GHDL, a VHDL compiler.
Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Tristan Gingold.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
This manual is the user and reference manual for GHDL. It does not contain an introduction to VHDL. Thus, the reader should have at least a basic knowledge of VHDL. A good knowledge of VHDL language reference manual (usually called LRM) is a plus.
VHDL
?VHDL is an acronym for Very High Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language which is a programming language used to describe a logic circuit by function, data flow behaviour, or structure.
VHDL
is a programming language: although VHDL
was
not designed for writing general purpose programs, you can write any
algorithm with the VHDL
language. If you are able to write
programs, you will find in VHDL
features similar to those found
in procedural languages such as C
, Pascal
or Ada
.
VHDL
derives most of its syntax and semantics from Ada
.
Knowing Ada
is an advantage for learning VHDL
(it is an
advantage in general as well).
However, VHDL
was not designed as a general purpose language but as an
HDL
(hardware description language). As the name implies, VHDL
aims at modeling or documenting electronics systems. Due to the nature
of hardware components which are always running, VHDL
is a highly
concurrent language, built upon an event-based timing model.
Like a program written in any other language, a VHDL
program
can be executed. Since VHDL
is used to model designs, the term
simulation is often used instead of execution, with the
same meaning.
Like a program written in another hardware description language, a
VHDL
program can be transformed with a synthesis tool
into a netlist, that is, a detailed gate-level implementation.
GHDL
?GHDL is a shorthand for G Hardware Design Language. Currently,
G
has no meaning.
GHDL is a VHDL
compiler that can execute (nearly) any
VHDL
program. GHDL
is not a synthesis tool: you cannot
create a netlist with GHDL
.
Unlike some other simulators, GHDL
is a compiler: it directly
translates a VHDL
file to machine code, using the GCC
back-end and without using an intermediary language such as C
or C++
. Therefore, the compiled code should be faster and
the analysis time should be shorter than with a compiler using an
intermediary language.
The Windows(TM) version of GHDL
is not based on GCC
but on
an internal code generator.
The current version of GHDL
does not contain any graphical
viewer: you cannot see signal waves. You can still check with a test
bench. The current version can produce a VCD
file which can be
viewed with a wave viewer, as well as ghw
files to be viewed by
`gtkwave'.
GHDL
aims at implementing VHDL
as defined by IEEE 1076.
It supports most of the 1987 standard and most features added by the
1993 standard.
In this chapter, you will learn how to use the GHDL compiler by working on two examples.
To illustrate the large purpose of VHDL, here is a commented VHDL "Hello world" program.
-- Hello world program. use std.textio.all; -- Imports the standard textio package. -- Defines a design entity, without any ports. entity hello_world is end hello_world; architecture behaviour of hello_world is begin process variable l : line; begin write (l, String'("Hello world!")); writeline (output, l); wait; end process; end behaviour;
Suppose this program is contained in the file hello.vhdl. First, you have to compile the file; this is called analysis of a design file in VHDL terms.
$ ghdl -a hello.vhdl
This command creates or updates a file work-obj93.cf, which describes the library `work'. On GNU/Linux, this command generates a file hello.o, which is the object file corresponding to your VHDL program. The object file is not created on Windows.
Then, you have to build an executable file.
$ ghdl -e hello_world
The `-e' option means elaborate. With this option, GHDL
creates code in order to elaborate a design, with the `hello'
entity at the top of the hierarchy.
On GNU/Linux, the result is an executable program called hello which can be run:
$ ghdl -r hello_world
or directly:
$ ./hello_world
On Windows, no file is created. The simulation is launched using this command:
> ghdl -r hello_world
The result of the simulation appears on the screen:
Hello world!
