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author | 1138-4EB <1138-4EB@users.noreply.github.com> | 2017-02-19 08:12:30 +0100 |
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committer | tgingold <tgingold@users.noreply.github.com> | 2017-12-10 12:02:05 +0100 |
commit | 4c1118d130c5b2dd8aef5ef486138db002dcfda7 (patch) | |
tree | 07a0819200358dd97d4e2f045851cc3f033a1c44 /doc/references | |
parent | a1fb74c4fa69c035ea298c3d526a9a277c8db1f7 (diff) | |
download | ghdl-4c1118d130c5b2dd8aef5ef486138db002dcfda7.tar.gz ghdl-4c1118d130c5b2dd8aef5ef486138db002dcfda7.tar.bz2 ghdl-4c1118d130c5b2dd8aef5ef486138db002dcfda7.zip |
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-rw-r--r-- | doc/references/ImplementationOfVHDL.rst | 487 | ||||
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diff --git a/doc/references/CommandReference.rst b/doc/references/CommandReference.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ed7869dba --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/references/CommandReference.rst @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +.. _REF:Command: + +Command Reference +################# + + diff --git a/doc/references/ImplementationOfVHDL.rst b/doc/references/ImplementationOfVHDL.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6919d0ef8 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/references/ImplementationOfVHDL.rst @@ -0,0 +1,487 @@ +.. _REF:ImplVHDL: + +*************************** +GHDL implementation of VHDL +*************************** + +This chapter describes several implementation defined aspect of VHDL in GHDL. + +.. _VHDL_standards: + +VHDL standards +============== + +.. index:: VHDL standards + +.. index:: IEEE 1076 + +.. index:: IEEE 1076a + +.. index:: 1076 + +.. index:: 1076a + +.. index:: v87 + +.. index:: v93 + +.. index:: v93c + +.. index:: v00 + +.. index:: v02 + +.. index:: v08 + +This is very unfortunate, but there are many versions of the VHDL +language, and they aren't backward compatible. + +The VHDL language was first standardized in 1987 by IEEE as IEEE 1076-1987, and +is commonly referred as VHDL-87. This is certainly the most important version, +since most of the VHDL tools are still based on this standard. + +Various problems of this first standard have been analyzed by experts groups +to give reasonable ways of interpreting the unclear portions of the standard. + +VHDL was revised in 1993 by IEEE as IEEE 1076-1993. This revision is still +well-known. + +Unfortunately, VHDL-93 is not fully compatible with VHDL-87, i.e. some perfectly +valid VHDL-87 programs are invalid VHDL-93 programs. Here are some of the +reasons: + +* the syntax of file declaration has changed (this is the most visible source + of incompatibility), +* new keywords were introduced (group, impure, inertial, literal, + postponed, pure, reject, rol, ror, shared, sla, sll, sra, srl, + unaffected, xnor), +* some dynamic behaviours have changed (the concatenation is one of them), +* rules have been added. + +Shared variables were replaced by protected types in the 2000 revision of +the VHDL standard. This modification is also known as 1076a. Note that this +standard is not fully backward compatible with VHDL-93, since the type of a +shared variable must now be a protected type (there was no such restriction +before). + +Minors corrections were added by the 2002 revision of the VHDL standard. This +revision is not fully backward compatible with VHDL-00 since, for example, +the value of the `'instance_name` attribute has slightly changed. + +The latest version is 2008. Many features have been added, and GHDL +doesn't implement all of them. + +You can select the VHDL standard expected by GHDL with the +:samp:`--std=VER` option, where :samp:`VER` is one of the left column of the +table below: + + +87 + Select VHDL-87 standard as defined by IEEE 1076-1987. LRM bugs corrected by + later revisions are taken into account. + +93 + Select VHDL-93; VHDL-87 file declarations are not accepted. + +93c + Select VHDL-93 standard with relaxed rules: + + + * VHDL-87 file declarations are accepted; + + * default binding indication rules of VHDL-02 are used. Default binding rules + are often used, but they are particularly obscure before VHDL-02. + +00 + Select VHDL-2000 standard, which adds protected types. + +02 + Select VHDL-2002 standard + +08 + Select VHDL-2008 standard (partially implemented). + +The 93, 93c, 00 and 02 standards are considered as compatible: you can +elaborate a design mixing these standards. However, 87, 93 and 08 are +not compatible. + +.. _psl_implementation: + +PSL implementation +================== + +GHDL understands embedded PSL annotations in VHDL files, but not in +separate files. + +As PSL annotations are embedded within comments, you must analyze and elaborate +your design with option *-fpsl* to enable PSL annotations. + +A PSL assertion statement must appear within a comment that starts +with the `psl` keyword. The keyword must be followed (on the +same