P550 cores don't have vector extensions. It's actually quite an old design, from 2021. What you'd want is SiFive P670 cores, which are RVA22 compliant with the vector 1.0 spec.
Three years from announcement of a core to SoCs on boards being available is actually on the quick side.
Arm A53 (Pi 3, October 2012 - February 2016), A72 (Pi 4, Feb 2015 - June 2019), and A76 (Pi 5, May 2018 - September 2023, or January 2022 for Radxa Rock 5B) all took longer.
P670 was only announced in November 2022. If a board ships by the end of 2025 it will be doing very well.
why does it take so long? I totally understand for leading edge products on new nodes why it would, but for chips on mature processes, what's the bottleneck between design and sale? I know the round trip time from the foundries is ~3 months. Is the rest validation? It feels like it would be really valuable to be able to reduce the time to ~1 year (even if that came at the cost of power, area or a moderate amount of performance). Shortening the feedback loop here would be super helpful for designers and programmers to be able to experiment with new paradigms faster I would think.
brucehoult|1 year ago
Arm A53 (Pi 3, October 2012 - February 2016), A72 (Pi 4, Feb 2015 - June 2019), and A76 (Pi 5, May 2018 - September 2023, or January 2022 for Radxa Rock 5B) all took longer.
P670 was only announced in November 2022. If a board ships by the end of 2025 it will be doing very well.
adgjlsfhk1|1 year ago