verilator/bin/verilator
2009-10-25 16:53:55 -04:00

2680 lines
97 KiB
Perl
Executable File

: # -*-Mode: perl;-*- use perl, wherever it is
eval 'exec perl -wS $0 ${1+"$@"}'
if 0;
######################################################################
#
# Copyright 2003-2009 by Wilson Snyder. This program is free software; you
# can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either the GNU
# Lesser General Public License Version 3 or the Perl Artistic License
# Version 2.0.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
######################################################################
require 5.006_001;
use warnings;
BEGIN {
if ($ENV{DIRPROJECT} && $ENV{DIRPROJECT_PERL_BOOT}) {
# Magic to allow author testing of perl packages in local directory
require $ENV{DIRPROJECT}."/".$ENV{DIRPROJECT_PERL_BOOT};
}
}
use File::Path;
use File::Basename;
use Getopt::Long;
use FindBin qw($RealBin $RealScript);
use IO::File;
use Pod::Usage;
use Config;
use Cwd qw(abs_path getcwd);
use strict;
use vars qw ($Debug @Opt_Verilator_Sw);
#######################################################################
#######################################################################
# main
autoflush STDOUT 1;
autoflush STDERR 1;
$Debug = 0;
my $opt_gdb;
my $opt_gdbbt;
# No arguments can't do anything useful. Give help
if ($#ARGV < 0) {
pod2usage(-exitstatus=>2, -verbose=>0);
}
# Insert debugging options up front
push @ARGV, (split ' ',$ENV{VERILATOR_TEST_FLAGS}||"");
# We sneak a look at the flags so we can do some pre-environment checks
# All flags will hit verilator...
@Opt_Verilator_Sw = @ARGV;
Getopt::Long::config ("no_auto_abbrev","pass_through");
if (! GetOptions (
# Major operating modes
"help" => \&usage,
"debug:s" => \&debug,
# "version!" => \&version, # Also passthru'ed
# Switches
"gdb=s" => \$opt_gdb, # Undocumented debugging
"gdbbt!" => \$opt_gdbbt, # Undocumented debugging
# Additional parameters
"<>" => sub {}, # Ignored
)) {
pod2usage(-exitstatus=>2, -verbose=>0);
}
# Determine runtime flags and run
if ($opt_gdbbt && !$opt_gdb && $Debug) {
# Run under GDB to get gdbbt
run ("gdb ".verilator_bin()
." --batch --quiet"
." -ex 'run ".join(' ',@Opt_Verilator_Sw)."'"
." -ex 'set width 0'"
." -ex 'bt'"
." -ex 'c'");
die "%Error: --gdbbt looses the exit status; so must assume run went badly...";
} else {
# Normal, non gdb
run (($opt_gdb?"$opt_gdb ":"")
.verilator_bin()
." ".join(' ',@Opt_Verilator_Sw));
}
#----------------------------------------------------------------------
sub usage {
pod2usage(-exitstatus=>2, -verbose=>2);
}
sub debug {
shift;
my $level = shift;
$Debug = $level||3;
}
#######################################################################
#######################################################################
# Builds
sub verilator_bin {
my $bin = "";
# Use VERILATOR_ROOT if defined, else assume verilator_bin is in the search path
$bin .= $ENV{VERILATOR_ROOT}."/" if defined($ENV{VERILATOR_ROOT});
$bin .= ($ENV{VERILATOR_BIN}
|| ($Debug ? "verilator_bin_dbg" : "verilator_bin"));
return $bin;
}
#######################################################################
#######################################################################
# Utilities
sub run {
# Run command, check errors
my $command = shift;
print "\t$command\n" if $Debug>=3;
system($command);
my $status = $?;
if ($status) {
if ($! =~ /no such file or directory/i) {
warn "%Error: verilator: Misinstalled, or VERILATOR_ROOT might need to be in environment\n";
}
if ($Debug) { # For easy rerunning
warn "%Error: export VERILATOR_ROOT=".($ENV{VERILATOR_ROOT}||"")."\n";
warn "%Error: $command\n";
}
die "%Error: Command Failed $command\n";
}
}
#######################################################################
#######################################################################
package main;
__END__
=pod
=head1 NAME
Verilator - Convert Verilog code to C++/SystemC
=head1 SYNOPSIS
verilator --help
verilator --version
verilator --cc [options] [top_level.v] [opt_c_files.cpp/c/cc]
verilator --sc [options] [top_level.v] [opt_c_files.cpp/c/cc]
verilator --sp [options] [top_level.v] [opt_c_files.cpp/c/cc]
verilator --lint-only ...
