow.

  1. Clone the OpenROAD-flow repository
git clone --recursive https://github.com/The-OpenROAD-Project/OpenROAD-flow.git
cd OpenROAD-flow
  1. Ensure the docker daemon is running and docker is in your PATH, then run the docker build:
./build_openroad.sh
  1. Start an interactive shell in a docker container using your user credentials
docker run -it -u $(id -u ${USER}):$(id -g ${USER}) openroad/flow bash
  1. Update your container environment
source ./setup_env.sh

To transfer files between your host system and container, it is often useful to use docker bind mounts instead.

Option 2: Local

  1. Clone the OpenROAD-flow repository
git clone --recursive https://github.com/The-OpenROAD-Project/OpenROAD-flow.git
cd OpenROAD-flow
  1. Run the build script
./build_openroad.sh
  1. Update your shell environment
source setup_env.sh

Using the Flow

See the flow README for details about the flow and how to run designs through the flow

Useful Resources

Your feedback is very welcome.

  • Website: Visit our website for more information on the project, participants and objectives.
  • GitHub Issues: Please submit GitHub issues for any bugs, improvements, or new feature requests. Feedback can be directed at this repository or the repository for the tool, component or design as appropriate. This link is an aggregate of all OpenROAD related issues
  • Community: Find us on the public Gitter community where you can ask quick questions or discuss anything OpenROAD related.
  • Twitter: Follow us on twitter - @OpenROAD_EDA.

Contributing

We welcome any comments, patches and designs to help us improve the tool. At this time we are focused on overhauling the build process, build testing, and the continuous integration framework. This will set us up for better integration with contributors. Please stay tuned.

About the Project

The OpenROAD ("Foundations and Realization of Open, Accessible Design") project was launched in June 2018 within the DARPA IDEA program. OpenROAD aims to bring down the barriers of cost, expertise and unpredictability that currently block designers' access to hardware implementation in advanced technologies. The project team (Qualcomm, Arm and multiple universities and partners, led by UC San Diego) is developing a fully autonomous, open-source tool chain for digital layout generation across die, package and board, with initial focus on the RTL-to-GDSII phase of system-on-chip design. Thus, OpenROAD holistically attacks the multiple facets of today's design cost crisis: engineering resources, design tool licenses, project schedule, and risk.

The IDEA program targets no-human-in-loop (NHIL) design, with 24-hour turnaround time and eventual zero loss of power-performance-area (PPA) design quality. No humans means that tools must adapt and self-tune, and never get stuck: thus, machine intelligence must replace today's human intelligence within the layout generation process. 24 hours means that problems must be aggressively decomposed into bite-sized subproblems for the design process to remain within the schedule constraint. Eventual zero loss of PPA quality requires parallel and distributed search to recoup the solution quality lost by problem decomposition.

Citing this Work

If you use this software in any published work, we would appreciate a citation! Please use the following references:

@article{ajayi2019openroad,
  title={OpenROAD: Toward a Self-Driving, Open-Source Digital Layout Implementation Tool Chain},
  author={Ajayi, T and Blaauw, D and Chan, TB and Cheng, CK and Chhabria, VA and Choo, DK and Coltella, M and Dobre, S and Dreslinski, R and Foga{\c{c}}a, M and others},
  journal={Proc. GOMACTECH},
  pages={1105--1110},
  year={2019}
}

A copy of this paper is available here (PDF).

@inproceedings{ajayi2019toward,
  title={Toward an open-source digital flow: First learnings from the openroad project},
  author={Ajayi, Tutu and Chhabria, Vidya A and Foga{\c{c}}a, Mateus and Hashemi, Soheil and Hosny, Abdelrahman and Kahng, Andrew B and Kim, Minsoo and Lee, Jeongsup and Mallappa, Uday and Neseem, Marina and others},
  booktitle={Proceedings of the 56th Annual Design Automation Conference 2019},
  pages={1--4},
  year={2019}
}

A copy of this paper is availble here (PDF).

If you like the tools, please give us a star on our GitHub repos!

License

The OpenROAD-flow repository (build and run scripts) has a BSD 3-Clause License. The flow relies on several tools, platforms and designs that each have their own licenses:

  • Find the tool license at: OpenROAD-flow/tools/{tool}/ or OpenROAD-flow/tools/OpenROAD/src/{tool}/
  • Find the platform license at: OpenROAD-flow/flow/platforms/{platform}/
  • Find the design license at: OpenROAD-flow/flow/designs/src/{design}/