A Linux Foundation Project
OPF N1 Working Group · Heritage Reference · OpenPOWER Foundation

The Backbone of the Internet
Ran on POWER Architecture

Freescale PowerQUICC and QorIQ processors powered Cisco routers, Juniper switches, and industrial networking equipment for two decades. We're open-sourcing this proven networking silicon, updating it to POWER ISA 3.1, and running it through modern EDA flows.

Cisco Catalyst & ASR Series Juniper MX & EX Series MikroTik RouterOS HPE / Aruba Enterprise Industrial SCADA Networks
Explore the Chip Families Join the Initiative
20+
Years POWER in production networking infrastructure
8-core
QorIQ P4080 — 8-core POWER at 1.5 GHz for carrier-grade routing
MPC85xx
PowerQUICC III — the mid-range router CPU for a decade
Cisco GSR
12000 Series backbone routers ran 667 MHz PowerPC route processors
The Heritage Chip Families

Three Generations of POWER Networking Silicon

Freescale (formerly Motorola, acquired by NXP) built three successive generations of POWER-based networking processors. Each generation ran in real production networks at scale — not lab silicon, not reference designs. Production iron that carried internet traffic for two decades.

Generation 1–2 · 2000s

Freescale PowerQUICC III

MPC83xx / MPC85xx series · PowerPC Book E
CPU Cores
1–2 e500 cores
Max Clock
1.5 GHz
Key Models
MPC8548, MPC8572, MPC8377
Process
90 nm → 65 nm

The MPC85xx was the mid-range router CPU for a decade. Book E PowerPC with hardware network acceleration, integrated Ethernet MACs, PCI Express, and dedicated crypto engines. The e500 core's split integer/FP pipeline and deterministic memory latency made it the default choice for control-plane packet processing across the industry.

Cisco 7200 (7448) Cisco ISR 2900 Juniper J-Series MikroTik CCR
Open-source initiative — in scoping
Generation 3 · Late 2000s–2010s

Freescale QorIQ P-series

P10xx / P20xx / P40xx / P50xx · up to 8 cores
CPU Cores
1–8 e500mc / e5500
Max Clock
1.8 GHz (P4080)
Key Models
P1010, P2020, P4080, P5040
Process
45 nm

The P4080 — 8 e500mc cores at 1.5 GHz on 45 nm — was the carrier-grade networking CPU of its era. The QorIQ line introduced DPAA (Data Path Acceleration Architecture), a hardware packet classification and scheduling engine integrated directly with the CPU complex. DPAA prefigured modern SmartNIC architectures by a decade. The P5040 pushed to 2.2 GHz with e5500 64-bit cores and hardware virtualisation.

Juniper MX80 Juniper MX240 Cisco ASR 1000 HPE ProCurve
Open-source initiative — in scoping
Access Layer · 2010s

AppliedMicro APM86xxx

PowerPC-based access switch silicon · 40 nm
CPU
PowerPC 465 / 476
Key Model
APM86392
Integration
CPU + NPU + Switch Fabric
Process
40 nm

AppliedMicro (APM) built access-layer switch SoCs around PowerPC 465/476 cores integrated with a network processing unit and switch fabric on a single die. The APM86392 shipped in Cisco Catalyst 2960X and 3650/3850 series — the most widely deployed access switches in enterprise networking. Tight CPU-NPU integration on a single die at 40 nm represented the state of the art for cost-optimised access networking.

Cisco Catalyst 2960X Cisco Catalyst 3650 Cisco Catalyst 3850
Open-source initiative — in scoping

The QorIQ DPAA Architecture: A Modern Blueprint

The QorIQ P4080's Data Path Acceleration Architecture integrated hardware packet classification, policing, scheduling, and queue management directly adjacent to the CPU complex — connected via a coherent fabric. This is identical to what NVIDIA Bluefield, Marvell Octeon, and Broadcom Stingray SmartNICs do today. Open-sourcing DPAA gives designers a 45 nm reference for a hardware-accelerated networking data path that can be updated to modern nodes.

