109 projects tagged "Electronic Design Automation (EDA)"
Slam is a mature IC Layout editor with the ability to edit very large designs (such as stream files larger than 10GB). Novel features include threading for redraw, support for displaying on multiple X servers simultaneously, and a Tcl interface to the database for user extensibility. The system is a library based system with multi-user support. Programmable structures (P-Cells) are available in Tcl. The editor includes gds input and output.
Piklab is an integrated development environment for applications based on PIC and dsPIC microcontrollers. Supported compilers are: the Small Device C Compiler, the GNU PIC Utilities, PICC compilers, the PIC30 toolchain, the C18 compiler, the JAL and JALV2 compilers, the CSC compiler, and the Boost compilers. Supported programmers: ICD2, PICkit, PICkit2, PicStart+, and most direct programmers. Supported debuggers: ICD2 and GPSim. A commandline programmer/debugger is also provided.
DOLPHIN SLED is a hierarchical schematic entry solution with graphic linking of components, hierarchical configuration of the netlist, and multi-language netlisting (SPICE, Verilog, VHDL-AMS, etc.). Interoperability with other schematic entry tools, particularly the ECS family (including Synario, Cohesion, and Laker-AMS) is ensured for capitalizing on legacy designs and cooperative work. Interoperability is ensured through standard design exchange formats (EDIF2) and scriptability for customization.
Scheture is a hierarchical schematic capture system with built-in netlisters for Spice and Verilog. It has built-in plotting for Postscript, HP PCL and HP GL/2 printers and plotters. It includes a set of symbol primitives, and allows user-defined symbol primitives to allow for extensive customization of primitive properties. The system supports wire buses and iterated instances. The system also supports global pins and implicitly connected pins on a specific sheet. Supported platforms include Solaris and Linux (32- and 64-bit).
A tool to launch applications remotely on your PC via your Android device.