VHDL is generally used for hardware design. This example starts with a full adder described in the adder.vhdl file:
entity adder is -- i0, i1 and the carry-in ci are inputs of the adder. -- s is the sum output, co is the carry-out. port (i0, i1 : in bit; ci : in bit; s : out bit; co : out bit); end adder; architecture rtl of adder is begin -- This full-adder architecture contains two concurrent assignment. -- Compute the sum. s <= i0 xor i1 xor ci; -- Compute the carry. co <= (i0 and i1) or (i0 and ci) or (i1 and ci); end rtl;
You can analyze this design file:
$ ghdl -a adder.vhdl
You can try to execute the `adder' design, but this is useless, since nothing externally visible will happen. In order to check this full adder, a testbench has to be run. This testbench is very simple, since the adder is also simple: it checks exhaustively all inputs. Note that only the behaviour is tested, timing constraints are not checked. The file adder_tb.vhdl contains the testbench for the adder:
-- A testbench has no ports. entity adder_tb is end adder_tb; architecture behav of adder_tb is -- Declaration of the component that will be instantiated. component adder port (i0, i1 : in bit; ci : in bit; s : out bit; co : out bit); end component; -- Specifies which entity is bound with the component. for adder_0: adder use entity work.adder; signal i0, i1, ci, s, co : bit; begin -- Component instantiation. adder_0: adder port map (i0 => i0, i1 => i1, ci => ci, s => s, co => co); -- This process does the real job. process type pattern_type is record -- The inputs of the adder. i0, i1, ci : bit; -- The expected outputs of the adder. s, co : bit; end record; -- The patterns to apply. type pattern_array is array (natural range <>) of pattern_type; constant patterns : pattern_array := (('0', '0', '0', '0', '0'), ('0', '0', '1', '1', '0'), ('0', '1', '0', '1', '0'), ('0', '1', '1', '0', '1'), ('1', '0', '0', '1', '0'), ('1', '0', '1', '0', '1'), ('1', '1', '0', '0', '1'), ('1', '1', '1', '1', '1')); begin -- Check each pattern. for i in patterns'range loop -- Set the inputs. i0 <= patterns(i).i0; i1 <= patterns(i).i1; ci <= patterns(i).ci; -- Wait for the results. wait for 1 ns; -- Check the outputs. assert s = patterns(i).s report "bad sum value" severity error; assert co = patterns(i).co report "bad carray out value" severity error; end loop; assert false report "end of test" severity note; -- Wait forever; this will finish the simulation. wait; end process; end behav;
As usual, you should analyze the design:
$ ghdl -a adder_tb.vhdl
And build an executable for the testbench:
$ ghdl -e adder_tb
You do not need to specify which object files are required: GHDL knows them and automatically adds them in the executable. Now, it is time to run the testbench:
$ ghdl -r adder_tb adder_tb.vhdl:52:7:(assertion note): end of test
If your design is rather complex, you'd like to inspect signals. Signals value can be dumped using the VCD file format. The resulting file can be read with a wave viewer such as GTKWave. First, you should simulate your design and dump a waveform file:
$ ghdl -r adder_tb --vcd=adder.vcd
Then, you may now view the waves:
$ gtkwave adder.vcd
See Simulation options, for more details on the --vcd option and other run time options.
Unless you are only studying VHDL, you will work with bigger designs than the ones of the previous examples.
Let's see how to analyze and run a bigger design, such as the DLX model
suite written by Peter Ashenden which is distributed under the terms of the
GNU General Public License. A copy is kept on
<http://ghdl.free.fr/dlx.tar.gz
>
First, untar the sources:
$ tar zxvf dlx.tar.gz
In order not to pollute the sources with the library, it is a good idea to create a work/ subdirectory for the `WORK' library. To any GHDL commands, we will add the --workdir=work option, so that all files generated by the compiler (except the executable) will be placed in this directory.
$ cd dlx $ mkdir work
We will run the `dlx_test_behaviour' design. We need to analyze all the design units for the design hierarchy, in the correct order. GHDL provides an easy way to do this, by importing the sources:
$ ghdl -i --workdir=work *.vhdl
and making a design:
$ ghdl -m --workdir=work dlx_test_behaviour
Before this second stage, GHDL knows all the design units of the DLX, but no one have been analyzed. The make command of GHDL analyzes and elaborates a design. This creates many files in the work/ directory, and the dlx_test_behaviour executable in the current directory.
The simulation needs to have a DLX program contained in the file dlx.out. This memory image will be be loaded in the DLX memory. Just take one sample:
$ cp test_loop.out dlx.out
And you can run the test suite:
$ ghdl -r dlx_test_behaviour
The test bench monitors the bus and displays each instruction executed. It finishes with an assertion of severity level note:
dlx-behaviour.vhdl:395:11:(assertion note): TRAP instruction encountered, execution halted
Since the clock is still running, you have to manually stop the program with the C-c key sequence. This behavior prevents you from running the test bench in batch mode. However, you may force the simulator to stop when an assertion above or equal a certain severity level occurs:
$ ghdl -r dlx_test_behaviour --assert-level=note
With this option, the program stops just after the previous message:
dlx-behaviour.vhdl:395:11:(assertion note): TRAP instruction encountered, execution halted error: assertion failed
If you want to make room on your hard drive, you can either:
$ ghdl --clean --workdir=work
This removes the executable and all the object files. If you want to rebuild the design at this point, just do the make command as shown above.
$ ghdl --remove --workdir=work
This removes the executable, all the object files and the library file. If you want to rebuild the design, you have to import the sources again, and to make the design.
$ rm -rf work
Only the executable is kept. If you want to rebuild the design, create the work/ directory, import the sources, and make the design.
Sometimes, a design does not fully follow the VHDL standards. For example it uses the badly engineered `std_logic_unsigned' package. GHDL supports this VHDL dialect through some options:
--ieee=synopsys -fexplicit
See IEEE library pitfalls, for more details.
The form of the ghdl
command is
$ ghdl command [options...]
The GHDL program has several commands. The first argument selects the commands. The options are used to slighly modify the action.
No options are allowed before the command. Except for the run commands, no options are allowed after a filename or a unit name.
The mostly used commands of GHDL are those to analyze and elaborate a design.
