EAGLE (program)
EAGLE is a scriptable electronic design automation application with schematic capture, printed circuit board layout, auto-router and computer-aided manufacturing features. EAGLE stands for Easily Applicable Graphical Layout Editor and is developed by CadSoft Computer GmbH. The company was acquired by Autodesk Inc. in 2016.
Features
EAGLE contains a schematic editor, for designing circuit diagrams. Schematics are stored in files with.SCH extension, parts are defined in device libraries with.LBR extension. Parts can be placed on many sheets and connected together through ports.The PCB layout editor stores board files with the extension.BRD. It allows back-annotation to the schematic and auto-routing to automatically connect traces based on the connections defined in the schematic.
EAGLE saves Gerber and PostScript layout files as well as Excellon and Sieb & Meyer drill files. These are standard file formats accepted by PCB fabrication companies, but given EAGLE's typical user base of small design firms and hobbyists, many PCB fabricators and assembly shops also accept EAGLE board files directly to export optimized production files and pick-and-place data themselves.
EAGLE provides a multi-window graphical user interface and menu system for editing, project management and to customize the interface and design parameters. The system can be controlled via mouse, keyboard hotkeys or by entering specific commands at an embedded command line. Multiple repeating commands can be combined into script files. It is also possible to explore design files utilizing an EAGLE-specific object-oriented programming language.
History
The German CadSoft Computer GmbH was founded by Rudolf Hofer and Klaus-Peter Schmidinger in 1988 to develop EAGLE, a 16-bit PCB design application for DOS. Originally, the software consisted of a layout editor with part libraries only. An auto-router module became available as optional component later on. With EAGLE 2.0 a schematics editor was added in 1991. The software used BGI video drivers, and XPLOT to print. In 1992, version 2.6 changed the definition of layers, but designs created under older versions could be converted into the new format using the provided UPDATE26.EXE utility.EAGLE 3.0 was changed to be a 32-bit extended DOS application in 1994.
Support for OS/2 Presentation Manager was added with version 3.5 in April 1996. This version also introduced multi-window support with forward-/backward-annotation, user-definable copper areas, and a built-in programming language with ULPs. It was also the first to no longer require a dongle.
In 2000 EAGLE version 4.0 officially dropped support for DOS and OS/2, but now being based on Qt 3 it added native support for Windows and was among the first professional electronic CAD tools available for Linux. A 32-bit DPMI version of EAGLE 4.0 running under DOS was still available on special request in order to help support existing customers, but it was not released commercially. Much later in 2015, a special version of EAGLE 4.09r2 was made available by CadSoft to ease installation under Windows 7.
Starting with version 4.13, EAGLE became available for Mac OS X, with versions before 5.0.0 still requiring X11. Version 5.0.0 officially dropped support for Windows 9x and Windows NT 3.x/4.x. This version was based on Qt 4 and introduced user-definable attributes.
On 24 September 2009, Premier Farnell announced the acquisition of CadSoft Computer GmbH.
Version 5.91.0 introduced an XML-based file format in 2011 but continued to read the older binary format. It could not, however, write files in the former format, thereby not allowing collaboration with EAGLE 5.12.0 and earlier. EAGLE 6.0.0 no longer supported Mac OS X on the Power PC platform, and the minimum requirements were changed to Mac OS X 10.6, Linux 2.6 and Windows XP. This version also introduced support for assembly variants and differential pair routing with length matching and automatic meandering.
Version 7.0.0 brought hierarchical designs, a new gridless topological pre-router called "TopRouter" for the conventional ripup-and-retry auto-router as well as multi-core support. Version 7.3.0 introduced native 64-bit versions for all three platforms in 2015. Version 7.6.0 dropped support for the 32-bit Mac OS X version in 2016. EAGLE 6.x.x continues to read EAGLE 7.x.x design files for as long as the hierarchical design feature isn't used.
On 27 June 2016, Autodesk announced the acquisition of CadSoft Computer GmbH from Premier Farnell, with Premier Farnell continuing to distribute CadSoft products for Autodesk. Autodesk changed the license to a subscription-only model starting with version 8.0.0 in 2017. Only 64-bit versions remain available anymore. The file format used by EAGLE 8.0.0 and higher is not backward compatible with earlier EAGLE versions, however it does provide an export facility for saving an EAGLE 7.x compatible version of the design.
