![]() Fortunately, there is an Xfce distro, which has much lower hardware demands. ZX-Uno enthusiast Microjack informed me that he had ISE working reliably on Linux Mint 20.1 Cinnamon.īut Cinnamon relies on having a GPU to do the heavy lifting in the GUI. The trick is that you need something old enough to work reliably with ISE, but new enough to support the UTM guest additions (for shared folders). Initially, I’d tried to get it working on Debian 11, but that suffered frequent crashes. Even on Windows 10, Xilnix provides an emulated Linux environment to run the software. Originally published in 1995, the software hasn’t been updated since 2013. So I decided to revisit the problem of running Xilinx’s older ISE tool to generate cores for the Spartan-6 (as used on the ZX-Uno). However, in the forthcoming macOS 13, third-party apps like UTM will be able to leverage Rosetta’s just in time (JIT) translation for Intel 64-bit instructions. But emulating Intel 64-bit instructions is slow. UTM is great for running other ARM OSes (like Ubuntu). ![]() But it’s also possible to use the Linux binaries with UTM. ![]() The easiest solution is to run the Intel binaries on ARM Windows under Parallels Desktop. Back in March 2022, I did a write-up of how to run Xilinx Vivado on an M1 Mac to generate cores for the Artix-7 series of FPGAs (as used on the Mega65).
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