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OpenSPARC is an open-source hardware project, started in December 2005, for CPUs implementing the SPARC instruction architecture. The initial contribution to the project was Sun Microsystems' register-transfer level (RTL) Verilog code for a full 64-bit, 32-thread microprocessor, the UltraSPARC T1 processor.
Verilator is a very high speed open-source simulator that compiles Verilog to multithreaded C++/SystemC. Verilator previously required that testbench code be written as synthesizable RTL, or as a C++ or SystemC testbench, because Verilator did not support behavioral Verilog. These are now supported. Verilog Behavioral Simulator (VBS) GPL
The Free Pascal Runtime Library, abbreviated RTL, is Free Pascal's runtime library. The RTL consists of a collection of units that provide components and classes for general programming tasks. It acts as a basis for Free Pascal 's Free Component Library (FCL) and the Lazarus Component Library (LCL).
Design at the RTL level is typical practice in modern digital design. [1] Unlike in software compiler design, where the register-transfer level is an intermediate representation and at the lowest level, the RTL level is the usual input that circuit designers operate on.
Rtl is the second largest group of ntdll calls. These comprise the (extended) C Run-Time Library, which includes many utility functions that can be used by native applications, yet don't directly involve kernel support.
This is a list of proprietary source-available software, which has available source code, but is not classified as free software or open-source software. In some cases, this type of software is originally sold and released without the source code , and the source code becomes available later.
Unlike Win32 applications, native applications instantiate within the Kernel runtime code (ntoskrnl.exe) and so they must have a different entry point (NtProcessStartup, rather than (w)(Win)MainCRTStartup as is found in a Win32 application), [4] obtain their command-line arguments via a pointer to an in-memory structure, manage their own memory ...
Native code (i.e., processor-specific machine code) cannot contain metadata, so it is stored in a separate metadata file that can be reflected like ordinary CLI assemblies. [22] Since it is the same format as CLI metadata, WinRT APIs can be used from managed CLI languages as if it was just a .NET API.