On 7 January 2020, Eagle was discontinued as a standalone product and only licensed to users as a bundled item with the Autodesk Fusion 360 subscription license.
License model
Since EAGLE version 8.0.0, there are Premium, Standard, Free, and Student & educator editions, with the Standard and Premium versions sold on a monthly or annual subscription basis, requiring online reactivation at least every 14 days.Comparison of features for the various available editions:
Version | Schematic sheets | Layers | PCB size | Use | Cost/month | Cost/year |
Premium | 999 | 16 | 4 m² | Any | $65 | $510 |
Student and educator | 999 | 16 | 4 m² | For student and educator use only | Free | Free |
Standard | 99 | 4 | 160 cm² | Any | $15 | $100 |
Free | 2 | 2 | 80 cm² | For individual, non-commercial use only | Free | Free |
For comparison, the former perpetual licensing scheme for EAGLE 7.x.x with costs referring to the 2016 prices for a single-user license:
Version | Schematic sheets | Layers | PCB size | Use | Cost | Cost |
Ultimate | 999 | 16 | 4 m² | Any | $1145 | $1640, €1385 |
Premium | 99 | 6 | 160×100 mm² | Any | $575 | $820, €690 |
Maker | 99 | 6 | 160×100 mm² | For individual, non-commercial use only | N/A | $169, €140 |
Educational | 99 | 6 | 160×100 mm² | For non-commercial student and educator use only | N/A | Free |
Standard | 2 | 2 | 100×80 mm² | Any | N/A | $69, €62 |
Express | 2 | 2 | 100×80 mm² | For individual, non-commercial use only | N/A | Free |
Community
A large group of textual and video tutorials exists for beginners to design their own PCBs.The DIY electronics site SparkFun uses EAGLE and releases the EAGLE files for boards designed in-house. SparkFun Electronics is a company that has grown due to the hobbyist market exemplified by Make magazine and others. Many of these companies offer EAGLE part libraries which define schematic shapes, pinouts, and part sizes to allow for correct layout in the PCB layout editor.
Other popular libraries include Adafruit, Arduino, SnapEDA, and Dangerous Prototypes, element14 also have some libraries available from their site.
Using ULPs to convert EAGLE.BRD files into Specctra-compatible design files it is possible to export designs for usage in conjunction with advanced external autorouters such as KONEKT ELECTRA, Eremex TopoR or Alfons Wirtz's FreeRouting. For further touching-up the finished designs in session format can be imported back into EAGLE via.SES to.SCR script file converters.
Controversies
In spring 1991 the dongle protection scheme of EAGLE 2.0 had been cracked causing a decline of 30% in sales, while sales for a reduced demo version with a printed manual saw a significant increase. As a consequence in 1992 CadSoft sent thousands of floppy disks containing a new demo of EAGLE 2.6 to potential users, in particular those who had ordered the former demo but had not subsequently bought the full product. The new demo, however, also contained spy code scanning the user's hard disk for illegal copies of EAGLE. If the program found traces of such, it would show a message indicating that the user was entitled to order a free printed manual using the displayed special order code, which, however, was actually a number encoding the evidence found on the user's machine. Users sending in the filled out form would receive a reply from CadSoft's attorneys. The act of spying, however, was illegal as well by German law.In 2014, EAGLE 7.0.0 introduced a new Flexera FLEXlm-based licensing model, which wasn't well received by the user community, so that CadSoft returned to the former model of independent perpetual licenses with EAGLE 7.1.0.
Despite announcements to the contrary in 2016, Autodesk switched to a subscription-only licensing model with EAGLE 8.0.0 in January 2017. Without an online connection to a licensing server to verify the licensing status every two weeks, the software would fall back to the functionality of the freeware version. This caused an uproar in the user community, in particular among those who work in secure or remote environments without direct Internet access and users for whom it is mandantory to be able to gain full access to their designs even after extended periods of time without depending on third-parties such as Autodesk to allow reactivation. Many users have indicated they would refuse to upgrade under a subscription model and rather migrate to other electronic design applications such as KiCad, or use cracked 7.7 version.