mirror of https://github.com/YosysHQ/yosys.git
400 lines
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ReStructuredText
400 lines
16 KiB
ReStructuredText
Selections
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----------
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.. role:: yoscrypt(code)
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:language: yoscrypt
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The selection framework
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The :cmd:ref:`select` command can be used to create a selection for subsequent
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commands. For example:
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.. code:: yoscrypt
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select foobar # select the module foobar
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delete # delete selected objects
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Normally the :cmd:ref:`select` command overwrites a previous selection. The
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commands :yoscrypt:`select -add` and :yoscrypt:`select -del` can be used to add
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or remove objects from the current selection.
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The command :yoscrypt:`select -clear` can be used to reset the selection to the
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default, which is a complete selection of everything in the current module.
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This selection framework can also be used directly in many other commands.
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Whenever a command has ``[selection]`` as last argument in its usage help, this
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means that it will use the engine behind the :cmd:ref:`select` command to
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evaluate additional arguments and use the resulting selection instead of the
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selection created by the last :cmd:ref:`select` command.
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For example, the command :cmd:ref:`delete` will delete everything in the current
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selection; while :yoscrypt:`delete foobar` will only delete the module foobar.
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If no :cmd:ref:`select` command has been made, then the "current selection" will
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be the whole design.
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.. note:: Many of the examples on this page make use of the :cmd:ref:`show`
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command to visually demonstrate the effect of selections. For a more
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detailed look at this command, refer to :ref:`interactive_show`.
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How to make a selection
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Selection by object name
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The easiest way to select objects is by object name. This is usually only done
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in synthesis scripts that are hand-tailored for a specific design.
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.. code:: yoscrypt
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select foobar # select module foobar
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select foo* # select all modules whose names start with foo
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select foo*/bar* # select all objects matching bar* from modules matching foo*
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select */clk # select objects named clk from all modules
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Module and design context
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Commands can be executed in *module/* or *design/* context. Until now all
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commands have been executed in design context. The :cmd:ref:`cd` command can be
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used to switch to module context.
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In module context, all commands only effect the active module. Objects in the
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module are selected without the ``<module_name>/`` prefix. For example:
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.. code:: yoscrypt
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cd foo # switch to module foo
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delete bar # delete object foo/bar
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cd mycpu # switch to module mycpu
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dump reg_* # print details on all objects whose names start with reg_
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cd .. # switch back to design
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Note: Most synthesis scripts never switch to module context. But it is a very
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powerful tool which we explore more in
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:doc:`/using_yosys/more_scripting/interactive_investigation`.
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Selecting by object property or type
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Special patterns can be used to select by object property or type. For example:
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- select all wires whose names start with ``reg_``: :yoscrypt:`select w:reg_*`
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- select all objects with the attribute ``foobar`` set: :yoscrypt:`select a:foobar`
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- select all objects with the attribute ``foobar`` set to 42: :yoscrypt:`select a:foobar=42`
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- select all modules with the attribute ``blabla`` set: :yoscrypt:`select A:blabla`
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- select all $add cells from the module foo: :yoscrypt:`select foo/t:$add`
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A complete list of pattern expressions can be found in :doc:`/cmd/select`.
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Operations on selections
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Combining selections
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The :cmd:ref:`select` command is actually much more powerful than it might seem
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at first glance. When it is called with multiple arguments, each argument is
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evaluated and pushed separately on a stack. After all arguments have been
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processed it simply creates the union of all elements on the stack. So
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:yoscrypt:`select t:$add a:foo` will select all ``$add`` cells and all objects
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with the ``foo`` attribute set:
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.. literalinclude:: /code_examples/selections/foobaraddsub.v
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:caption: Test module for operations on selections
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:name: foobaraddsub
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:language: verilog
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.. code-block::
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:caption: Output for command ``select t:$add a:foo -list`` on :numref:`foobaraddsub`
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yosys> select t:$add a:foo -list
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foobaraddsub/$add$foobaraddsub.v:6$3
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foobaraddsub/$sub$foobaraddsub.v:5$2
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foobaraddsub/$add$foobaraddsub.v:4$1
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In many cases simply adding more and more stuff to the selection is an
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ineffective way of selecting the interesting part of the design. Special
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arguments can be used to combine the elements on the stack. For example the
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``%i`` arguments pops the last two elements from the stack, intersects them, and
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pushes the result back on the stack. So :yoscrypt:`select t:$add a:foo %i` will
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select all ``$add`` cells that have the ``foo`` attribute set:
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.. code-block::
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:caption: Output for command ``select t:$add a:foo %i -list`` on :numref:`foobaraddsub`
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yosys> select t:$add a:foo %i -list
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foobaraddsub/$add$foobaraddsub.v:4$1
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Some of the special ``%``-codes:
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- ``%u``: union of top two elements on stack -- pop 2, push 1
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- ``%d``: difference of top two elements on stack -- pop 2, push 1
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- ``%i``: intersection of top two elements on stack -- pop 2, push 1
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- ``%n``: inverse of top element on stack -- pop 1, push 1
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See :doc:`/cmd/select` for the full list.