line) by a PSL keyword such as `assert` or `default`. +To continue a PSL statement on the next line, just start a new comment. + +A PSL statement is considered as a process. So it is not allowed within +a process. + +All PSL assertions must be clocked (GHDL doesn't support unclocked assertion). +Furthermore only one clock per assertion is allowed. + +You can either use a default clock like this: + +.. code-block:: VHDL + + -- psl default clock is rising_edge (CLK); + -- psl assert always + -- a -> eventually! b; + +or use a clocked expression (note the use of parenthesis): + +.. code-block:: VHDL + + -- psl assert (always a -> next[3](b)) @rising_edge (clk); + + +Of course only the simple subset of PSL is allowed. + +Currently the built-in functions are not implemented. + +Source representation +===================== + +According to the VHDL standard, design units (i.e. entities, +architectures, packages, package bodies and configurations) may be +independently analyzed. + +Several design units may be grouped into a design file. + +In GHDL, a system file represents a design file. That is, a file compiled by +GHDL may contain one or more design units. + +It is common to have several design units in a design file. + +GHDL does not impose any restriction on the name of a design file +(except that the filename may not contain any control character or +spaces). + +GHDL do not keep a binary representation of the design units analyzed like +other VHDL analyzers. The sources of the design units are re-read when +needed (for example, an entity is re-read when one of its architecture is +analyzed). Therefore, if you delete or modify a source file of a unit +analyzed, GHDL will refuse to use it. + +.. _Library_database: + +Library database +================ + +Each design unit analyzed is placed into a design library. By default, +the name of this design library is :samp:`work`; however, this can be +changed with the :option:`--work=NAME` option of GHDL. + +To keep the list of design units in a design library, GHDL creates +library files. The name of these files is :file:`NAME-objVER.cf`, where +`NAME` is the name of the library, and `VER` the VHDL version (87, +93 or 08) used to analyze the design units. + +You don't have to know how to read a library file. You can display it +using the *-d* of `ghdl`. The file contains the name of the +design units, as well as the location and the dependencies. + +The format may change with the next version of GHDL. + +.. _Top_entity: + +Top entity +========== + +There are some restrictions on the entity being at the apex of a design +hierarchy: + +* The generic must have a default value, and the value of a generic is its + default value; +* The ports type must be constrained. + +Using vendor libraries +====================== + +Many vendors libraries have been analyzed with GHDL. There are +usually no problems. Be sure to use the :option:`--work=` option. +However, some problems have been encountered. + +GHDL follows the VHDL LRM (the manual which defines VHDL) more +strictly than other VHDL tools. You could try to relax the +restrictions by using the :option:`--std=93c`, :option:`-fexplicit`, +:option:`-frelaxed-rules` and :option:`--warn-no-vital-generic`. + +Interfacing to other languages +============================== + +.. index:: interfacing + +.. index:: other languages + +.. index:: foreign + +.. index:: VHPI + +.. index:: VHPIDIRECT + +Interfacing with foreign languages is possible only on GNU/Linux systems. + +You can define a subprogram in a foreign language (such as `C` or +`Ada`) and import it in a VHDL design. + +Foreign declarations +-------------------- + +Only subprograms (functions or procedures) can be imported, using the foreign +attribute. In this example, the `sin` function is imported: + +.. code-block:: VHDL + + package math is + function sin (v : real) return real; + attribute foreign of sin : function is "VHPIDIRECT sin"; + end math; + + package body math is + function sin (v : real) return real is + begin + assert false severity failure; + end sin; + end math; + + +A subprogram is made foreign if the `foreign` attribute decorates +it. This attribute is declared in the 1993 revision of the +:samp:`std.standard` package. Therefore, you cannot use this feature in +VHDL 1987. + +The decoration is achieved through an attribute specification. The +attribute specification must be in the same declarative part as the +subprogram and must be after it. This is a general rule for specifications. +The value of the specification must be a locally static string. + +Even when a subprogram is foreign, its body must be present. However, since +it won't be called, you can made it empty or simply but an assertion. + +The value of the attribute must start with :samp:`VHPIDIRECT` (an +upper-case keyword followed by one or more blanks). The linkage name of the +subprogram follows. + +.. _Restrictions_on_foreign_declarations: + +Restrictions on foreign declarations +------------------------------------ + +Any subprogram can be imported. GHDL puts no restrictions on foreign +subprograms. However, the representation of a type or of an interface in a +foreign language may be obscure. Most of non-composite types are easily imported: + + +*integer types* + They are represented on a 32 bits word. This generally corresponds to + `int` for `C` or `Integer` for `Ada`. + +*physical types* + They are represented on a 64 bits word. This generally corresponds to the + `long long` for `C` or `Long_Long_Integer` for `Ada`. + +*floating point types* + They are represented on a 64 bits floating point word. This generally + corresponds to `double` for `C` or `Long_Float` for `Ada`. + +*enumeration types* + They are represented on 8 bits or 32 bits word, if the number of literals is + greater than 256. There is no corresponding C types, since arguments are + not promoted. + +Non-composite types are passed by value. For the `in` mode, this +corresponds to the `C` or `Ada` mechanism. The `out` and +`inout` interfaces of non-composite types are gathered in a record +and this record is passed by reference as the first argument to the +subprogram. As a consequence, you shouldn't use `in` and +`inout` modes in foreign subprograms, since they are not portable. + +Records are represented like a `C` structure and are passed by reference +to subprograms. + +Arrays with static bounds are represented like a `C` array, whose +length is the number of elements, and are passed by reference to subprograms. + +Unconstrained array are represented by a fat pointer. Do not use unconstrained +arrays in foreign subprograms. + +Accesses to an unconstrained array is a fat pointer. Other accesses correspond to an address and are passed to a subprogram like other non-composite types. + +Files are represented by a 32 bits word, which corresponds to an index +in a table. + +.. _Linking_with_foreign_object_files: + +Linking with foreign object files +--------------------------------- + +You may add additional files or options during the link using the +*-Wl,* of `GHDL`, as described in :ref:`Elaboration_command`. +For example:: + + ghdl -e -Wl,-lm math_tb + +will create the :file:`math_tb` executable with the :file:`lm` (mathematical) +library. + +Note the :file:`c` library is always linked with an executable. + +.. _Starting_a_simulation_from_a_foreign_program: + +Starting a simulation from a foreign program +-------------------------------------------- + +You may run your design from an external program. You just have to call +the :samp:`ghdl_main` function which can be defined: + +in C: + +.. code-block:: C + + extern int ghdl_main (int argc, char **argv); + +in Ada: + +.. code-block:: Ada + + with System; + ... + function Ghdl_Main (Argc : Integer; Argv : System.Address) + return Integer; + pragma import (C, Ghdl_Main, "ghdl_main"); + + +This function must be called once, and returns 0 at the end of the simulation. +In case of failure, this function does not return. This has to be fixed. + +.. _Linking_with_Ada: + +Linking with Ada +---------------- + +As explained previously in :ref:`Starting_a_simulation_from_a_foreign_program`, +you can start a simulation from an `Ada` program. However the build +process is not trivial: you have to elaborate your `Ada` program and your +`VHDL` design. + +First, you have to analyze all your design files. In this example, we +suppose there is only one design file, :file:`design.vhdl`. + +:: + + $ ghdl -a design.vhdl + +Then, bind your design. In this example, we suppose the entity at the +design apex is :samp:`design`. + +:: + + $ ghdl --bind design + +Finally, compile, bind your `Ada` program at link it with your `VHDL` +design:: + + $ gnatmake my_prog -largs `ghdl --list-link design` + + +Using GRT from Ada +------------------ + +.. warning:: + This topic is only for advanced users knowing how to use `Ada` + and `GNAT`. This is provided only for reference, I have tested + this once before releasing `GHDL` 0.19 but this is not checked at + each release. + +The simulator kernel of `GHDL` named :dfn:`GRT` is written in +`Ada95` and contains a very light and slightly adapted version +of `VHPI`. Since it is an `Ada` implementation it is +called :dfn:`AVHPI`. Although being tough, you may interface to `AVHPI`. + +For using `AVHPI`, you need the sources of `GHDL` and to recompile +them (at least the `GRT` library). This library is usually compiled with +a `No_Run_Time` pragma, so that the user does not need to install the +`GNAT` runtime library. However, you certainly want to use the usual +runtime library and want to avoid this pragma. For this, reset the +`GRT_PRAGMA_FLAG` variable. + +:: + + $ make GRT_PRAGMA_FLAG= grt-all + + +Since `GRT` is a self-contained library, you don't want +`gnatlink` to fetch individual object files (furthermore this +doesn't always work due to tricks used in `GRT`). For this, +remove all the object files and make the :file:`.ali` files read-only. + +:: + + $ rm *.o + $ chmod -w *.ali + + +You may then install the sources files and the :file:`.ali` files. I have never +tested this step. + +You are now ready to use it. + +For example, here is an example, :file:`test_grt.adb` which displays the top +level design name. + +.. code-block:: Ada + + with System; use System; + with Grt.Avhpi; use Grt.Avhpi; + with Ada.Text_IO; use Ada.Text_IO; + with Ghdl_Main; + + procedure Test_Grt is + -- VHPI handle. + H : VhpiHandleT; + Status : Integer; + + -- Name. + Name : String (1 .. 