Vibrante

Vibrante is the name of a Linux distribution created by NVIDIA and used for at least their Drive PX 2 platform series.[1] The name is listed as a registered trademark of NVIDIA.[2] First appearances of the name were seen in about the year 2010 when it labeled some rather universal multimedia engine including audio, video and 3D building display that was in tight cooperation with Audi company.[3] At NVidia TechDay in December 2015 the distribution was reported with version numbers 3.0 for Jetson TK1 Pro (aka. X3) and Drive CX, and with version 4.0 for Drive CX and PX platforms.[4] Jetson TK1 is mentioned as running with the Linux4Tegra package instead.[5] Companies like Toradex have built and published e.g. sample application codes on top of it.[6] Abbreviations of Vibrante Linux like V3L, V3Le or V4L with the number representing the version plus terms like L4T (Linux4Tegra, a supposed sibling) and assigned to certain devices can be found in some history and release docs, e.g. for NVIDIA VisionWorks.[7] On top of Vibrante it is possible to run NVIDIAs VisionWorks Toolkit.[8] Vibrante is one of the targets that OpenCV4Tegra (OpenCV for Tegra; an OpenCV derivate with Tegra-specific optimizations) can run upon.[9] Further there is the NVIDIA PerfKit Package that copes with Vibrante.[10]

Vibrante
DeveloperNVIDIA
OS familyUnix-like
Working stateCurrent
Source modelOpen source
Initial release2010 (2010)
Kernel typeMonolithic (Linux)

Spin Offs

It seems that Vibrante Linux was used to derive a QNX based version, thus probably using the QNX kernel as the base system along with several higher level software components (e.g. from GNU and other sources) as already present from the Vibrante Linux environment. Namely the package qnx-V3Q-23.16.01 is reported to run on the Nvidia Jetson TK1 Pro board.[11]

Usage

At CES 2010 it was announced that NVIDIA would be introducing its GPUs to all 2010 Audi vehicles, to power its third generation MMI. 3G MMI used Vibrante as its multimedia engine to deliver in car entertainment.[12]

References

  1. Valich, Theo (5 April 2016). "DRIVE PX 2 Shows Next-Gen Nvidia Tegra, Pascal Processors". VR World. Archived from the original on 6 April 2016.
  2. GeForce Legal Information, last updated 2014 (at time of first check)
  3. nVidia will Audi beliefern (nVidia wants to supply Audi), January 2010
  4. "COMPUTING POWER IS THE NEW HORSEPOWER" (PDF). NVIDIA. December 2015. Archived from the original on 13 July 2018.
  5. NVIDIA VISIONWORKS TOOLKIT, last edited April 2014
  6. Embedded Linux Sample Code, last checked 10/2016
  7. VisionWorks-1.0.25-Release-Notes.txt, located via Google search
  8. NVIDIA VISIONWORKS TOOLKIT, last edited April 2014
  9. "Embedded Software | NVIDIA Developer". NVIDIA Developer. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016.
  10. PerfKit-4.4.0-ReleaseNotes.txt, located via Google search
  11. "Running QNX onto Jetson TK1 Pro (1860) - NVIDIA Developer Forums". NVIDIA Developer Forums. 6 June 2016. Archived from the original on 16 March 2018.
  12. "NVIDIA and Audi Marry Silicon Valley Technology with German Engineering|NVIDIA". NVIDIA. 7 January 2010. Archived from the original on 18 April 2018. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
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