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Verilator converts synthesizable (not behavioral) Verilog code, plus some
Synthesis, SystemVerilog and Sugar/PSL assertions, into C++, SystemC or
SystemPerl code. It is not a complete simulator, just a compiler.
Verilator is invoked with parameters similar to GCC, Cadence
Verilog-XL/NC-Verilog, or Synopsys's VCS. It reads the specified Verilog
code, lints it, and optionally adds coverage and waveform tracing code.
For C++ and SystemC formats, it outputs .cpp and .h files. For SystemPerl
format, it outputs .sp files for the SystemPerl preprocessor, which greatly
simplifies writing SystemC code and is available at
L<http://www.veripool.org>.
The files created by Verilator are then compiled with C++. The user writes
a little C++ wrapper file, which instantiates the top level module, and
passes this filename on the command line. These C files are compiled in
C++, and linked with the Verilated files.
The resulting executable will perform the actual simulation.
=head1 ARGUMENT SUMMARY
This is a short summary of the arguments to Verilator. See the detailed
descriptions in the next sections for more information.
{file.v} Verilog top level filenames
{file.c/cc/cpp} Optional C++ files to link in
--assert Enable all assertions
--autoflush Flush streams after all $displays
--bbox-sys Blackbox unknown $system calls
--bin <filename> Override Verilator binary
--cc Create C++ output
--compiler <compiler-name> Tune for specified C++ compiler
--coverage Enable all coverage
--coverage-line Enable line coverage
--coverage-toggle Enable toggle coverage
--coverage-user Enable PSL/SVL user coverage
-D<var>[=<value>] Set preprocessor define
--debug Enable debugging
--debug-check Enable debugging assertions
--debugi <level> Enable debugging at a specified level
--debugi-<srcfile> <level> Enable debugging a source file at a level
--dump-tree Enable dumping .tree files
-E Preprocess, but do not compile
--error-limit <value> Abort after this number of errors
--exe Link to create executable
-f <file> Parse options from a file
--help Display this help.
-I<dir> Directory to search for includes
--inhibit-sim Create function to turn off sim
--inline-mult <value> Tune module inlining
--language <lang> Language standard to parse
--lint-only Lint, but do not make output
--MMD Create .d dependency files
--MP Create phony dependency targets
--Mdir <directory> Name of output object directory
--mod-prefix <topname> Name to prepend to lower classes
--no-pins64 Don't use uint64_t's for 33-64 bit sigs
--no-skip-identical Disable skipping identical output
-O0 Disable optimizations
-O3 High performance optimizations
-O<optimization-letter> Selectable optimizations
--output-split <bytes> Split .cpp files into pieces
--output-split-cfuncs <statements> Split .ccp functions
--pins-bv <bits> Specify types for top level ports
--pins-uint8 Specify types for top level ports
--prefix <topname> Name of top level class
--profile-cfuncs Name functions for profiling
--private Debugging; see docs
--psl Enable PSL parsing
--public Debugging; see docs
--sc Create SystemC output
--sp Create SystemPerl output
--stats Create statistics file
--top-module <topname> Name of top level input module
--trace Enable waveform creation
--trace-depth <levels> Depth of tracing
-U<var> Undefine preprocessor define
--underline-zero Zero signals with leading _'s
--unroll-count <loops> Tune maximum loop iterations
--unroll-stmts <stmts> Tune maximum loop body size
-V Verbose version and config
-v <filename> Verilog library
-Werror-<message> Convert warning to error
-Wfuture-<message> Disable unknown message warnings
-Wno-<message> Disable warning
-Wno-lint Disable all lint warnings
-x-assign <mode> Initially assign Xs to this value
-y <dir> Directory to search for modules
+define+<var>+<value> Set preprocessor define
+incdir+<dir> Directory to search for includes
+libext+<ext>+[ext]... Extensions for finding modules
=head1 ARGUMENTS
=over 4
=item {file.v}
Specifies the Verilog file containing the top module to be Verilated.