$ ghdl -a [options] files
The analysis command compiles one or more files, and creates an object file for each source file. The analysis command is selected with -a switch. Any argument starting with a dash is a option, the others are filenames. No options are allowed after a filename argument. GHDL analyzes each filename in the given order, and stops the analysis in case of error (the following files are not analyzed).
See GHDL options, for details on the GHDL options. For example, to produce debugging information such as line numbers, use:
$ ghdl -a -g my_design.vhdl
$ ghdl -e [options] primary_unit [secondary_unit]
On GNU/Linux the elaboration command creates an executable
containing the code of the VHDL
sources, the elaboration code
and simulation code to execute a design hiearachy. On Windows this
command elaborates the design but does not generate anything.
The elaboration command is selected with -e switch, and must be followed by either:
Name of the units must be a simple name, without any dot. You can select the name of the `WORK' library with the --work=NAME option, as described in GHDL options.
See Top entity, for the restrictions on the root design of a hierarchy.
On GNU/Linux the file name of the executable is the name of the primary unit, or for the later case, the concatenation of the name of the primary unit, a dash, and the name of the secondary unit (or architecture). On Windows there is no executable generated.
The -o followed by a file name can override the default executable file name.
For the elaboration command, GHDL
re-analyzes all the
configurations, entities, architectures and package declarations, and
creates the default configurations and the default binding indications
according to the LRM rules. It also generates the list of objects files
required for the executable. Then, it links all these files with the
run time library.
The actual elaboration is performed at run-time.
On Windows this command can be skipped because it is also done by the run command.
$ ghdl -r [options] primary_unit [secondary_unit] [simulation_options]
The options and arguments are the same as the See Elaboration command.
On GNU/Linux this command simply build the filename of the executable and execute it. Options are ignored. You may also directly execute the program.
This command exists for three reasons:
On Windows this command elaborate and launch the simulation. As a consequence you must use the same options used during analysis.
See Simulation and run time, for details on options.
Elaborate and then simulate a design unit.
$ ghdl --elab-run [elab_options] primary_unit [secondary_unit] [run_options]
This command acts like the elaboration command (see Elaboration command) followed by the run command (see Run command).
Bind a design unit and prepare the link step.
$ ghdl --bind [options] primary_unit [secondary_unit]
This command is only available on GNU/Linux.
This performs only the first stage of the elaboration command; the list of objects files is created but the executable is not built. This command should be used only when the main entry point is not ghdl.
Link an already bound design unit.
$ ghdl --link [options] primary_unit [secondary_unit]
This performs only the second stage of the elaboration command: the executable is created by linking the files of the object files list. This command is available only for completness. The elaboration command is equivalent to the bind command followed by the link command.
Disp files which will be linked.
$ ghdl --list-link primary_unit [secondary_unit]
This command is only available on GNU/Linux.
This command may be used only after a bind command. GHDL displays all the files which will be linked to create an executable. This command is intended to add object files in a link of an foreign program.
Analyze files but do not generate code.
$ ghdl -s [options] files
This command may be used to check the syntax of files. It does not update the library.
Analyze files and elaborate in the same time.
On GNU/Linux:
$ ghdl -c [options] file... -e primary_unit [secondary_unit]
On Windows:
$ ghdl -c [options] file... -r primary_unit [secondary_unit]
This command combines analyze and elaboration: files are analyzed and the unit is then elaborated. However, code is only generated during the elaboration. On Windows the simulation is launched.
To be more precise, the files are first parsed, and then the elaboration drives the analysis. Therefore, there is no analysis order, and you don't need to care about it.
All the units of the files are put into the `work' library. But, the work library is neither read from disk nor saved. Therefore, you must give all the files of the `work' library your design needs.
The advantages over the traditionnal approach (analyze and then elaborate) are:
This command is still experimental. In case of problems, you should go back to the traditionnal way.
Besides the options described below, GHDL
passes any debugging options
(those that begin with -g) and optimizations options (those that
begin with -O or -f) to GCC
. Refer to the GCC
manual for details.
--work=
NAMEGHDL
checks `WORK' is a valid identifier. Although being
more or less supported, the `WORK' identifier should not be an
extended identifier, since the filesystem may prevent it from correctly
working (due to case sensitivity or forbidden characters in filenames).
VHDL
rules forbides you to add units in the `std' library.
Furthermode, you should not put units in the `ieee' library.
--workdir=
PATH--std=
STD--ieee=
VERIEEE
library to use. VER must be one of:
IEEE
library. Any library clause with the `IEEE'
identifier will fail, unless you have created by your own a library with
the IEEE
name.
IEEE
library containing only packages defined by
ieee standards. Currently, there are the multivalue logic system
packages `std_logic_1164' defined by IEEE 1164, the synthesis
packages , `numeric_bit' and `numeric_std' defined by IEEE
1076.3, and the vital packages `vital_timing' and
`vital_primitives', defined by IEEE 1076.4. The version of these
packages is defined by the VHDL standard used. See VITAL packages,
for more details.
IEEE
library without the ieee permission.
To avoid errors, you must use the same IEEE
library for all units of
your design, and during elaboration.
