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How European collaboration is driving an open source revolution in the chip space

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

 

The open source software 鈥榤ovement鈥 has already transformed computer operating systems. Can it do the same for semiconductors? European leaders think so. They have launched a range of initiatives to support the open source chip architecture, RISC-V鈥

If the geopolitical battles of the 21st century were fought over oil, what is the 21st century equivalent? For many observers, there鈥檚 one candidate: semiconductors.

Chips power everything from the smartphone to the giant servers that organise global financial systems. So it鈥檚 no surprise that the world鈥檚 superpowers 鈥 China, the US, Europe 鈥 are jostling to control chip supplies and win the R&D race. 

It explains why the European Union passed , which entered into force on 21 September 2023. It set aside 鈧43 billion to increase Europe鈥檚 semiconductor production capacity from 10 percent of the global market today to 20 percent by 2030.

And there鈥檚 one part of the market to which Europe is especially committed: the open-source, royalty-free instruction set architecture (ISA) for semiconductors: .

For decades, the microprocessor market has been dominated by companies such as Arm and Intel that licence their chip design IP to companies for a fee. For example, Arm-based chips have powered more than for more than a decade. 

But now open source is giving developers the ability to design chips without paying royalties.

One of the EU鈥檚 flagship RISC-V projects is the . Its aim is to create repository of industrial quality RISC-V chip designs in different domains such as automotive, industrial and healthcare. 

In other words, (Together for RISc-V Technology and ApplicatioNs) will 鈥榩roductise鈥 RISC-V 鈥 especially in the area of 鈥榮ystem on a chip鈥, which combines many elements of a computer system into a single chip (system memory, graphics processing, radio modems (etc).

TRISTAN member companies such as Thales are working hard to make the project a success, and in so doing change the commercials on which the chip market is based. 

But before we dive more deeply into the potential impact of the RISC-V revolution, let鈥檚 re-cap the history of the wider open source idea.

Software wants to be free: the origins of open source

Open source computing emerged in 1991, when engineer Linus Torvalds created a new computer operating system 鈥 the 鈥 and released its source code for free. 

It was a revolutionary move. Although the idea of open source software (OSS) had been around for decades, Linux made it fly. Linux was competing with well-established operating systems such as Unix and Windows. But it prevailed. Today, it is . It underpins Android, and therefore most of the world鈥檚 smartphones. It also powers . 

And now, the open source model is making an impact in semiconductors. Which brings is back to RISC-V.

Open source comes to semiconductors

The RISC in RISC-V stands for Reduced Instruction Set Computer. are critical. They specify what the processor is capable of doing 鈥 and how it gets done. Obviously, ISAs with fewer commands 鈥 鈥榬educed instruction sets鈥 鈥 execute faster and use less memory. This is especially important when making chips for mobile and embedded devices, where size and power consumption are limited.

One company, Arm Holdings, spotted the potential for RISC technology early. It developed proprietary licences in the 1990s and eventually dominated the world of smartphones and connected objects. ARM tech helped smartphone engineers to re-define .

But not RISC-V offers an alternative to Arm 鈥 and other proprietary ISAs such as Intel鈥檚 x86. We can list its benefits as follows:

路    Flexible: developers can customise for specific use cases, resulting in faster development cycles and better performance
路    Autonomous: developers can fine-tune their systems without relying on third parties or incurring additional license fees 

路    Visible: it鈥檚 open so developers can have more visibility into the code base
路    Affordable: open source so no licence fee 鈥 and also no need to buy a commercial chip with more capability than needed
路    Independence: a privately-owned ISA brings the risk of export bans and other restrictions. With open source, there鈥檚 no owner to restrict access.

 

RISC-V has made a lot of progress. Its was founded in 2015 and now has 3,950 members across 70 countries including Google, Qualcomm, Intel and Nvidia.

The project is genuinely global. This summer鈥檚 RISC-V Summit welcomed attendees from 40 countries. Already, companies all over the world are already adopting the tech. The are estimated to have funding of over $1 billion. And in the US, startup SiFive to value the company at over $2.5 billion. In August 2024, it launched its first RISC-V solution for data centres.