DPAA → SmartNIC
Hardware packet classification and scheduling, open IP
e500mc → Modern Core
Updated to POWER ISA 3.1 — full software ecosystem
45 nm → 7 nm
EDA retargeting delivers 10× PPA improvement at modern nodes
Proven at Scale

This Silicon Ran Real Networks — at Global Scale

These weren't reference platforms. They were production CPUs in equipment that carried enterprise and carrier internet traffic for 10–20 years. That deployment history is the validation data that academic designs never have.

Cisco Systems
POWER CPUs across every product tier — backbone, distribution, and access — for over a decade.
  • GSR 12000 — PRP-1 route processor: 667 MHz PowerPC
  • 7200 Series (7201) — Motorola/Freescale PowerPC 7448
  • Catalyst 6500 Sup720 — PowerPC management plane
  • ASR 1000 — early route processors: PowerPC architecture
  • Catalyst 2960X — APM86392 PowerPC + NPU + switch fabric
Juniper Networks
QorIQ P-series powered Juniper Routing Engines before the migration to x86.
  • MX80 — QorIQ-based Routing Engine
  • MX240 — Freescale QorIQ RE
  • J-Series routers — PowerPC control plane
  • EX4200 early generations — PowerPC management
MikroTik
RouterOS on PowerPC cores — widely deployed in emerging markets and ISP access networks globally.
  • CCR1036 — 36-core Tilera (PowerPC-compatible pipeline)
  • CCR1072 — 72-core Tilera architecture
  • Various RB series — PPC-based MIPS/PowerPC hybrid routing
HPE / Aruba
ProCurve and 3Com acquisition product lines used embedded PowerPC for switch management and forwarding.
  • ProCurve 5400 series — embedded PowerPC management
  • 3Com 4500G series — PowerPC control plane
  • Aruba campus switches (early gen) — POWER-derived
Industrial & SCADA
QorIQ and PowerQUICC remain in active use in industrial automation and rugged networking environments.
  • Hirschmann industrial switches — PowerQUICC III
  • Moxa industrial routers — QorIQ embedded
  • Curtiss-Wright defense systems — POWER architecture SBCs
  • Power utilities SCADA infrastructure — still deployed
Telecom / Carrier
Carrier-grade POWER silicon in base station controllers, signaling gateways, and optical transport.
  • Ericsson RBS signaling systems — PowerPC
  • Nokia (formerly Alcatel-Lucent) aggregation routers
  • ZTE NGN gateways — QorIQ P-series
  • Huawei early SmartAX DSLAM — PowerQUICC
Why Open-Source Networking Cores

Networking Silicon Is the Last Closed Domain in Open Hardware

RISC-V has open CPU cores. POWER has open CPU cores. But network processing — the packet classification, scheduling, and forwarding silicon that sits between the CPU and the wire — remains almost entirely proprietary. The QorIQ DPAA changes that.

🌐

Open SmartNIC Blueprint

QorIQ DPAA is the original SmartNIC architecture — POWER CPU plus hardware packet processing, coherently connected. Open-sourcing it gives SmartNIC designers a 45 nm reference with proven silicon validation to port to modern nodes.

🔒

Sovereign Networking Infrastructure

Nations building sovereign networking equipment need open-source control-plane silicon they can audit, modify, and build themselves. PowerQUICC and QorIQ — updated to POWER ISA 3.1 and EDA-verified — provide the foundation for fully auditable national networking infrastructure.

📡

Big-Endian Protocol Processing

Network protocols are big-endian. The POWER ISA is big-endian. Software written for PowerQUICC and QorIQ handles Ethernet frames, IP headers, and MPLS labels without byte-swapping overhead — a performance advantage that disappears when porting to x86 or ARM little-endian platforms.