-P
PATHThe WORK
library is always searched in the path specified by the
--workdir= option, or in the current directory if the later
option is not specified.
-fexplicit
This option is not set by default. I don't think this option is a
good feature, because it breaks the encapsulation rule. When set, an
operator can be silently overriden in another package. You'd better to fix
your design and use the `numeric_std' package.
--no-vital-checks
--vital-checks
Checks are performed only when a design unit is decorated by a VITAL attribute. The VITAL attributes are `VITAL_Level0' and `VITAL_Level1', both declared in the `ieee.VITAL_Timing' package.
Currently, VITAL checks are only partially implemented. See VHDL restrictions for VITAL, for more details.
--syn-binding
This rule is known as synthetizer rule.
There are two key points: normal VHDL LRM rules are tried first and entities are search only in known library. A known library is a library which has been named in your design.
This option is only useful during elaboration.
--PREFIX=
PATH--GHDL1=
COMMAND-v
These options are only available on GNU/Linux.
For many commands, GHDL
acts as a driver: it invokes programs to perform
the command. You can pass arbritrary options to these programs.
Both the compiler and the linker are in fact GCC programs. See GCC options, for details on GCC options.
-Wc,
OPTION-Wa,
OPTION-Wl,
OPTIONSome contructions are not erroneous but dubious. Warnings are diagnostic messages that report such constructions. Some warnings are reported only during analysis, others during elaboration.
You could disable a warning by using the --warn-no-XXX instead of --warn-XXX.
--warn-reserved
--warn-default-binding
--warn-binding
However, warnings are even emitted if a component instantiation is
inside a generate statement. As a consequence, if you use conditionnal
generate statement to select a component according to the implementation,
you will certainly get warnings.
--warn-library
--warn-vital-generic
--warn-delayed-checks
GHDL
doesn't read not required
package bodies).
These are checks for no wait statement in a procedure called in a
sensitized process and checks for pure rules of a function.
--warn-body
--warn-specs
--warn-unused
--warn-error
Analyzing and elaborating a design consisting in severals files can be tricky, due to dependences. GHDL has a few commands to rebuild a design.
Add files in the work design library.
$ ghdl -i [options] file...
All the files specified in the command line are scanned, parsed and added in the libraries but as not yet analyzed. No object files are created.
The purpose of this command is to localize design units in the design files. The make command will then be able to recursively build a hierarchy from an entity name or a configuration name.
Since the files are parsed, there must be correct files. However, since they are not analyzed, many errors are tolerated by this command.
Note that all the files are added in the work library. If you have many libraries, you must use the command for each library.
See Make command, to actually build the design.
$ ghdl -m [options] primary [secondary]
Analyze automatically outdated files and elaborate a design.
The primary unit denoted by the primary argument must already be known by the system, either because you have already analyzed it (even if you have modified it) or because you have imported it. GHDL analyzes all outdated files. A file may be outdated because it has been modified (e.g. you just have edited it), or because a design unit contained in the file depends on a unit which is outdated. This rule is of course recursive.
With the -f (force) option, GHDL analyzes all the units of the work library needed to create the design hierarchy. Not outdated units are recompiled. This is useful if you want to compile a design hierarch with new compilation flags (for example, to add the -g debugging option).
The make command will only re-analyze design units in the work library. GHDL fails if it has to analyze an outdated unit from another library.
The purpose of this command is to be able to compile a design without prior knowledge of file order. In the VHDL model, some units must be analyzed before others (e.g. an entity before its architecture). It might be a nightmare to analyze a full design of several files, if you don't have the ordered list of file. This command computes an analysis order.
The make command fails when a unit was not previously parsed. For example, if you split a file containing several design units into several files, you must either import these new files or analyze them so that GHDL knows in which file these units are.
The make command imports files which have been modified. Then, a design hierarchy is internally built as if no units are outdated. Then, all outdated design units, using the dependences of the design hierarchy, are analyzed. If necessary, the design hierarchy is elaborated.
This is not perfect, since defaults architecture (the most recently analyzed one) may change while outdated design files are analyzed. In such a case, re-run the make command of GHDL.
Generate a Makefile to build a design unit.
$ ghdl --gen-makefile [options] primary [secondary]
This command works like the make command (see Make command), but only a makefile is generated on the standard output.
GHDL has a few commands which act on a library.
Display the name of the units contained in a design library.
$ ghdl -d [options]
The directory command, selected with the -d command line argument displays the content of the work design library. All options are allowed, but only a few are meaningful: --work=NAME, --workdir=PATH and --std=VER.
Remove object and executable files but keep the library.
$ ghdl --clean [options]
GHDL tries to remove any object, executable or temporary file it could have created. Source files are not removed.
There is no short command line form for this option to prevent accidental clean up.
Do like the clean command but remove the library too.
$ ghdl --remove [options]
There is no short command line form for this option to prevent accidental clean up. Note that after removing a design library, the files are not known anymore by GHDL.
To easily navigate through your sources, you may generate cross-references.
$ ghdl --xref-html [options] file...
