How are large vlsi projects' src code organised at big companies?
If you are a large visualization project, you probably aren't coding a game engine, so you'd use whatever the visualizer uses. They typically treat code as data too.
1. https://github.com/Allar/ue5-style-guide (Unreal Engine game engines organization)
2. https://www.usgs.gov/faqs/what-geographic-information-system... (Map systems)
3. regular databases (postgresql / oracle)
4. sims smart objects
Hi there. Thanks for the reply, but I was actually referring to Very Large Scale Integration -- the term used for very large chip designs. I should have realized that there was another use for that acronym.
Perhaps the problem is similar for very large games since there is likely large amounts of static files.
What I actually want to know is how for example, Intel manages all the different variants of a chip architecture, i.e. 1core, 2core, 4core, 6core, 8core, etc etc when there are very large amounts of similarities between them and there are very very many files not traditionally seen as source code, such as logical simulations, electrical simulations, EM interaction analysis, margin and yield results, experiments, delay files, etc etc and then layouts (potentially different variants of layouts).
I wonder if they use monorepos for each architecture variant and put differ variants into different package or is it more common for large companies to have different repos for each variants (or do they just have different github branches for different variant).
(Oops misread. you said source code. Perforce.)
Most project I know use perforce to store a few terabytes of art data and the game project.
Another project used Google Drive for the same purpose.
Some groups built entire platforms https://sketchfab.com (Epic Games) or https://github.com/nuxeo-archives/nuxeo-platform-3d (Electronic Arts)
Cesium3D uses 3d tiles and storing the data tables inside of the gltf 3d asset.
OpenUSD is probably the largest example of code visualization libraries. https://openusd.org/release/api/arch_page_front.html
You can look at the shared source game engines. https://github.com/epicGames/unrealEngine/ (need to sign license)