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The Zip CPU

The Zip CPU is a small, light-weight, RISC CPU. Specific design goals include:

Unique features and characteristics

Getting Started

If you'd like to get started with the ZipCPU, you might wish to know that this repository contains the CPU, its documentation, and the toolchain. The CPU implementation found here, though, is just that: a CPU. This implementation requires a bus with peripherals hanging off of it, things such as RAM, flash (ROM), serial port, etc. This is just where I keep the CPU apart from any necessary peripherals.

So, if you want to try out the CPU, feel free to download and build this repository (use git-clone with a depth of 1--there's a lot of stuff in the git repo that you don't necessarily need). You'll need it for the binutils, GCC, and newlib support provided by it.

Once you've built these tools, then I'd suggest you look into the ZBasic repository. That repository places the CPU in an environment with block RAM, QSPI flash, and SD-card (SPI protocol) access. From that repository, you can either tweak the distro (main.v, regdefs.h, board.h, board.ld) to add the peripherals you want to use the CPU with, or you can use AutoFPGA to adjust your RAM size, add or remove peripherals and so forth while maintaining (creating, really) all of these files for you.

The sim/ subdirectory also contains a version of the ZipCPU in a usable environment for simulation purposes. This includes the CPU, possibly more CPU's for a multiprocessor environment, bus interconnect, memory, a simulated serial port, and a couple more peripherals.

If you aren't interested in simulating the CPU, there is an assembly level debugger that you can use to stop and step the CPU, as well as an integrated wishbone scope that you can use to get traces from within the design while it is running.

Need help?

If you'd like to use the ZipCPU, and don't know where to begin, feel free to find me on IRC as ZipCPU. I've created a #zipcpu channel on several IRC servers that I tend to inhabit. If you get stuck, feel free to drop by and ask for help. You can also drop by just to say hi. Either way, please introduce yourself and give me some time to respond.

Current Status

You can also read about the ZipCPU via several blog articles posted at zipcpu.com! Articles you might find valuable include:

Not yet integrated

Commercial Opportunities

The GPLv3 license should be sufficient for most (all) academic and hobby purposes, and certainly for all simulation based purposes. If you find, however, that the GPLv3 license is insufficient for your needs, other licenses can be purchased from Gisselquist Technology, LLC.

This applies to all but the toolchain, for which GPLv3 should work for all purposes. (Besides, I don't own the licenses for Binutils, GCC, or newlib.)