This command generates an html file for each file given in the command line, with syntax highlighting and full cross-reference: every identifier is a link to its declaration. Besides, an index of the files is created too.
The set of file are analyzed, and then, if the analyze is successful, html files are generated in the directory specified by the -o dir option, or html/ directory by default.
If the --format=html2 is specified, then the generated html files follow the HTML 2.0 standard, and colours are specified with `<FONT>' tags. However, colours are hard-coded.
If the --format=css is specified, then the generated html files follow the HTML 4.0 standard, and use the CSS-1 file ghdl.css to specify colours. This file is generated only if it does not already exist (it is never overwritten) and can be customized by the user to change colours or appearance. Refer to a generated file and its comments for more informations.
The following commands act on one or severals files. They do not analysis files, therefore, they work even if a file has semantic errors.
Generate HTML on standard output from VHDL.
$ ghdl --pp-html [options] file...
The files are just scanned and an html file, with syntax highlighting is generated on standard output.
Since the files are not even parsed, erroneous files or uncomplete designs can be pretty printed.
The style of the html file can be modified with the --format= option. By default or when the --format=html2 option is specified, the output is an HTML 2.0 file, with colours set throught `<FONT>' tags. When the --format=css option is specified, the output is an HTML 4.0 file, with colours set through a CSS file, whose name is `ghdl.css'. See Cross-reference command, for more details about this CSS file.
Display the name of the design units in files.
$ ghdl -f file...
The files are scanned, parsed and the names of design units are displayed. Design units marked with two stars are candidate to be at the apex of a design hierarchy.
Chop (or split) files at design unit.
$ ghdl --chop files
GHDL
reads files, and writes a file in the current directory for
every design unit.
The file name of a design unit is build according to the unit. For an entity declaration, a package declaration or a configuration the file name is NAME.vhdl, where NAME is the name of the design unit. For a package body, the file name is NAME-body.vhdl. Finally, for an architecture ARCH of an entity ENTITY, the file name is ENTITY-ARCH.vhdl.
Since the input files are parsed, this command aborts in case of syntax error. The command aborts too if a file to be written already exists.
Comments between design units are stored into the most adequate files.
This command may be useful to split big files, if your computer has not enough memory to compile such files. The size of the executable is reduced too.
Display on the standard output lines of files preceded by line number.
$ ghdl --lines files
There are a few GHDL commands which are seldom useful.
Display (on the standard output) a short description of the all the commands available. If the help switch is followed by an command switch, then options for this later command are displayed.
$ ghdl --help $ ghdl -h $ ghdl -h command
Display the program pathes and options used by GHDL.
$ ghdl --dispconfig [options]
This may be useful to track installation errors.
Display the `std.standard' package:
$ ghdl --disp-standard [options]
Display the GHDL
version and exit.
$ ghdl --version
During analysis and elaboration GHDL
may read the std
and ieee
files. The location of these files is based on the prefix,
which is (in priority order):
You should use the --dispconfig command (see Dispconfig command for details) to disp and debug installation problems.
When you use options --ieee=synopsys or --ieee=mentor,
the IEEE
library contains non standard packages such as
`std_logic_arith'.
These packages are not standard because there are not described by an IEEE
standard, even if they have been put in the IEEE
library. Furthermore,
they are not really de-facto standard, because there a slight differences
between the packages of Mentor and those of Synopsys.
Furthermore, since they are not well-thought, their use have pitfalls. For example, this description has error during compilation:
library ieee; use ieee.std_logic_1164.all; -- A counter from 0 to 10. entity counter is port (val : out std_logic_vector (3 downto 0); ck : std_logic; rst : std_logic); end counter; library ieee; use ieee.std_logic_unsigned.all; architecture bad of counter is signal v : std_logic_vector (3 downto 0); begin process (ck, rst) begin if rst = '1' then v <= x"0"; elsif rising_edge (ck) then if v = "1010" then -- Error v <= x"0"; else v <= v + 1; end if; end if; end process; val <= v; end bad;
When you analyze this design, GHDL does not accept it (too long lines have been split for readability):
$ ghdl -a --ieee=synopsys bad_counter.vhdl bad_counter.vhdl:13:14: operator "=" is overloaded bad_counter.vhdl:13:14: possible interpretations are: ../../libraries/ieee/std_logic_1164.v93:69:5: implicit function "=" [std_logic_vector, std_logic_vector return boolean] ../../libraries/synopsys/std_logic_unsigned.vhdl:64:5: function "=" [std_logic_vector, std_logic_vector return boolean] ../translate/ghdldrv/ghdl: compilation error
Indeed, the "="
operator is defined in both packages, and both
are visible at the place it is used. The first declaration is an
implicit one, which occurs when the std_logic_vector
type is
declared and is a element to element comparaison, the second one is an
explicit declared function, with the semantic of an unsigned comparaison.
With some analyser, the explicit declaration has priority on the implicit declaration, and this design can be analyzed without error. However, this is not the rule given by the VHDL LRM, and since GHDL follows these rules, it emits an error.
