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gdsfactory 7.10.0

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gdsfactory: Your open source platform for end to-end chip design and validation.

Highlights:

  • More than 1M downloads
  • More than 50 Contributors
  • More than 10 PDKs available

Welcome to gdsfactory, a Python library designed for crafting chips (Photonics, Analog, Quantum, MEMs, and more), 3D printed objects, and PCBs. Here, you can code your hardware design in Python or YAML, perform verification (DRC, simulation, and extraction), and enable automated testing in the lab to ensure your fabricated chip meets your specifications.

workflow

We facilitate an end-to-end design flow for you to:

  • Design (Layout, Simulation, Optimization): Utilize parametric cell functions in Python or YAML to define components. Test component settings, ports, and geometry to avoid unwanted regressions, and capture design intent in a schematic.
  • Verify (DRC, DFM, LVS): Run simulations directly from the layout using our simulation interfaces, removing the need to duplicate geometry drawings. Conduct component and circuit simulations, study design for manufacturing, and ensure complex layouts match their design intent through Layout Versus Schematic verification.
  • Validate: Define layout and test protocols simultaneously for automated chip analysis post-fabrication. This allows you to extract essential component parameters, and build data pipelines from raw data to structured data to monitor chip performance.

Your input: Python or YAML text. Your output: A GDSII or OASIS file for fabrication, alongside component settings (for measurement and data analysis) and netlists (for circuit simulations) in YAML.

layout_to_components

flow

We provide a common syntax for design (KLayout, gdstk, Ansys Lumerical, tidy3d, MEEP, MPB, DEVSIM, SAX, MEOW ...), verification, and validation.

tool interfaces

Numerous foundries have gdsfactory PDKs available. You may need to contact your foundry to access their gdsfactory PDK, as some are provided under NDA only.

Available foundries include:

You can also access:

pdks

Getting started

Who is using gdsfactory?

Hundreds of organisations are using gdsfactory. Some companies and organizations around the world using gdsfactory include:

logos

"I've used gdsfactory since 2017 for all my chip tapeouts. I love that it is fast, easy to use, and easy to extend. It's the only tool that allows us to have an end-to-end chip design flow (design, verification and validation)."

Joaquin Matres - Google

"I've relied on gdsfactory for several tapeouts over the years. It's the only tool I've found that gives me the flexibility and scalability I need for a variety of projects."

Alec Hammond - Meta Reality Labs Research

"The best photonics layout tool I've used so far and it is leaps and bounds ahead of any commercial alternatives out there. Feels like gdsfactory is freeing photonics."

Hasitha Jayatilleka - LightIC Technologies

"As an academic working on large scale silicon photonics at CMOS foundries I've used gdsfactory to go from nothing to full-reticle layouts rapidly (in a few days). I particularly appreciate the full-system approach to photonics, with my layout being connected to circuit simulators which are then connected to device simulators. Moving from legacy tools such as gdspy and phidl to gdsfactory has sped up my workflow at least an order of magnitude."

Alex Sludds - MIT

"I use gdsfactory for all of my photonic tape-outs. The Python interface makes it easy to version control individual photonic components as well as entire layouts, while integrating seamlessly with KLayout and most standard photonic simulation tools, both open-source and commercial.

Thomas Dorch - Freedom Photonics

Contributors

Thanks to all the contributors that make this awesome project possible!

Meet our contributors!

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  • Python 82.9%
  • Jupyter Notebook 16.7%
  • XS 0.3%
  • Makefile 0.1%
  • Shell 0.0%
  • Jinja 0.0%