HomeElectronics NewsWhat's NewA Look At The New RISC-V Specifications Of 2022

A Look At The New RISC-V Specifications Of 2022

The global open-design standards pioneer, RISC-V International, has announced the first four specification and extension approvals for 2022. The announcement builds on the pace RISC-V had established in 2021, when 16 standards covering more than 40 extensions were ratified.

“The RISC-V culture of contribution and collaboration continues to produce impressive and strategic results,” said Calista Redmond, CEO of RISC-V. “RISC-V members are leaders in the era of open compute, proving that collaboration accelerates innovation through shared investment while growing global opportunity.”

- Advertisement -

“These new specifications accelerate embedded and large-system design,” said Mark Himelstein, CTO of RISC-V. The new specifications are as follows:

1] Efficient Trace for RISC-V (E-Trace)

  • E-Trace for RISC-V provides a branch trace-based approach to processor tracing that is suited for debugging a wide range of applications, from small embedded designs to supercomputers.
  • The signals between the RISC-V core and the encoder (or ingress port) are specified in the documentation, along with a compressed branch trace method and a packet format to encapsulate compressed branch trace information.

2] RISC-V Supervisor Binary Interface (SBI)

- Advertisement -
  • Using an application binary interface in supervisor mode (S-mode or VS-mode), the RISC-V standard for SBI creates a firmware layer between the hardware platform and the operating system kernel. This abstraction allows all RISC-V operating system implementations to share platform services.
  • Because many RISC-V members have already implemented the RISC-V SBI specification in their RISC-V solutions, ratifying it would enable a consistent approach across the whole RISC-V ecosystem, assuring compatibility.

3] RISC-V Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) specifications

  • UEFI is an important component of any system. It may be able to take the place of simple BIOS software in some cases.
  • Existing UEFI standards are brought to RISC-V processors via RISC-V UEFI Protocols.

4] RISC-V Zmmul multiply-only extension

  • Division operations are too uncommon in many microcontroller applications to justify the cost of divider hardware. Simple FPGA soft cores will benefit from the RISC-V Zmmul expansion in particular.
  • It enables low-cost implementations that require multiplication operations but not division.

 

 

Aaryaa Padhyegurjar, Tech Journalist, EFY Group
Aaryaa Padhyegurjar, Tech Journalist, EFY Group
Aaryaa Padhyegurjar is an embedded systems specialist with a Master of Science in Embedded Computing Systems and research experience at German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), where she completed her thesis. Her work focuses on building intelligent, real-time systems that integrate hardware and software for practical, real-world applications. Her areas of expertise include embedded systems, Internet of Things (IoT), sensor fusion, Real-Time Kinematic (RTK) positioning, and Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) technologies. She brings a strong foundation in developing precise, data-driven solutions that require high accuracy and reliability. Aaryaa is interested in designing systems that combine sensing, computation, and connectivity to solve complex engineering challenges. Her approach emphasises both technical depth and real-world usability, making advanced technologies more accessible and applicable across industries.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS & COMMENTS

EFY Prime

Unique DIY Projects

Electronics News

Truly Innovative Electronics

Latest DIY Videos

Electronics Components

Electronics Jobs

Calculators For Electronics