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README.txt
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THE ICARUS VERILOG COMPILATION SYSTEM
Copyright 2000-2004 Stephen Williams
1.0 What is ICARUS Verilog?
Icarus Verilog is intended to compile ALL of the Verilog HDL as
described in the IEEE-1364 standard. Of course, it's not quite there
yet. It does currently handle a mix of structural and behavioral
constructs. For a view of the current state of Icarus Verilog, see its
home page at <http://iverilog.icarus.com/>.
Icarus Verilog is not aimed at being a simulator in the traditional
sense, but a compiler that generates code employed by back-end
tools.
For instructions on how to run Icarus Verilog,
see the ``iverilog'' man page.
2.0 Building/Installing Icarus Verilog From Source
If you are starting from source, the build process is designed to be
as simple as practical. Someone basically familiar with the target
system and C/C++ compilation should be able to build the source
distribution with little effort. Some actual programming skills are
not required, but helpful in case of problems.
If you are building for Windows, see the mingw.txt file.
2.1 Compile Time Prerequisites
You need the following software to compile Icarus Verilog from source
on a UNIX-like system:
- GNU Make
The Makefiles use some GNU extensions, so a basic POSIX
make will not work. Linux systems typically come with a
satisfactory make. BSD based systems (i.e., NetBSD, FreeBSD)
typically have GNU make as the gmake program.
- ISO C++ Compiler
The ivl and ivlpp programs are written in C++ and make use
of templates and some of the standard C++ library. egcs and
recent gcc compilers with the associated libstdc++ are known
to work. MSVC++ 5 and 6 are known to definitely *not* work.
- bison and flex
- gperf 2.7
The lexical analyzer doesn't recognize keywords directly,
but instead matches symbols and looks them up in a hash
table in order to get the proper lexical code. The gperf
program generates the lookup table.
A version problem with this program is the most common cause
of difficulty. See the Icarus Verilog FAQ.
- readline 4.2
On Linux systems, this usually means the readline-devel
rpm. In any case, it is the development headers of readline
that are needed.
- termcap
The readline library in turn uses termcap.
If you are building from git, you will also need software to generate
the configure scripts.
- autoconf 2.53
This generates configure scripts from configure.in. The 2.53
or later versions are known to work, autoconf 2.13 is
reported to *not* work.
2.2 Compilation
Unpack the tar-ball and cd into the verilog-######### directory
(presumably that is how you got to this README) and compile the source
with the commands:
./configure
make
Normally, this command automatically figures out everything it needs
to know. It generally works pretty well. There are a few flags to the
configure script that modify its behavior:
--prefix=<root>
The default is /usr/local, which causes the tool suite to
be compiled for install in /usr/local/bin,
/usr/local/share/ivl, etc.
I recommend that if you are configuring for precompiled
binaries, use --prefix=/usr. On Solaris systems, it is
common to use --prefix=/opt. You can configure for a non-root
install with --prefix=$HOME.
--enable-suffix
--enable-suffix=<your-suffix>
--disable-suffix
Enable/disable changing the names of install files to use
a suffix string so that this version or install can co-
exist with other versions. This renames the installed
commands (iverilog, iverilog-vpi, vvp) and the installed
library files and include directory so that installations
with the same prefix but different suffix are guaranteed
to not interfere with each other.
2.3 (Optional) Testing
To run a simple test before installation, execute
make check
The commands printed by this run might help you in running Icarus
Verilog on your own Verilog sources before the package is installed
by root.
2.4 Installation
Now install the files in an appropriate place. (The makefiles by
default install in /usr/local unless you specify a different prefix
with the --prefix=<path> flag to the configure command.) You may need
to do this as root to gain access to installation directories.
make install
2.5 Uninstallation
The generated Makefiles also include the uninstall target. This should
remove all the files that ``make install'' creates.
3.0 How Icarus Verilog Works
This tool includes a parser which reads in Verilog (plus extensions)
and generates an internal netlist. The netlist is passed to various
processing steps that transform the design to more optimal/practical
forms, then is passed to a code generator for final output. The
processing steps and the code generator are selected by command line
switches.
3.1 Preprocessing
There is a separate program, ivlpp, that does the preprocessing. This
program implements the `include and `define directives producing
output that is equivalent but without the directives. The output is a
single file with line number directives, so that the actual compiler
only sees a single input file. See ivlpp/ivlpp.txt for details.
3.2 Parse
The Verilog compiler starts by parsing the Verilog source file. The
output of the parse is a list of Module objects in "pform". The pform
(see pform.h) is mostly a direct reflection of the compilation
step. There may be dangling references, and it is not yet clear which
module is the root.
One can see a human readable version of the final pform by using the
``-P <path>'' flag to the ``ivl'' subcommand. This will cause ivl
to dump the pform into the file named <path>. (Note that this is not
normally done, unless debugging the ``ivl'' subcommand.)
