| SoC RTOSs | ||
| NET+Works | ZFx86 | |
| Company | NetSilicon | ZF Micro Devices Inc. |
| Processor | 32-bit ARM7TDMI | 32-bit x86 |
| Peripherals | Ethernet, serial, GPIO serial, parallel, 10-channel DMA | GPIO, IDE, USB, floppy disk, serial, parallel, IrDA, PS/2, I2C |
| RTOS | NET+OS (ThreadX), uClinux, Wind River's VxWorks, Accelerated Technology's Nucleus | LynuxWorks' BlueCat Linux, Red Hat Linux, Wind River's VxWorks, Microsoft's Windows CE |
| Tools | GNU, Green Hills' Multi 2000 IDE, Accelerated Technology's code/lab, Wind River's Tornado, Esmertec Jbed | GNU, Wind River's Tornado, Microsoft's Platform Builder and Visual Studio |
| Services | Network protocols, NET+Services | Phoenix PC BIOS |
| Miscellaneous | NET+DB development board | FailSafe Boot ROM, Z-Tag |
NetSilicon provides four different real-time operating systems (RTOSs). NET+OS 4 is the primary RTOS. It's based on Express Logic's ThreadX v4 RTOS. The development tools for NET+OS are part of Green Hills' Multi 2000 IDE. NET+OS 4 includes the Fusion 5.0 TCP/IP stack and support for SNMP v3, LDAP, and Active Directory. A new XML Parser provides the basis for protocols like SOAP. The optional NET+Services includes mail, FTP, and Web servers.
The other RTOSs for NET+ARM include uClinux, VxWorks, and Nucleus. GNU tools are used with uClinux while Wind River's Tornado is used with VxWorks. Accelerated Technology's code/lab development environment works with Nucleus. Each RTOS comes with its own set of drivers and services for NET+ARM. All have been tested with the NET+ARM and have comparable services to NET+Services.
www.netsilicon.com
ZF Micro comes with support for LynuxWorks' BlueCat Linux, Red Hat's Linux, Wind River's VxWorks, and Microsoft's Windows CE. The latter two are royalty-based when a product is delivered. ZF Micro is RTOS-agnostic, providing similar configuration support for each RTOS. This includes drivers for the built-in PC-compatible hardware such as the IDE, USB, parallel, and serial ports.
A typical ZFx86 system can often provide host-based development. But most developers will utilize a cross-platform development approach because most PCs have significantly more power and disk space than a typical embedded system. Still, having the ability to use the same OS on the embedded system is handy. Versions of the ZFx86 are available with minimal on-chip peripherals and specialized peripherals like the ZFx86-TV, which has video support.
www.zfmicro.com
About the Author
William G. Wong
Senior Content Director - Electronic Design and Microwaves & RF
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