Libre-SOC began its life when Luke Leighton wanted there to be a completely free and libre system on a chip offering. He initially opted for a RISC-V base, but later switched to OpenPOWER when that seemed like a better fit for the project.[4][5] It is the second processor written from scratch using the OpenPOWER ISA 3.0, and the first libre core that is completely independent of IBM.
The project is mostly funded through NLnet grants.[6][7]
While being developed as a "soft core" Libre-SOC will be fabricated in 180 nm by TSMC's "Open MPW Shuttle Program" through Imec in 2021.[8] The finished ASIC was sent to Imec in July 2021.[9]
The Libre-SOC core will be a hybrid design, based around a precise-augmented version of the historic CDC 6600 microarchitecture,[10] merging traditional general purpose, vector and graphics computing into a single execution unit reducing complexity and size of the complete chip as well as simplifying 3D driver development.[11] This constitutes the need to add a small addition to the OpenPOWER instruction set architecture called "Simple-V".[12][13]
SVP64, currently in draft,[14] extends OpenPOWER register files to 128, including CR fields, in order to cope with modern 3D and Video workloads, effectively making Libre-SOC a Vector processor.
While Libre-SOC is as developed as a libre software project, eventually the goal is to produce real "hard" hardware products as opposed to the "soft"synthesised versions that reflects the actual development.
The first hard version of the Libre-SOC is fabricated by TSMC on their 180 nm node. The chip comprises 130.000 logic gates, measures 5.5 × 5.9 mm2 and will be packaged in a 128 pin QFP package.[9]