3.3 Elaboration
This phase takes the pform and generates a netlist. The driver selects
(by user request or lucky guess) the root module to elaborate,
resolves references and expands the instantiations to form the design
netlist. (See netlist.txt.) Final semantic checks are performed during
elaboration, and some simple optimizations are performed. The netlist
includes all the behavioral descriptions, as well as gates and wires.
The elaborate() function performs the elaboration.
One can see a human readable version of the final, elaborated and
optimized netlist by using the ``-N <path>'' flag to the compiler. If
elaboration succeeds, the final netlist (i.e., after optimizations but
before code generation) will be dumped into the file named <path>.
Elaboration is actually performed in two steps: scopes and parameters
first, followed by the structural and behavioral elaboration.
3.3.1 Scope Elaboration
This pass scans through the pform looking for scopes and parameters. A
tree of NetScope objects is built up and placed in the Design object,
with the root module represented by the root NetScope object. The
elab_scope.cc file contains most of the code for handling this phase.
The tail of the elaborate_scope behavior (after the pform is
traversed) includes a scan of the NetScope tree to locate defparam
assignments that were collected during scope elaboration. This is when
the defparam overrides are applied to the parameters.
3.3.2 Netlist Elaboration
After the scopes and parameters are generated and the NetScope tree
fully formed, the elaboration runs through the pform again, this time
generating the structural and behavioral netlist. Parameters are
elaborated and evaluated by now so all the constants of code
generation are now known locally, so the netlist can be generated by
simply passing through the pform.
3.4 Optimization
This is actually a collection of processing steps that perform
optimizations that do not depend on the target technology. Examples of
some useful transformations are
- eliminate null effect circuitry
- combinational reduction
- constant propagation
The actual functions performed are specified on the ivl command line by
the -F flags (see below).
3.5 Code Generation
This step takes the design netlist and uses it to drive the code
generator (see target.h). This may require transforming the
design to suit the technology.
The emit() method of the Design class performs this step. It runs
through the design elements, calling target functions as need arises
to generate actual output.
The user selects the target code generator with the -t flag on the
command line.
3.6 ATTRIBUTES
NOTE: The $attribute syntax will soon be deprecated in favor of the
Verilog-2001 attribute syntax, which is cleaner and standardized.
The parser accepts, as an extension to Verilog, the $attribute module
item. The syntax of the $attribute item is:
$attribute (<identifier>, <key>, <value>);
The $attribute keyword looks like a system task invocation. The
difference here is that the parameters are more restricted than those
of a system task. The <identifier> must be an identifier. This will be
the item to get an attribute. The <key> and <value> are strings, not
expressions, that give the key and the value of the attribute to be
attached to the identified object.
Attributes are [<key> <value>] pairs and are used to communicate with
the various processing steps. See the documentation for the processing
step for a list of the pertinent attributes.
Attributes can also be applied to gate types. When this is done, the
attribute is given to every instantiation of the primitive. The syntax
for the attribute statement is the same, except that the <identifier>
names a primitive earlier in the compilation unit and the statement is
placed in global scope, instead of within a module. The semicolon is
not part of a type attribute.
Note that attributes are also occasionally used for communication
between processing steps. Processing steps that are aware of others
may place attributes on netlist objects to communicate information to
later steps.
Icarus Verilog also accepts the Verilog 2001 syntax for
attributes. They have the same general meaning as with the $attribute
syntax, but they are attached to objects by position instead of by
name. Also, the key is a Verilog identifier instead of a string.
4.0 Running iverilog
The preferred way to invoke the compiler is with the iverilog(1)
command. This program invokes the preprocessor (ivlpp) and the
compiler (ivl) with the proper command line options to get the job
done in a friendly way. See the iverilog(1) man page for usage details.
4.1 EXAMPLES
Example: Compiling "hello.vl"
------------------------ hello.vl ----------------------------
module main();
initial
begin
$display("Hi there");
$finish ;
end
endmodule
--------------------------------------------------------------
Ensure that "iverilog" is on your search path, and the vpi library
is available.
To compile the program:
iverilog hello.vl
(The above presumes that /usr/local/include and /usr/local/lib are
part of the compiler search path, which is usually the case for gcc.)
To run the program:
./a.out
You can use the "-o" switch to name the output command to be generated
by the compiler. See the iverilog(1) man page.
5.0 Unsupported Constructs
Icarus Verilog is in development - as such it still only supports a
(growing) subset of Verilog. Below is a description of some of the
currently unsupported Verilog features. This list is not exhaustive,
and does not account for errors in the compiler. See the Icarus
Verilog web page for the current state of support for Verilog, and in
particular, browse the bug report database for reported unsupported
constructs.
- System functions are supported, but the return value is a little
tricky. See SYSTEM FUNCTION TABLE FILES in the iverilog man page.
- Specify blocks are parsed but ignored in general.
