Use python script to generate tests for both SDP and TDP across multiple sizes of RAM.
Adds sync_ram_sdp_(wwr|wrr) to common blockram.v for double width write and double width read respectively.
Anlogic FPGAs all have two kinds of BRAMs, one is 9bit*1K when being
true dual port (or 18bit*512 when simple dual port), the other is
16bit*2K.
Supports mapping of these two kinds of BRAMs. 9Kbit BRAM in SDP mode and
32Kbit BRAM with 8bit width are not support yet.
Signed-off-by: Icenowy Zheng <icenowy@aosc.io>
- FfData now keeps track of the module and underlying cell, if any (so
calling emit on FfData created from a cell will replace the existing cell)
- FfData implementation is split off to its own .cc file for faster
compilation
- the "flip FF data sense by inserting inverters in front and after"
functionality that zinit uses is moved onto FfData class and beefed up
to have dffsr support, to support more use cases
These parts keep rereading a Verilog module, then using chparam
to test it with various parameter combinations. Since the default
parameters are on the large side, this spends a lot of time
needlessly elaborating the default parametrization that will then
be discarded. Fix it with -deref and manual hierarchy call.
Shaves 30s off the test time on my machine.
Calling log_signal is problematic for several reasons:
- with recent changes, empty string is serialized as { }, which violates
the "no spaces in IdString" rule
- the type (plain / real / signed / string) is dropped, wrongly conflating
functionally different values and potentially introducing a subtle
elaboration bug
Instead, use a custom simple serialization scheme.
The presence of IS_*_INVERTED on FD* cells follows Vivado, which
apparently has been decided by a dice roll. Just assume false if the
parameter doesn't exist.
Fixes#2559.
This test pretty much passes by accident — the `prep` command runs
memory_collect without memory_dff first, which prevents merging read
register into the memory, and thus blocks block RAM inference for a
reason completely unrelated to the attribute.
The attribute setting didn't actually work because it was set on the
containing module instead of the actual memory.
When the register being merged into the EN signal happens to be a $sdff,
the current code creates a new $mux for every bit, even if they happen
to be identical (as is usually the case), preventing proper grouping
further down the flow. Fix this by adding a simple cache.
Fixes#2409.
* xilinx: eliminate SCCs from DSP48E1 model
* xilinx: add SCC test for DSP48E1
* Update techlibs/xilinx/cells_sim.v
* xilinx: Gate DSP48E1 being a whitebox behind ALLOW_WHITEBOX_DSP48E1
Have a test that checks it works through ABC9 when enabled
Quartus assumes unsigned multiplication by default, breaking signed
multiplies, so add an input signedness parameter to the MISTRAL_MUL*
cells to propagate to Quartus' <family>_mac cells.
Our techmap rules for $shift and $shiftx cells contained a special path
that aimed to decompose the shift LSB-first instead of MSB-first in
select cases that come up in pmux lowering. This path was needlessly
overcomplicated and contained bugs.
Instead of doing that, just switch over the main path to iterate
LSB-first (except for the specially-handled MSB for signed shifts
and overflow handling). This also makes the code consistent with
shl/shr/sshl/sshr cells, which are already decomposed LSB-first.
Fixes#2346.
The main part is converting ice40_dsp to recognize the new FF types
created in opt_dff instead of trying to recognize the mux patterns on
its own.
The fsm call has been moved upwards because the passes cannot deal with
$dffe/$sdff*, and other optimizations don't help it much anyway.
The main part is converting xilinx_dsp to recognize the new FF types
created in opt_dff instead of trying to recognize the patterns on its
own.
The fsm call has been moved upwards because the passes cannot deal with
$dffe/$sdff*, and other optimizations don't help it much anyway.