Use `$finish(0)` to silently exit even when using recent iverlog
versions. Run `write_verilog -noexpr` before `write_verilog` as the
latter can modify the design.
This also enables checking the tests results, as xprop should be in a
state where the existing tests pass.
This brings the metadata for packed arrays in packed structs
in line with the metadata for unpacked arrays, and correctly
handles the case when both lsb and msb in an address range are
non-zero.
This is primarily intended to enable the standard-permitted use of
module-scoped identifiers to refer to tasks and non-constant functions.
As a side-effect, this also adds support for the non-standard use of
module-scoped identifiers referring to constant functions, a feature
that is supported in some other tools, including Iverilog.
The witness metadata was missing fine grained FFs completely and for
coarse grained FFs where the output connection has multiple chunks it
lacked the offset of the chunk within the SMT expression. This fixes
both, the later by adding an "smtoffset" field to the metadata.
This adds a native json based witness trace format. By having a common
format that includes everything we support, and providing a conversion
utility (yosys-witness) we no longer need to implement every format for
every tool that deals with witness traces, avoiding a quadratic
opportunity to introduce subtle bugs.
Included:
* smt2: New yosys-smt2-witness info lines containing full hierarchical
paths without lossy escaping.
* yosys-smtbmc --dump-yw trace.yw: Dump results in the new format.
* yosys-smtbmc --yw trace.yw: Read new format as constraints.
* yosys-witness: New tool to convert witness formats.
Currently this can only display traces in a human-readable-only
format and do a passthrough read/write of the new format.
* ywio.py: Small python lib for reading and writing the new format.
Used by yosys-smtbmc and yosys-witness to avoid duplication.
genrtlil.cc and simplify.cc had inconsistent and slightly broken
handling of signedness for array querying functions. These functions are
defined to return a signed result. Simplify always produced an unsigned
and genrtlil always a signed 32-bit result ignoring the context.
Includes tests for the the relvant edge cases for context dependent
conversions.
The previously generated logic assumed an unconstrained past value in
the initial state and did not handle 'x values. While the current formal
verification flow uses 2-valued logic, SVA value change expressions
require a past value of 'x during the initial state to behave in the
expected way (i.e. to consider both an initial 0 and an initial 1 as
$changed and an initial 1 as $rose and an initial 0 as $fell).
This patch now generates logic that at the same time
a) provides the expected behavior in a 2-valued logic setting, not
depending on any dont-care optimizations, and
b) properly handles 'x values in yosys simulation
For SVAs that have an explicit clock and are contained in a procedure
which conditionally executes the assertion, verific expresses this using
a mux with one input connected to constant 1 and the other output
connected to an SVA_AT. The existing code only handled the case where
the first input is connected to 1. This patch also handles the other
case.
The `-keepdc` option prevents merging flipflops with dont-care bits in
their initial value, as, in general, this is not a valid transform for
formal verification.
The keepdc option of `opt` is passed along to `opt_merge` now.
- Prevent unmatched expected error patterns from self-matching
- Prevent infinite recursion on unmatched expected warnings
- Always print the error message for unmatched error patterns
- Add test coverage for all unmatched message types
- Add test coverage for excess matched logs and warnings
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>
The preprocessor currently destroys double slash containing escaped
identifiers (for example \a//b ). This is due to next_token trying to
convert single line comments (//) into /* */ comments. This then leads
to an unintuitive error message like this:
ERROR: syntax error, unexpected '*'
This patch fixes the error by recognizing escaped identifiers and
returning them as single token. It also adds a testcase.
- Attempt to lookup a derived module if it potentially contains a port
connection with elaboration ambiguities
- Mark the cell if module has not yet been derived
- This can be extended to implement automatic hierarchical port
connections in a future change
- 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
This enables the usage of declarations of wand or wor with a base type
of logic, integer, or a typename. Note that declarations of nets with
2-state base types is still permitted, in violation of the spec.
- Root AST_PREFIX nodes are now subject to genblk expansion to allow
them to refer to a locally-visible generate block
- Part selects on AST_PREFIX member leafs can now refer to generate
block items (previously would not resolve and raise an error)
- Add source location information to AST_PREFIX nodes
This is accomplished by generating a unique name for the genvar,
renaming references to the genvar only in the loop's initialization,
guard, and incrementation, and finally adding a localparam inside the
loop body with the original name so that the genvar can be shadowed as
expected.
Previously, opt_clean would reconnect all ports (including FF Q ports)
to a "canonical" SigBit chosen by complex rules, but would leave the
init attribute on the old wire. This change applies the same
canonicalization rules to the init attributes, ensuring that init moves
to wherever the Q port moved.
Part of another jab at #2920.
- User-defined types must be data types. Using a net type (e.g. wire) is
a syntax error.
- User-defined types without a net type are always variables (i.e.
logic).
- Nets and variables can now be explicitly declared using user-defined
types:
typedef logic [1:0] W;
wire W w;
typedef logic [1:0] V;
var V v;
Fixes#2846
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.
If width of a case expression was large, explicit patterns could cause
the existing logic to take an extremely long time, or exhaust the
maximum size of the underlying set. For cases where all of the patterns
are fully defined and there are no constants in the case expression,
this change uses a simple set to track which patterns have been seen.