- trireg is not supported. tri0 and tri1 are supported.
- tran primitives, i.e. tran, tranif1, tranif0, rtran, rtranif1
and rtranif0 are not supported.
- Net delays, of the form "wire #N foo;" do not work. Delays in
every other context do work properly, including the V2001 form
"wire #5 foo = bar;"
- Event controls inside non-blocking assignments are not supported.
i.e.: a <= @(posedge clk) b;
- Macro arguments are not supported. `define macros are supported,
but they cannot take arguments.
5.1 Nonstandard Constructs or Behaviors
Icarus Verilog includes some features that are not part of the
IEEE1364 standard, but have well defined meaning, and also sometimes
gives nonstandard (but extended) meanings to some features of the
language that are defined. See the "extensions.txt" documentation for
more details.
$is_signed(<expr>)
This system function returns 1 if the expression contained is
signed, or 0 otherwise. This is mostly of use for compiler
regression tests.
$sizeof(<expr>)
$bits(<expr>)
The $bits system function returns the size in bits of the
expression that is its argument. The result of this
function is undefined if the argument doesn't have a
self-determined size.
The $sizeof function is deprecated in favor of $bits, which is
the same thing, but included in the SystemVerilog definition.
$simtime
The $simtime system function returns as a 64bit value the
simulation time, unscaled by the time units of local
scope. This is different from the $time and $stime functions
which return the scaled times. This function is added for
regression testing of the compiler and run time, but can be
used by applications who really want the simulation time.
Note that the simulation time can be confusing if there are
lots of different `timescales within a design. It is not in
general possible to predict what the simulation precision will
turn out to be.
$mti_random()
$mti_dist_uniform
These functions are similar to the IEEE1364 standard $random
functions, but they use the Mersenne Twister (MT19937)
algorithm. This is considered an excellent random number
generator, but does not generate the same sequence as the
standardized $random.
Builtin system functions
Certain of the system functions have well defined meanings, so
can theoretically be evaluated at compile time, instead of
using runtime VPI code. Doing so means that VPI cannot
override the definitions of functions handled in this
manner. On the other hand, this makes them synthesizable, and
also allows for more aggressive constant propagation. The
functions handled in this manner are:
$bits
$signed
$sizeof
$unsigned
Implementations of these system functions in VPI modules will
be ignored.
Preprocessing Library Modules
Icarus Verilog does preprocess modules that are loaded from
libraries via the -y mechanism. However, the only macros
defined during compilation of that file are those that it
defines itself (or includes) or that are defined on the
command line or command file.
Specifically, macros defined in the non-library source files
are not remembered when the library module is loaded. This is
intentional. If it were otherwise, then compilation results
might vary depending on the order that libraries are loaded,
and that is too unpredictable.
It is said that some commercial compilers do allow macro
definitions to span library modules. That's just plain weird.
Width in %t Time Formats
Standard Verilog does not allow width fields in the %t formats
of display strings. For example, this is illegal:
$display("Time is %0t", %time);
Standard Verilog instead relies on the $timeformat to
completely specify the format.
Icarus Verilog allows the programmer to specify the field
width. The "%t" format in Icarus Verilog works exactly as it
does in standard Verilog. However, if the programmer chooses
to specify a minimum width (i.e., "%5t"), then for that display
Icarus Verilog will override the $timeformat minimum width and
use the explicit minimum width.
vpiScope iterator on vpiScope objects.
In the VPI, the normal way to iterate over vpiScope objects
contained within a vpiScope object, is the vpiInternalScope
iterator. Icarus Verilog adds support for the vpiScope
iterator of a vpiScope object, that iterates over *everything*
the is contained in the current scope. This is useful in cases
where one wants to iterate over all the objects in a scope
without iterating over all the contained types explicitly.
time 0 race resolution.
Combinational logic is routinely modeled using always
blocks. However, this can lead to race conditions if the
inputs to the combinational block are initialized in initial
statements. Icarus Verilog slightly modifies time 0 scheduling
by arranging for always statements with ANYEDGE sensitivity
lists to be scheduled before any other threads. This causes
combinational always blocks to be triggered when the values in
the sensitivity list are initialized by initial threads.
Nets with Types
Icarus Verilog support an extension syntax that allows nets
and regs to be explicitly typed. The currently supported types
are logic, bool and real. This implies that "logic" and "bool"
are new keywords. Typical syntax is:
wire real foo = 1.0;
reg logic bar, bat;
... and so forth. The syntax can be turned off by using the
-g2 flag to iverilog, and turned on explicitly with the -g2x
flag to iverilog.
6.0 CREDITS
Except where otherwise noted, Icarus Verilog, ivl and ivlpp are
Copyright Stephen Williams. The proper notices are in the head of each
file. However, I have early on received aid in the form of fixes,
Verilog guidance, and especially testing from many people. Testers in
particular include a larger community of people interested in a GPL
Verilog for Linux.