You can force GHDL to use this rule with the -fexplicit option. See GHDL options, for more details.
However it is easy to fix this error, by using a selected name:
library ieee; use ieee.std_logic_unsigned.all; architecture fixed_bad of counter is signal v : std_logic_vector (3 downto 0); begin process (ck, rst) begin if rst = '1' then v <= x"0"; elsif rising_edge (ck) then if ieee.std_logic_unsigned."=" (v, "1010") then v <= x"0"; else v <= v + 1; end if; end if; end process; val <= v; end fixed_bad;
It is better to only use the standard packages defined by IEEE, which provides the same functionnalities:
library ieee; use ieee.numeric_std.all; architecture good of counter is signal v : unsigned (3 downto 0); begin process (ck, rst) begin if rst = '1' then v <= x"0"; elsif rising_edge (ck) then if v = "1010" then v <= x"0"; else v <= v + 1; end if; end if; end process; val <= std_logic_vector (v); end good;
In most system environments, it is possible to pass options while invoking a program. Contrary to most programming language, there is no standard method in VHDL to obtain the arguments or to set the exit status.
In GHDL, it is impossible to pass parameters to your design. A later version could do it through the generics interfaces of the top entity.
However, the GHDL run time behaviour can be modified with some options; for example, it is possible to stop simulation after a certain time.
The exit status of the simulation is `EXIT_SUCCESS' (0) if the simulation completes, or `EXIT_FAILURE' (1) in case of error (assertion failure, overflow or any constraint error).
Here is the list of the most useful options. Some debugging options are also available, but not described here. The `--help' options lists all options available, including the debugging one.
--assert-level=
LEVELseverity_level
enumerated type defined in the standard
package or the
`none' name.
By default, only assertion violation of severity level `failure' stops the simulation.
For example, if LEVEL was `warning', any assertion violation with severity level `warning', `error' or `failure' would stop simulation, but the assertion violation at the `note' severity level would only display a message.
`--assert-level=none' prevents any assertion violation to stop
simulation.
--stop-time=
TIMEFor examples:
$ ./my_design --stop-time=10ns $ ./my_design --stop-time=ps
--stop-delta=
N--disp-time
--disp-tree[
=KIND]
--no-run
--vcd=
FILENAME--vcdgz=
FILENAMEThe --vcdgz option is the same as the --vcd option,
but the output is compressed using the zlib
(gzip
compression). However, you can't use the `-' filename.
Furthermore, only one VCD file can be written.
VCD (value change dump) is a file format defined
by the verilog
standard and used by virtually any wave viewer.
Since it comes from verilog
, only a few VHDL types can be dumped. GHDL
dumps only signals whose base type is of the following:
I have successfully used gtkwave
to view VCD files.
Currently, there is no way to select signals to be dumped: all signals are dumped, which can generate big files.
It is very unfortunate there is no standard or well-known wave file
format supporting VHDL types. If you are aware of such a free format,
please mail me (see Reporting bugs).
--wave=
FILENAMEghw
(GHdl Waveform) file. Currently, all
the signals are dumped into the waveform file, you cannot select a hierarchy
of signals to be dumped.
The format of this file was defined by myself and is not yet completly fixed. It may change slightly.
There is a patch against gtkwave 1.3.72
on the ghdl website at
ghdl.free.fr, so that it can read such files.
Contrary to VCD files, any VHDL type can be dumped into a GHW file.
--sdf=
PATH=
FILENAME--sdf=min=
PATH=
FILENAME--sdf=typ=
PATH=
FILENAME--sdf=max=
PATH=
FILENAMEPATH is a path of instances, separated with `.' or `/'. Any separator can be used. Instances are component instantiation labels, generate labels or block labels. Currently, you cannot use an indexed name.
If the option contains a type of delay, that is min=, typ= or max=, the annotator use respectively minimum, typical or maximum values. If the option does not contain a type of delay, the annotator use the typical delay.
See Backannotation, for more details.
--stack-max-size=
SIZEIf the value SIZE is followed (without any space) by the `k', `K', `kb', `Kb', `ko' or `Ko' multiplier, then the size is the numeric value multiplied by 1024.
If the value SIZE is followed (without any space) by the `m', `M', `mb', `Mb', `mo' or `Mo' multiplier, then the size is the numeric value multiplied by 1024 * 1024 = 1048576.
Each non-sensitized process has its own stack, while the sensitized processes share the same and main stack. This stack is the stack created by the operating system.
Using too small stacks may result in simulation failure due to lack of memory.
Using too big stacks may reduce the maximum number of processes.
--stack-size=
SIZEThe stack of the non-sensitized processes grows until reaching the
maximum size limit.
--help
Debugging VHDL programs usign GDB
is possible only on GNU/Linux systems.
GDB
is a general purpose debugger for programs compiled by GCC
.
Currently, there is no VHDL support for GDB
. It may be difficult
to inspect variables or signals in GDB
, however, GDB
is
still able to display the stack frame in case of error or to set a breakpoint
at a specified line.
