Bronzebeard

Bronzebeard is a simple, standalone assembler for developing bare metal RISC-V programs. It is designed for applications that stand on their own without relying on operating systems, frameworks, SDKs, or pre-existing software of any kind. Bronzebeard and its tools are implemented purely in Python. It has been written in order to be free from large, complex toolchains. This keeps the project portable, minimal, and easy to understand.

Motivation

Much of modern software has accrued vast amounts of bulk and complexity throughout the years. Can useful software be developed without relying on any of it? That's the question that this project seeks to answer. I believe that the rise of RISC-V provides a great opportunity to explore different methods of program development. Installing a full operating system doesn't have to be a prerequisite to building something useful.

Check out the DerzForth project for further elaboration of this idea.

Devices

The assembler itself supports the base 32-bit instruction set as well as the M, A, and C extensions (RV32IMAC). At the moment, Bronzebeard has only been used to target the Longan Nano and the Wio Lite. There are plans to test on additional RISC-V boards such as the HiFive1 Rev B in the future.

Installation

If you are unfamiliar with virtual environments, I suggest taking a brief moment to learn about them and set one up. The Python docs provide a great tutorial for getting started with virtual environments and packages.

Bronzebeard can be installed via pip:

pip install bronzebeard

Assemble!

With Bronzebeard installed:

bronzebeard examples/example.asm

By default, the assembled output binary will be placed in a file named bb.out.

GitHub

https://github.com/theandrew168/bronzebeard