this post was submitted on 28 May 2026
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My fucking CPU comment was not that serious. The projects we were doing were just that. I have a notebook full of diagrams that I understand less and less every year.
It was just a bit shitty that the CPU part wasn’t included with the chip itself. IIRC the nicer ones had hardware CPUs/CPU cores anyway.
I meant it more as “hey I need to do this simple task, better write a processor real quick” which is not convenient. I’m almost certain there are dozens of FOSS RISC cores that could be burned to all of Xilinx’s FPGAs. It’s theoretically hardware agnostic but these are super popular parts.
There are in fact parts that have CPUs included. However these aren't always the best route. Sometimes you don't want a CPU in the design at all, since software is SLOW compared to RTL designs for certain applications (DSP, Data acquisition, etc).
Xilinx has a number of SOC parts that bundle ARM cores alongside FPGA fabric, and they're very tightly coupled to make passing data between them very efficient. These include the Zynq and Versal families.
There are already some open source cores out there, including NEORV32. There are also closed source ones, like Xilinx's Microblaze IP. Which comes in both ARM32/64 variants, as well as RISC-V now.
The FPGA itself is just the chip. You can find them pre-installed in development boards though, but these are more expensive. But at least they might of a microprocessor if that's what you want.
And if you're fed up with Xilinx, check out Lattice semiconductors. They have a somewhat more open ecosystem