GDB
can be useful to precisely catch a run-time error, such as indexing
an array beyond its bounds. All error check subprograms call the
__ghdl_fatal
procedure. Therefore, to catch run-time error, set
a breakpoint like this:
(gdb) break __ghdl_fatal
When the breakpoint is hit, use the where
or bt
command to
display the stack frames.
This chapter describes several implementation defined aspect of VHDL in GHDL.
This is very unfortunate, but there are many versions of the VHDL language.
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.
Unfortunatly, VHDL-93 is not fully compatible with VHDL-87, ie some perfectly valid VHDL-87 programs are invalid VHDL-93 programs. Here are some of the reasons:
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 slighly changed.
You can select the VHDL standard expected by GHDL with the `--std=VER' option, where VER is one of the left column of the table below:
You cannot mix VHDL-87 and VHDL-93 units. A design hierarchy must have been completly analyzed using either the 87 or the 93 version of the VHDL standard.
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 file name 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.
Each design unit analyzed is placed into a design library. By default, the name of this design library is `work'; however, this can be changed with the --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 `NAME-objVER.cf', where NAME is the name of the library, and VER the VHDL version (87 or 93) 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 dependences.
The format may change with the next version of GHDL.
VHDL has features to handle files.
GHDL associates a file logical name (the VHDL file name) to an operating system file name. The logical name `STD_INPUT' is associated to the standard input as defined by `stdin' stream of the C library, while the logical name `STD_OUTPUT' is associated to the standard output, as defined by the `stdout' stream of the C library. Other logical name are directly mapped to a file name as defined by the first (`path') argument of the `fopen' function of the C library. For a binary file, the `b' character is appended to the mode argument (binary mode).
If multiple file objects are associated with the same external file, a stream is created for each object, except for the standard input or output.
GHDL has no internal restrictions on the number of file objects that are associated at one time with a given external file, but the operating system may restrict the maximum number of file open at the same time.
For more details about these point, please refer to your operation system documentation.
There are two kinds of files: binary or text files.
Text files are files of type `std.textio.text'. The format is the same as the format of any ascii file. In VHDL-87, only the first 128 characters (7 bits) are allowed, since the character type has only 128 literals. The end of line is system dependent. Note that the stdio functions with the text mode are used to handle text files: the fgets function is used to read lines. Please, refer to the manual of your C library for more information.
There are two kind of binary files, according to the type mark of the file. According to the VHDL standard, binary files must be read using the same type they are written.
If the type mark is a non-composite type (integer, floating type
enumeration, physical), the file is a raw stream:
elements are read or written using the same format as is used to represent
the data in memory. This is highly non-portable, but you should be able
to read file written by a non-GHDL
program.
If the type mark is a composite type (record or array), the file is composed of a 2 lines signature, followed by a raw stream.
There are some restrictions on the entity being at the apex of a design hierarchy:
Many vendors libraries have been analyzed with GHDL. There are usually no problems. Be sure to use the --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 --std=93c, -fexplicit and --warn-no-vital-generic.
Even with these relaxations, some broken libraries may fail.
For example, unisim_VITAL.vhd
from Xilinx
can't be
compiled because lines such as:
variable Write_A_Write_B : memory_collision_type := Write_A_Write_B; variable Read_A_Write_B : memory_collision_type := Read_A_Write_B;
(there are 6 such lines). According to VHDL visibility rules, `Write_A_Write_B' cannot be used while it is defined. This is very logical because it prevents from silly declarations such as
constant k : natural := 2 * k;
This files must be modified. Fortunatly, in the example the variables are never written. So it is enough to remove them.
Contrary to other `ieee' libraries, the math packages sources are not freely available. The sources provided with GHDL are based on an early draft and use the C libraries. As a consequence, you should link your design with the `libm.a' library using the -Wl, option like:
$ ghdl -e -Wl,-lm my_design
Please, refer to your system manual for more details.
Please also note that the `ieee' libraries are not the same as the drafts.
If you really need the `ieee' math libraries, they are available on the web, but they cannot be included in GHDL.
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.
Only subprograms (functions or procedures) can be imported, using the foreign
attribute. In this example, the sin
function is imported:
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 `std.standard' package. Therefore, you cannot use this feature in VHDL 1987.
The decoration is achived 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 `VHPIDIRECT ' (an upper-case keyword followed by one or more blanks). The linkage name of the subprogram follows.
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 obscur. Most of non-composite types are easily imported:
int
for C
or Integer
for Ada
.
long long
for C
or Long_Long_Integer
for Ada
.
double
for C
or Long_Float
for Ada
.
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 corresponds a 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.
You may add additionnal files or options during the link using the
-Wl, of GHDL
, as described in Elaboration command.
For example:
$ ghdl -e -Wl,-lm math_tb
will create the math_tb executable with the lm (mathematical) library.
Note the c library is always linked with an executable.
You main run your design from an external program. You just have to call the `ghdl_main' function which can be defined:
in C:
extern int ghdl_main (int argc, char **argv);
in 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.
