Define "huge" in the context of logic cells, SRAM, and DSP blocks.
If you're looking at something like a Xilinx Virtex-7 2000T which is going to have about 1.9M LEs, 67K of BRAM, and 2160 DSP slices, then perhaps an inrevium board might come close. You can also get them with a 690T (693k LEs, 52K BRAM, 3.6k DSPs), or an 1140T (1.1M LEs, 67K BRAM, 3.3k DSPs). Add in an HDMI, QSFP, and pin header FMC cards and you get pretty much everything on your list except SATA and Analog I/O. Hitech Global also makes a 690/2000 PCIe board with FMC expansion modules. They don't have a module that does video or analog I/O, but they have several network option, a SATA module, and an I/O module. If you are actually looking for SRAM on the board and not DDRx memory, it becomes quite a bit harder. Some of the terasIC Altera boards have 4.5MB SRAM on them and a very wide selection of HSMC based add on boards (DVI, HDMI, network, DAC/ADC, etc). However you are only going to get around 500k equivelent logic elements unless you want to go with a dual FPGA board like their Arria V GT dev board. Patrick M On 07/02/2015 10:59 AM, Timothy Normand Miller wrote: > I have some funding I need to spend before it expires, I've been > meaning to get an FPGA prototyping board, and I'm also working on some > GPU stuff that would benefit from that. So I was wondering if people > would mind making some suggestions about which one I should get. > > > Things I need the board to have: > > - FPGA with a huge number of logic cells, a lot of on-board SRAM, and > "DSP" (i.e. multiplier) blocks. > - DRAM on board > - PCIe > - Video out or equivalent (SERDES, DACs, etc.) > - General purpose I/O > > Things that would be nice: > > - NIC > - SATA > - Analog general-purpose I/O > > As for synthesis and programming software, Mac support would be nice. > I also have Windows 7 in a VM, which due to the way the VM integrates, > is easier to deal with than Linux. > > Thanks! > > > -- > Timothy Normand Miller, PhD > Assistant Professor of Computer Science, Binghamton University > http://www.cs.binghamton.edu/~millerti/ > <http://www.cs.binghamton.edu/%7Emillerti/> > Open Graphics Project > > > _______________________________________________ > Open-graphics mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.duskglow.com/mailman/listinfo/open-graphics > List service provided by Duskglow Consulting, LLC (www.duskglow.com)
_______________________________________________ Open-graphics mailing list [email protected] http://lists.duskglow.com/mailman/listinfo/open-graphics List service provided by Duskglow Consulting, LLC (www.duskglow.com)
