Checks to see if a cell is of type ff in the liberty,
and keeps track of an additional area value.
```
Chip area for module '\addr': 92.280720
Sequential area for module '\addr': 38.814720
```
Signed-off-by: Ethan Mahintorabi <ethanmoon@google.com>
This fixes hierarchy when used with cell libraries that were loaded with
-defer and also makes more of the hierarchy visible to the auto-top
heuristic.
This adds support for `$check` cells in chformal and adds a `-lower`
mode which converts `$check` cells into `$assert` etc. cells with a
`$print` cell to output the `$check` message.
If the offset is larger than the signal itself,
meaning the signal is completely shifted out,
it tried to extract a negative amount of bits from the old signal.
This RTL pattern is suspicious since it is a complicated way of
arriving at a constant value, so we warn the user.
This allows tools like SBY to capture the $display output independent
from anything else sim might log. Additionally it provides source and
hierarchy locations for everything printed.
The previous version could easily generate a large amount of padding
when the constant factor was significantly larger than the width of the
shift data input. This could lead to huge amounts of logic being
generated before then being optimized away at a huge performance and
memory cost.
Additionally and more critically, when the input width was not a
multiple of the constant factor, the input data was padded with 'x bits
to such a multiple before interspersing the 'x padding needed to align
the selectable windows to power-of-two offsets.
Such a final padding would not be correct for shifts besides $shiftx,
and the previous version did attempt to remove that final padding at the
end so that the native zero/sign/x-extension behavior of the shift cell
would be used, but since the last selectable window also got
power-of-two padding appended after the padding the code is trying to
remove got added, it did not actually fully remove it in some cases.
I changed the code to only add 'x padding between selectable windows,
leaving the last selectable window unpadded. This omits the need to add
final padding to a multiple of the constant factor in the first place.
In turn, that means the only 'x bits added are actually impossible to
select. As a side effect no padding is added when the constant factor is
equal to or larger than the width of the shift data input, also solving
the reported performance bug.
This fixes#4056
Remove duplicate %.pmg -> %_pm.h pattern. One of the duplicates overrode
the other, and in some conditions there were build races as to whether
the target directory for the generated header would exist. Instead have
a single rule which is properly generalized.
Generalize what was formerly the unsigned-only architecture to support
both signed and unsigned multiplication, use that as default, and set
aside the special low-power architecture that was formerly used for
signed multipliers.
- moved all selection and filtering logic to the match block
- applied less-verbose code suggestions
- removed constraint on number of bits in shift-amount
- added check for possible wrap-arround in the operation
Add a separate shiftmul pattern to match on left shifts which implement
demuxing. This mirrors the right shift pattern matcher but is probably
best kept separate instead of merging the two into a single matcher.
In any case the diff of the two matchers should be easily readable.
The `opt_expr` pass running before `peepopt` can interfere with the
detection of a shiftmul pattern due to some of the bottom bits of the
shift amount being replaced with constant zero. Extend the detection to
cover those situations as well.
`memory_nordff` has the advantage that it can be called just ahead of
the simulation step no matter whether the clocked read port has been
inferred or was explicitly instantiated in a flow.
In commit fedd12261 ("booth: Move away from explicit `Wire` pointers")
a bug was introduced when checking for vacant slots in arrays holding
some intermediate results. Non-wire SigBit values were taken to imply
a vacant slot, but actually a constant one can make its way into those
results, if the multiplier cell configuration is just right. Fix the
vacancy check to address the bug.
The main speedup comes from swithing from using a SHA1 hash to std::hash<std::string>. There is no need to use an expensive cryptographic hash for fingerprinting in this context.
This adds the -noinitstate option which is required to simulate
counterexamples to induction with yw-cosim. Also add handling for
$initstate cells for non-co-simulation.
For the basic single-bit operations, opt for gate cells (`$_AND_` etc.)
instead of the coarse cells (`$and` etc.). For the emission of cells
move to the conventional module methods (`module->addAndGate`) away
from the local helpers. While at it, touch on the surrounding code.
To represent intermediate signals use the `SigBit`/`SigSpec` classes as
is customary in the Yosys codebase. Do not pass around `Wire` pointers
unless we have special reason to.
* Speed up the autoname pass by 2x. This is accomplished by only constructing IdString objects for plain strings that have a higher score.
* Defer creating IdStrings even further. This increases the speedup to 3x.
This does not correctly handle an `$overwrite_tag` on a module output,
but since we currently require the user to flatten the design for
cross-module dft, this cannot be observed from within the design, only
by manually inspecting the signals in the design.
This is still missing a mode to rewrite $overwrite_tag and $original_tag
by injecting $set_tag and $get_tag in the right places. It's also
missing bit-precise propagation models for shifts and arithmetic and
requires the design to be flattened.
* Fixes a non-deterministic polarity error for $eqx/$nex cells
* Fixes a deterministic polarity error for $_NOR_ and $_ORNOT_ cells
* Generates hdlnames when xprop is run after flatten
ABC's read_lib command has a dont_use
cell list that is configurable by the user.
This PR exposes that option to Yosys.
See
5405d4787a/src/map/scl/scl.c (L285)
for documentation on this option.
Signed-off-by: Ethan Mahintorabi <ethanmoon@google.com>
Group the reconnections, so that instead of producing
connect $auto$wreduce.cc:455:run$24 [0] 1'0
connect $auto$wreduce.cc:455:run$23 [31] 1'0
connect $auto$wreduce.cc:455:run$23 [30] 1'0
... (40 more lines)
we produce
connect $auto$wreduce.cc:461:run$23 [31:11] 21'000000000000000000000
connect $auto$wreduce.cc:461:run$24 [31:10] 22'0000000000000000000000
.
If the `$ge` cell we are replacing has wide output port, the upper bits
on the port should be driven to zero. That's not what a `$not` cell with
a single-bit input does. Instead opt for a `$logic_not` cell, which does
zero-pad its output.
Fixes#3867.
C does not guarantee that stdout/stderr can be reassigned.
Most platforms do make them assignable, however musl and WASI that
is based on musl do not. WASI does not have `dup2()`; instead it has
its own non-portable version of it that can only assign to previously
allocated fds.
Update the stream redirection code so that it does the right thing
on WASI and other platforms.
This is mostly important for YoWASP builds, since those do not have
a way to build with external ABC (I prototyped it but for some reason
ABC always segfaults when built as an independent Wasm binary...)
Distinguish between the A, B input ports of `$_ANDNOT_`, `$_ORNOT_`
gates when considering those for sharing. Unlike the input ports of the
other supported single-bit gates, those are not interchangeable.
Fixes#3848.
An `std::vector<T>::reverse_iterator` stores the
`std::vector<T>::iterator` which points to the (forwards-ordered)
*following* item. Thus while `vec.rbegin()` dereferences to the final
item of `vec`, the iterator it wraps (`vec.rbegin().base()`) is equal to
`vec.end()`.
In the remove case here, we advance `it` (backwards), erasing the item
we just advanced past by grabbing its (pre-increment) base
forward-iterator and subtracting 1.
The iterator maths here is obviously all OK, but the forward-iterator
that `it` wraps post-increment actually points to the item we just
removed. That iterator was invalidated by the `erase()` call.
That this works anyway is (AFAICT) some combination of luck and/or
promises that aren't part of the C++ spec, but MSVC's debug iterator
support picks this up.
`erase()` returns the new iterator that follows the item just erased,
which happens to be the exact one we want our reverse-iterator to wrap
for the next loop; we get a fresh iterator to the same base, now without
the preceding item.