As explained previously in 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, design.vhdl.
$ ghdl -a design.vhdl
Then, bind your design. In this example, we suppose the entity at the design apex is `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`
Warning: This topic is only for advanced users knowing how to useAda
andGNAT
. This is provided only for reference, I have tested this once before releasingGHDL
0.19 but this is not checked at each release.
The simulator kernel of GHDL
named GRT is written in
Ada95
and contains a very light and slighly adapted version
of VHPI
. Since it is an Ada
implementation it is
called 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
run time library. However, you certainly want to use the usual
run time 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 .ali files read-only.
$ rm *.o $ chmod -w *.ali
You may then install the sources files and the .ali files. I have never tested this step.
You are now ready to use it.
For example, here is an example, test_grt.adb which displays the top level design name.
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 -aLgrt_ali_path -aIgrt_src_path -largs `ghdl --list-link counter`
Finally, run your design:
$ ./test_grt Status is 0 Root instance name: counter
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.
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 slighly modified so that they conform to the VHDL 1993 standard (a few functions are made pure and a few one impure).
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 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 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 labe, 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 (eg, 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 delay adjustement are necessary to handle negative constraint such as a negative setup time. This step is defined in the VITAL standard and should occurs 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.
The current version of GHDL is really a beta version. Some features of VHDL have not been implemented or are only partially implemented. Besides, GHDL has not been extensively tested yet.
Here is the non-exhaustive list of flaws:
GHDL
has been compiled and tested only on `i386-linux' systems.
In order to improve GHDL, we welcome bugs report and suggestions for
any aspect of GHDL. Please use the bug tracker on
<http://gna.org/projects/ghdl
>. You may also send an
email to ghdl@free.fr.
If the compiler crashes, this is a bug. Reliable tools never crash.
If your compiled VHDL executable crashes, this may be a bug at run time or the code produced may be wrong. However, since VHDL has a notion of pointers, an erroneous VHDL program (using invalid pointers for example) may crash.
If the compiler emits an error message for a perfectly valid input or does not emit an error message for an invalid input, this may be a bug. Please send the input file and what you expected. If you know the LRM well enough, please specify the paragraph which has not been well implemented. If you don't know the LRM, maybe your bug report will be rejected simply because there is no bug. In the latter case, it may be difficult to discuss the issue; and comparisons with other VHDL tools is not a very strong argument.
If a compiler message is not clear enough for you, please tell me. The error messages can be improved, but I have not enough experience with them.
If you have found a mistake in the manual, please send a comment. If you have not understood some parts of this manual, please tell me. English is not my mother tongue, so this manual may not be well-written. Again, rewriting part of it is a good way to improve it.
If you send a VHDL
file producing a bug, it is a good idea to try
to make it as short as possible. It is also a good idea to make it
looking like a test: write a comment which explains wether the file
should compile, and if yes, whether or not it should run successfully.
In the latter case, an assert statement should finish the test; the
severity level note indicates success, while a severity level failure
indicates failure.
For bug reports, please include enough information for the maintainers to reproduce the problem. This includes:
GHDL
(you can get it with `ghdl --version').
GHDL
from sources or used the binary
distribution.
I have several axes for GHDL
improvements:
The GHDL front-end, the `std.textio' package and the run-time library (grt) are copyrighted Tristan Gingold, come with absolutely no warranty, and are distributed under the conditions of the General Public License.
The `ieee.numeric_bit' and `ieee.numeric_std' packages are copyrighted by the IEEE. The source files may be distributed without change, except as permitted by the standard. This source file may not be sold or distributed for profit. See the source file and the IEEE 1076.3 standard for more information.
The `ieee.std_logic_1164' package is copyrighted by the IEEE. See source file and the IEEE 1164 standard for more information.
The `ieee.VITAL_Primitives', `ieee.VITAL_Timing' and `ieee.VITAL_Memory' packages are copyrighted by IEEE. See source file and the IEEE 1076.4 standards for more information.
The `ieee.Math_Real' and `ieee.Math_Complex' packages are copyrighted by IEEE. These are draft versions which may used and distributed without restriction. These packages cannot be sold or distributed for profit. See source files for more information.
The packages `std_logic_arith', `std_logic_signed', `std_logic_unsigned' and `std_logic_textio' contained in the `synopsys' directory are copyrighted by Synopsys, Inc. The source files may be used and distributed without restriction provided that the copyright statements are not removed from the files and that any derivative work contains the copyright notice. See the source files for more information.
The package `std_logic_arith' contained in the `mentor' directory is copyrighted by Mentor Graphics. The source files may be distributed in whole without restriction provided that the copyright statement is not removed from the file and that any derivative work contains this copyright notice. See the source files for more information.
As a consequence of the run-time copyright, you may not be allowed to
distribute an executable produced by GHDL
without the VHDL
sources. To my mind, this is not a real restriction, since there is no
points in distributing VHDL executable. Please, send a comment
(see Reporting bugs) if you don't like this policy.
__ghdl_fatal
: Debugging VHDL programs