ETRAX CRIS
The ETRAX CRIS is a series of CPUs for use in embedded systems since 1993.[1] The name is an acronym of the chip's features: Ethernet, Token Ring, AXis - Code Reduced Instruction Set. Token ring support has been taken out from the latest chips as it has become obsolete.
Types of chips
The TGA (Twinax Gate Array), developed in 1986, was a communications transceiver for the AS/400 architecture.
The First chip with embedded microcontroller was the CGA-1 (Coax Gate Array) which contained both IBM 3270 (coax) communications and AS/400 communications (Twinax). It also had a small microcontroller and various IO:s, including serial and parallel interfaces. The 1 chip was designed by Martin Gren, the bug-fixed CGA-2 by Martin Gren and Staffan Göransson. [2]
ETRAX
In 1993, by introducing 10 Mbit/s Ethernet and Token Ring controllers, the name ETRAX was born.
The ETRAX-4 had improved performance over previous models and an SCSI controller.
The ETRAX 100 features an 10/100 Mbit/s Ethernet Controller along with ATA and Wide SCSI support.
ETRAX 100LX
In 2000, the ETRAX 100LX design added an MMU, as well as USB, synchronous serial and SDRAM support. Its CPU performance was raised to 100 MIPS. Since it has an MMU, it can run the Linux kernel without modifications (low-level support for the ETRAX CPU had to be added[3]).
Main characteristics:
- A 32-bit RISC CPU core
- 10/100 Mbit/s Ethernet controller
- 4 asynchronous serial ports
- 2 synchronous serial ports
- 2 USB ports
- 2 Parallel ports
- 4 ATA (IDE) ports
- 2 Narrow SCSI ports (or 1 Wide)
- Support for SDRAM, Flash, EEPROM, SRAM
The device comes in a 256-pin Plastic Ball Grid Array (PBGA) package and uses 350 mW power (typical).
ETRAX 100LX MCM
This system-on-a-chip is an ETRAX 100LX plus flash memory, SDRAM, and an Ethernet PHYceiver. There were two versions commercialized: the ETRAX 100LX MCM 2+8 (2 MB flash, 8 MB SDRAM), and the ETRAX MCM 4-16 (4 MB flash, 16 MB SDRAM).
ETRAX FS
Designed in 2005, and with full Linux 2.6 support, this chip features:
- A 200 MIPS, 32-bit RISC with 5 stage pipeline CRIS CPU core with 16 kB data and 16 kB instruction cache and a MMU.
- Two 10/100 Mbit/s Ethernet controllers
- Crypto accelerator, supporting AES, DES, Triple DES, SHA-1 and MD5.
- 128 kB on-chip RAM
- A microprogrammable I/O processor, supporting PC-Card, CardBus, PCI, USB FS/HS host, USB FS device, SCSI and ATA.
The device comes in a 256-pin Plastic Ball Grid Array package and uses 465 mW power (typical).
Development tools
Software
A SDK (along with a cross-compiler) is provided by Axis on the development site.
Hardware
Several hardware manufacturers offer 'developer boards': a circuit board featuring an ETRAX chip and all the necessary I/O ports to develop (or even deploy) applications. These include:[4]
- AXIS 82 developer board
- Embedded Linux PC from ipcas
- ACME Systems' FOX board
- Elphel Reconfigurable Network Camera based on Etrax FS and Xilinx Spartan 3e FPGA
- embedded Linux system
- single board Linux computer
- DSP&FPGA's industrial control unit
- remote control systems
References
- ↑ axis.com - Axis Chip Development History Archived May 30, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ http://www.axis.com/files/sales/axis_milestones_30years_1401_lo.pdf
- ↑ The linux kernel source-code under /arch/chris contains the low-level CPU-specific additions required to make the Linux kernel able to run on the ETRAX/Cris CPUs. (See for example https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/cris?h=v4.13-rc4)
- ↑ "Showroom @". Developer.axis.com. Retrieved 2009-04-09.