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Expanding selections
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The listing in :numref:`sumprod` uses the Yosys non-standard ``{... *}`` syntax
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to set the attribute ``sumstuff`` on all cells generated by the first assign
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statement. (This works on arbitrary large blocks of Verilog code an can be used
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to mark portions of code for analysis.)
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.. literalinclude:: /code_examples/selections/sumprod.v
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:caption: Another test module for operations on selections
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:name: sumprod
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:language: verilog
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Selecting ``a:sumstuff`` in this module will yield the following circuit
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diagram:
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/sumprod_00.*
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:class: width-helper
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:name: sumprod_00
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Output of ``show a:sumstuff`` on :numref:`sumprod`
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As only the cells themselves are selected, but not the temporary wire ``$1_Y``,
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the two adders are shown as two disjunct parts. This can be very useful for
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global signals like clock and reset signals: just unselect them using a command
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such as :yoscrypt:`select -del clk rst` and each cell using them will get its
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own net label.
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In this case however we would like to see the cells connected properly. This can
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be achieved using the ``%x`` action, that broadens the selection, i.e. for each
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selected wire it selects all cells connected to the wire and vice versa. So
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:yoscrypt:`show a:sumstuff %x` yields the diagram shown in :numref:`sumprod_01`:
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/sumprod_01.*
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:class: width-helper
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:name: sumprod_01
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Output of ``show a:sumstuff %x`` on :numref:`sumprod`
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.. _selecting_logic_cones:
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Selecting logic cones
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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:numref:`sumprod_01` shows what is called the ``input cone`` of ``sum``, i.e.
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all cells and signals that are used to generate the signal ``sum``. The ``%ci``
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action can be used to select the input cones of all object in the top selection
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in the stack maintained by the :cmd:ref:`select` command.
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As with the ``%x`` action, these commands broaden the selection by one "step".
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But this time the operation only works against the direction of data flow. That
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means, wires only select cells via output ports and cells only select wires via
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input ports.
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The following sequence of diagrams demonstrates this step-wise expansion:
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/sumprod_02.*
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:class: width-helper
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Output of ``show prod`` on :numref:`sumprod`
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/sumprod_03.*
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:class: width-helper
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Output of ``show prod %ci`` on :numref:`sumprod`
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/sumprod_04.*
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:class: width-helper
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Output of ``show prod %ci %ci`` on :numref:`sumprod`
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/sumprod_05.*
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:class: width-helper
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Output of ``show prod %ci %ci %ci`` on :numref:`sumprod`
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When selecting many levels of logic, repeating ``%ci`` over and over again can
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be a bit dull. So there is a shortcut for that: the number of iterations can be
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appended to the action. So for example the action ``%ci3`` is identical to
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performing the ``%ci`` action three times.
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The action ``%ci*`` performs the ``%ci`` action over and over again until it
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has no effect anymore.
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.. _advanced_logic_cones:
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Advanced logic cone selection
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In most cases there are certain cell types and/or ports that should not be
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considered for the ``%ci`` action, or we only want to follow certain cell types
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and/or ports. This can be achieved using additional patterns that can be
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appended to the ``%ci`` action.
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Lets consider :numref:`memdemo_src`. It serves no purpose other than being a
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non-trivial circuit for demonstrating some of the advanced Yosys features. This
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code is available in ``docs/source/code_examples/selections`` of the Yosys
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source repository.
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.. literalinclude:: /code_examples/selections/memdemo.v
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:caption: ``memdemo.v``
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:name: memdemo_src
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:language: verilog
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The script ``memdemo.ys`` is used to generate the images included here. Let's
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look at the first section:
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.. literalinclude:: /code_examples/selections/memdemo.ys
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:caption: Synthesizing :ref:`memdemo_src`
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:name: memdemo_ys
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:language: yoscrypt
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:end-at: opt
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This loads :numref:`memdemo_src` and synthesizes the included module. Note that
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this code can be copied and run directly in a Yosys command line session,
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provided ``memdemo.v`` is in the same directory. We can now change to the
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``memdemo`` module with ``cd memdemo``, and call :cmd:ref:`show` to see the
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diagram in :numref:`memdemo_00`.
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/memdemo_00.*
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:class: width-helper
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:name: memdemo_00
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Complete circuit diagram for the design shown in :numref:`memdemo_src`
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.. TODO:: :ref:`memdemo_01` and :ref:`memdemo_02` are the same, probably change
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the example so they aren't.