64); + Name_Len : Integer; + begin + -- Elaborate and run the design. + Status := Ghdl_Main (0, Null_Address); + + -- Display the status of the simulation. + Put_Line ("Status is " & Integer'Image (Status)); + + -- Get the root instance. + Get_Root_Inst(H); + + -- Disp its name using vhpi API. + Vhpi_Get_Str (VhpiNameP, H, Name, Name_Len); + Put_Line ("Root instance name: " & Name (1 .. Name_Len)); + end Test_Grt; + + +First, analyze and bind your design:: + + $ ghdl -a counter.vhdl + $ ghdl --bind counter + + +Then build the whole:: + + $ gnatmake test_grt -aL`grt_ali_path` -aI`grt_src_path` -largs + `ghdl --list-link counter` + + +Finally, run your design:: + + $ ./test_grt + Status is 0 + Root instance name: counter diff --git a/doc/references/ImplementationOfVITAL.rst b/doc/references/ImplementationOfVITAL.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..4ffb8159b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/references/ImplementationOfVITAL.rst @@ -0,0 +1,94 @@ +.. _REF:ImplVITAL: + +**************************** +GHDL implementation of VITAL +**************************** + +.. index:: VITAL + +.. index:: IEEE 1076.4 + +.. index:: 1076.4 + +This chapter describes how VITAL is implemented in GHDL. Support of VITAL is +really in a preliminary stage. Do not expect too much of it as now. + +.. _vital_packages: + +VITAL packages +============== + +The VITAL standard or IEEE 1076.4 was first published in 1995, and revised in +2000. + +The version of the VITAL packages depends on the VHDL standard. VITAL +1995 packages are used with the VHDL 1987 standard, while VITAL 2000 +packages are used with other standards. This choice is based on the +requirements of VITAL: VITAL 1995 requires the models follow the VHDL +1987 standard, while VITAL 2000 requires the models follow VHDL 1993. + +The VITAL 2000 packages were slightly modified so that they conform to +the VHDL 1993 standard (a few functions are made pure and a few one +impure). + +.. _vhdl_restrictions_for_vital: + +VHDL restrictions for VITAL +=========================== + +The VITAL standard (partially) implemented is the IEEE 1076.4 standard +published in 1995. + +This standard defines restriction of the VHDL language usage on VITAL +model. A :dfn:`VITAL model` is a design unit (entity or architecture) +decorated by the `VITAL_Level0` or `VITAL_Level1` attribute. +These attributes are defined in the `ieee.VITAL_Timing` package. + +Currently, only VITAL level 0 checks are implemented. VITAL level 1 models +can be analyzed, but GHDL doesn't check they comply with the VITAL standard. + +Moreover, GHDL doesn't check (yet) that timing generics are not read inside +a VITAL level 0 model prior the VITAL annotation. + +The analysis of a non-conformant VITAL model fails. You can disable the +checks of VITAL restrictions with the *--no-vital-checks*. Even when +restrictions are not checked, SDF annotation can be performed. + +.. _backannotation: + +Backannotation +============== + +.. index:: SDF + +:dfn:`Backannotation` is the process of setting VITAL generics with timing +information provided by an external files. + +The external files must be SDF (Standard Delay Format) files. GHDL +supports a tiny subset of SDF version 2.1, other version number can be +used, provided no features added by the next version are used. + +Hierarchical instance names are not supported. However you can use a list of +instances. If there is no instance, the top entity will be annotated and +the celltype must be the name of the top entity. If there is at least one +instance, the last instance name must be a component instantiation label, and +the celltype must be the name of the component declaration instantiated. + +Instances being annotated are not required to be VITAL compliant. However +generics being annotated must follow rules of VITAL (e.g., type must be a +suitable vital delay type). + +Currently, only timing constraints applying on a timing generic of type +`VitalDelayType01` has been implemented. This SDF annotator is +just a proof of concept. Features will be added with the following GHDL +release. + +Negative constraint calculation +=============================== + +Negative constraint delay adjustment are necessary to handle negative +constraint such as a negative setup time. This step is defined in the VITAL +standard and should occur after backannotation. + +GHDL does not do negative constraint calculation. It fails to handle models +with negative constraint. I hope to be able to add this phase soon. |