Europe鈥檚 tech sector commits to RISC-V 

However, as explained in the introduction, there is particular support for RISC-V across Europe.  In 2022, the European Union confirmed to support the technology. The EU 鈥檚 commitment to RISC-V is part of a broader strategy to close the gap with its counterparts in the US and Asia Pac. There鈥檚 also a security dimension. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted Europe's dependency on Chinese semiconductor supply chains. It demonstrated the need for an autonomous European ecosystem.

European activity around RISC-V is already accelerating. In 2023, the between the EU鈥檚 EuroHPC body and a consortium of industry firms, research organisations and institutions. It wants to build an EU-wide RISC-V ecosystem to embed the tech in mass market products.

Moving RISC-V from concept to product

The is a central component of this effort to build a European sovereign alternative to existing proprietary players. As a leader in digital security for connected devices such as industrial sensors and software-defined vehicles, Thales is deeply committed to TRISTAN. Jean-Roch Coulon, RISC-V Processor Architect at Thales, says the hardware dimension of the project is especially important. 

鈥淚n any big industry collaboration, it鈥檚 always harder to tackle hardware than software,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not easy to share hardware insights. You need tools and verification, and this takes a lot of time and resources. This is much easier in the software space, which is probably 20 years ahead. So TRISTAN is an important project if we want Europe to have its own sovereignty in chip hardware, and not be reliant on private overseas platforms.鈥

From TRISTAN to ISOLDE

The follow-up to TRISTAN is (inevitably) called ISOLDE. Its mission is to take RISC-V hardware designs from concept to near-commercial adoption. More specifically, the project has stated that designs should achieve technology readiness (TRL) 7. This means that by 2026, the participants will have 鈥渄emonstrated RISC-V hardware designs in an operational environment.鈥

Away from Europe, there is another influential body driving the RISC-V vision forward. This is the . Thales is one of the 100 plus members that are developing the organisation鈥檚 CORE-V family of open-source RISC-V processors. To date, . 

For Jean-Roch Coulon, these developments help Thales to pay its part in the evolution of RISC-V and form new alliances. 鈥淲e need to be on the RISC-V train,鈥 he says. 鈥淲orking on projects like TRISTAN, ISOLDE and Open HW has enabled us to collaborate with organisations we have not worked with before. We now have relationships with some of Europe鈥檚 biggest chip companies, and also the best academic institutes. This is fantastic. It means we can adapt to the best new ideas and stay ahead of the competition.鈥

16 billion RISC-V chips in play by 2030?

Ten years after its birth, the open source semiconductor 鈥榤ovement鈥 is gaining ground. According to RISC-V International, RISC-V architecture has already been used inside over a billion chips. The organisation is predicting more than 16 billion unit shipments by 2030. And it believes that 27 percent of AI accelerators for automotive could be based on RISC-V by the same year. 

Meanwhile, there have been some notable 鈥榳ins鈥 in the commercial sector. Chip designer Qualcomm plans to embed RISC-V in the chips that power . And, remarkably, and even launched a $1 billion fund to support RISC-V based startups. Intel, remember, offers its own commercial ISA: x86.

Calista Redmond, CEO of RISC-V International, believes these developments show that . She says: 鈥淩ISC-V is absolutely the definition of open computing鈥t鈥檚 here already. It鈥檚 going across all domains in computing. It is inevitable.鈥

If you are interested in RISC-V, Thales is ready to collaborate, and to participate in European consortiums that drive innovation in this important space. For more details, please contact Marie Letailleur.
 

TRISTAN has received funding from the Chips Joint Undertaking under the grant agreement nr. 101095947 and from participating states Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czechia, Germany, Denmark, Estonia, Greece, Spain, Finland, France, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Iceland, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Sweden, Slovenia, Slovakia, Turkey. 
For France, the project is supported by the French government as part of France 2030. 
 

 

 

The ISOLDE project has received funding from the Chips Joint Undertaking under grant agreement nr. 101112274 and from participating states are Austria, Czechia, France, Germany, Italy, Romania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.