Awesome
LogicBone
When you can't quite find the development board you want, why not make your own?
This project aims to design a feature rich FPGA development board that is compatible with the open source FPGA synthesis tools such as yosys, NextPNR and SymbiFlow, while also targeting larger logic designs that need faster IO. The requirements set out for this board are, in order of priority:
- Compatiblity with open-source FPGA synthesis tools.
- Minimum of 4Gb of high speed memory, preferably at least 8Gb.
- At least one Ethernet interface.
- Compatiblity with existing expansion interfaces.
- USB interface for programming, debug and power.
- Licenseable as Open Source Hardware.
The ultimate objective of this board is to instantiate a soft core processor, such as the RISC-V, and use it to boot a Linux operating system with networking.
To that effect, this board is designed to be mechanically and electrically compatible with the Beaglebone Black, but featuring a Lattice ECP5 FPGA, which is available in logic sizes up to 85k LUTs, and a selection of hardware blocks for DDR3 DQS acceleration, MIPI interfaces, DSPs and 3Gbps SERDES.
Features
The major features of this board include:
- Lattice ECP5 (LFE5UM5G-45F-8BG381C)
- 44k LUTs and 351 kbits of distributed RAM
- 1944 kbits of embedded block RAM
- 203 IO pins
- 72 hardware multipliers
- 4 PLLs
- 2 dual channel 5Gbps SERDES
- Beaglebone Black mechanical and header compatibility.
- P9 is fully connected to the FPGA.
- P8 has 32 pins connected to the FPGA.
- 12-bit 1MSPS muxed ADC on P9 analog pins.
- 8Gb on-board DDR3L RAM
- KSZ9031 Gigabit Ethernet PHY
- microSD card slot
- USB-C upstream facing port for power and programming
- USB-C downstream facing port with USB Superspeed support
- M.2 E-Keyed expansion interface:
- Accepts connectivity options in the 2230 form factor
- Both PCIe lanes are routed to the FPGA SERDES
- GPIO, UART, SDIO and PCM interfaces
- MaxLinear MxL7704 power manager
Work In Progress
This project has completed the PCB layout phase, and we are moving into hardware prototyping. While we wait for the first boards to arrive, we have a schematic and some renders of the board that might satisfy your curiosity.
We would be happy to accept any feedback and review on the design that you might be willing to provide.
Copyright
Copyright Owen Kirby 2020
This documentation describes Open Hardware and is licensed under the CERN OHL v1.2.
You may redistribute and modify this documentation under the terms of the CERN OHL v1.2. (see LICENSE.txt). This documentation is distributed WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY, INCLUDING OF MERCHANTABILITY, SATISFACTORY QUALITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Please see the CERN OHL v.1.2 for applicable conditions.