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There's a lot going on there, but maybe we are only interested in the tree of
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multiplexers that select the output value. Let's start by just showing the
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output signal, ``y``, and its immediate predecessors. Remember `Selecting logic
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cones`_ from above, we can use :yoscrypt:`show y %ci2`:
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/memdemo_01.*
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:class: width-helper
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:name: memdemo_01
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Output of :yoscrypt:`show y %ci2`
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From this we would learn that ``y`` is driven by a ``$dff cell``, that ``y`` is
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connected to the output port ``Q``, that the ``clk`` signal goes into the
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``CLK`` input port of the cell, and that the data comes from a auto-generated
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wire into the input ``D`` of the flip-flop cell.
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As we are not interested in the clock signal we add an additional pattern to the
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``%ci`` action :yoscrypt:`show y %ci2:+$dff[Q,D]`, that tells it to only follow
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ports ``Q`` and ``D`` of ``$dff`` cells:
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/memdemo_02.*
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:class: width-helper
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:name: memdemo_02
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Output of :yoscrypt:`show y %ci2:+$dff[Q,D]`
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To add a pattern we add a colon followed by the pattern to the ``%ci`` action.
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The pattern itself starts with ``-`` or ``+``, indicating if it is an include or
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exclude pattern, followed by an optional comma separated list of cell types,
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followed by an optional comma separated list of port names in square brackets.
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Since we know that the only cell considered in this case is a ``$dff`` cell, we
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could as well only specify the port names, :yoscrypt:`show y %ci2:+[Q,D]`. Or we
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could decide to tell the ``%ci`` action to not follow the ``CLK`` input,
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:yoscrypt:`show y %ci2:-[CLK]`.
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Next we would investigate the next logic level by adding another ``%ci2`` to the
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command, :yoscrypt:`show y %ci2:-[CLK] %ci2`:
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/memdemo_03.*
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:class: width-helper
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:name: memdemo_03
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Output of :yoscrypt:`show y %ci2:-[CLK] %ci2`
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From this we would learn that the next cell is a ``$mux`` cell and we would add
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an additional pattern to narrow the selection on the path we are interested. In
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the end we would end up with a command such as :yoscrypt:`show y %ci2:+$dff[Q,D]
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%ci*:-$mux[S]:-$dff` in which the first ``%ci`` jumps over the initial d-type
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flip-flop and the 2nd action selects the entire input cone without going over
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multiplexer select inputs and flip-flop cells. The diagram produced by this
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command is shown in :numref:`memdemo_04`.
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/memdemo_04.*
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:class: width-helper
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:name: memdemo_04
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Output of ``show y %ci2:+$dff[Q,D] %ci*:-$mux[S]:-$dff``
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Similar to ``%ci`` exists an action ``%co`` to select output cones that accepts
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the same syntax for pattern and repetition. The ``%x`` action mentioned
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previously also accepts this advanced syntax.
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These actions for traversing the circuit graph, combined with the actions for
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boolean operations such as intersection (``%i``) and difference (``%d``) are
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powerful tools for extracting the relevant portions of the circuit under
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investigation.
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Again, see :doc:`/cmd/select` for full documentation of these expressions.
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Incremental selection
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Sometimes a selection can most easily be described by a series of add/delete
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operations. As mentioned previously, the commands :yoscrypt:`select -add` and
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:yoscrypt:`select -del` respectively add or remove objects from the current
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selection instead of overwriting it.
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.. code:: yoscrypt
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select -none # start with an empty selection
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select -add reg_* # select a bunch of objects
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select -del reg_42 # but not this one
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select -add state %ci # and add more stuff
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Within a select expression the token ``%`` can be used to push the previous selection
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on the stack.
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.. code:: yoscrypt
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select t:$add t:$sub # select all $add and $sub cells
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select % %ci % %d # select only the input wires to those cells
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Storing and recalling selections
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.. todo:: reflow for not presentation
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The current selection can be stored in memory with the command ``select -set
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<name>``. It can later be recalled using ``select @<name>``. In fact, the
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``@<name>`` expression pushes the stored selection on the stack maintained by
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the :cmd:ref:`select` command. So for example :yoscrypt:`select @foo @bar %i`
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will select the intersection between the stored selections ``foo`` and ``bar``.
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In larger investigation efforts it is highly recommended to maintain a script
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that sets up relevant selections, so they can easily be recalled, for example
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when Yosys needs to be re-run after a design or source code change.
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The :cmd:ref:`history` command can be used to list all recent interactive
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commands. This feature can be useful for creating such a script from the
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commands used in an interactive session.
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Remember that select expressions can also be used directly as arguments to most
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commands. Some commands also accept a single select argument to some options. In
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those cases selection variables must be used to capture more complex selections.
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Example:
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.. literalinclude:: /code_examples/selections/select.v
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:language: verilog
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:caption: ``docs/source/code_examples/selections/select.v``
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.. literalinclude:: /code_examples/selections/select.ys
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:language: yoscrypt
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:caption: ``docs/source/code_examples/selections/select.ys``
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:name: select_ys
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.. figure:: /_images/code_examples/selections/select.*
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:class: width-helper
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Circuit diagram produced by :numref:`select_ys`
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