Deterministic Packet Latency

The e500/e500mc pipeline was designed for deterministic execution timing — critical for line-rate packet forwarding. General-purpose OoO processors optimise for average throughput; networking CPUs optimise for worst-case latency. That design philosophy is preserved in the heritage cores.

🏗️

EDA Retargeting to Modern Nodes

A QorIQ P4080 at 7 nm with updated ISA would deliver tens of Gbps of deterministic packet processing with POWER's software ecosystem. The architecture is proven; the opportunity is in process shrink and ISA modernisation through the IBM EDA Suite via the Silicon Factory.

🧩

Chiplet-Ready Architecture

The QorIQ P-series fabric-connected multi-core design maps naturally onto modern disaggregated chiplet architectures — a CPU tile plus network acceleration tiles, connected via UCIe or proprietary interconnect. The architectural insight has aged well.

OPF N1 Working Group · Development Path

Heritage In → OPF N1 Out

These networking cores are the reference material — not the final product. The OPF N1 Working Group takes the best from PowerQUICC, QorIQ DPAA, and APM86xxx — especially the DPAA packet acceleration model — and consolidates them into a single unified OPF N1 networking core. That core then goes through ISA 3.1 update, AI-assisted EDA verification, and tape-out at Intel Foundry, Samsung, or TSMC at 7/5nm.

Phase 1

Open-Source the RTL

Engage NXP (Freescale successor), APM (acquired by Macom/Inphi), and the broader networking hardware community to release RTL for key networking cores under open licences.

  • Engage NXP on PowerQUICC III / QorIQ P-series RTL rights
  • Community reconstruction of e500 core from public documentation and chip decap analysis
  • Open-source DPAA packet acceleration logic — the unique networking IP
  • Functional verification against known RouterOS / Cisco IOS workloads
  • GitHub repository under OpenPOWER Foundation organisation
Phase 2

Update to Current POWER ISA

Migrate the e500 Book E / e500mc cores from their legacy ISA variant to OpenPOWER ISA 3.1, enabling the full modern POWER software toolchain and 30 years of binary compatibility.

  • Map PowerPC Book E extensions to POWER ISA 3.1 equivalents
  • Retain DPAA hardware acceleration interfaces — extend to modern packet formats (VXLAN, SR-v6)
  • Add hardware virtualisation (POWER ISA hypervisor mode)
  • GCC, LLVM, QEMU target update for modernised networking cores
  • Linux kernel driver update for open DPAA accelerator
Phase 3

EDA Verification & Tape-Out

Run the updated networking cores through IBM EDA Suite flows via the Silicon Factory — synthesis, timing sign-off, and physical verification — targeting FPGA bring-up and ASIC on advanced process nodes.

  • IBM EINSTEIN formal verification of core and DPAA logic
  • IBM SixthSense P&R on advanced networking-optimised process nodes
  • FPGA bring-up: Xilinx UltraScale+ running real routing protocols
  • ASIC targeting: advanced process nodes via the Silicon Factory
  • Line-rate packet forwarding test at 10/25/100 GbE

Silicon Factory Provides the Verified Flows

The OpenPOWER Silicon Factory provides IBM EDA Suite access — including SixthSense, EINSTEIN, and BooleDozer — with timing libraries suited for deterministic packet processing workloads. Networking core contributors can use these flows directly.

8
CPU Cores — QorIQ P4080 Carrier-Grade Routing Processor
20+ yr
POWER in Production Networking Infrastructure
DPAA
Hardware Packet Acceleration — the Original SmartNIC Blueprint
BE
Big-Endian — Native Protocol Processing, No Byte-Swap Overhead
Join the Initiative

Help Open-Source the Networking Core Ecosystem

Network engineers, chip designers, embedded Linux developers, open networking advocates, and hardware reverse engineers all have a role to play. If you worked on PowerQUICC or QorIQ-based systems, or if you want to build the next generation of open networking silicon on POWER, this is where to start.

Also see: G1 · Gaming Core  ·  Silicon Factory