On 08/23/2011 07:01 PM, omall...@msu.edu wrote:
Quoting Gordan Bobic <gor...@bobich.net>:
Unfortunately there is no way I could make it, but on the subject of 3D
support on ARM, Luke recently mentioned something that initially seemed
outlandish but upon closer examination doesn't seem like a bad idea. As
we all know, the state of openness of specifications of commonly used
ARM 3D GPUs is at best dire. What has been proposed is a bit radical,
but it doesn't actually seem that implausible. Specifically, combining
Open Graphics Project (http://wiki.opengraphics.org/tiki-index.php) and
the xilinx zynq-7000 or similar (dual core Cortex A9 + FPGA). The idea
is to have an OGP GPU in firmware in FPGA. In terms of the power budget,
it seems to work relatively sanely considering what it is, and it is as
ideal as it gets as far as openness and flexibility goes.
I just thought it's worthy of a mention.
It does seem outlandish, but it is kind of cool. Is it going to give
enough 3d speed? The next gen tegra is supposed to have a 24 core GPU.
If you can quantify what "enough 3D speed" means, then perhaps that can
be assessed. There really aren't many applications around at the moment
to make this an issue. I'd be more interested in it's ability to decode
1080p.
Then again - it's FPGA! You can load a different "firmware" depending on
whether you need 1080p decoding or 3D rendering, or some other kind of
specialized DSP offload with only bare minimal VGA. :)
Personally, I think OGP would be worth it even if just for the fact that
we would no longer have to beg (in vain) the vendors for decent drivers
or published specs. The added flexibility on top is just a "free extra". :)
Gordan