=item {file.c/.cc/.cpp/.cxx}
Specifies optional C++ files to be linked in with the Verilog code. If any
C++ files are specified in this way, Verilator will include a make rule
that generates a I<module> executable. Without any C++ files, Verilator
will stop at the I<module>__ALL.a library, and presume you'll continue
linking with make rules you write yourself.
=item --assert
Enable all assertions, includes enabling the --psl flag. (If psl is not
desired, but other assertions are, use --assert --nopsl.)
See also --x-assign; setting "--x-assign unique" may be desirable.
=item --autoflush
After every $display or $fdisplay, flush the output stream. This insures
that messages will appear immediately but may reduce performance. Defaults
off, which will buffer output as provided by the normal C stdio calls.
=item --bbox-sys
Black box any unknown $system task or function calls. System tasks will be
simply NOPed, and system functions will be replaced by unsized zero.
Arguments to such functions will be parsed, but not otherwise checked.
This prevents errors when linting in the presence of company specific PLI
calls.
=item --bin I<filename>
Rarely needed. Override the default filename for Verilator itself. When a
dependency (.d) file is created, this filename will become a source
dependency, such that a change in this binary will have make rebuild the
output files.
=item --cc
Specifies C++ without SystemC output mode; see also --sc and --sp.
=item --compiler I<compiler-name>
Enables tunings and work-arounds for the specified C++ compiler.
=over 4
=item gcc
Tune for Gnu C++, although generated code should work on almost any
compliant C++ compiler. Currently the default.
=item msvc
Tune for Microsoft Visual C++. This may reduce execution speed as it
enables several workarounds to avoid silly hardcoded limits in MSVC++.
This includes breaking deeply nested parenthesized expressions into
sub-expressions to avoid error C1009, and breaking deep blocks into
functions to avoid error C1061.
=back
=item --coverage
Enables all forms of coverage, alias for "--coverage-line --coverage-toggle
--coverage-user".
=item --coverage-line
Specifies basic block line coverage analysis code should be inserted.
Coverage analysis adds statements at each code flow change point, which are
the branches of IF and CASE statements, a super-set of normal Verilog Line
Coverage. At each such branch a unique counter is incremented. At the end
of a test, the counters along with the filename and line number
corresponding to each counter are written into logs/coverage.pl.
Verilator automatically disables coverage of branches that have a $stop in
them, as it is assumed $stop branches contain an error check that should
not occur. A /*verilator coverage_block_off*/ comment will perform a
similar function on any code in that block or below, or /*verilator
coverage_on/coverage_off*/ will disable coverage around lines of code.
Note Verilator may over-count combinatorial (non-clocked) blocks when those
blocks receive signals which have had the UNOPTFLAT warning disabled; for
most accurate results do not disable this warning when using coverage.
=item --coverage-toggle
Specifies signal toggle coverage analysis code should be inserted.
Every bit of every signal in a module has a counter inserted. The counter
will increment on every edge change of the corresponding bit.
Signals that are part of tasks or begin/end blocks are considered local
variables and are not covered. Signals that begin with underscores, are
integers, or are very wide (>256 bits total storage across all dimensions)
are also not covered.
Hierarchy is compressed, such that if a module is instantiated multiple
times, coverage will be summed for that bit across ALL instantiations of
that module with the same parameter set. A module instantiated with
different parameter values is considered a different module, and will get
counted separately.
Verilator makes a minimally-intelligent decision about what clock domain
the signal goes to, and only looks for edges in that clock domain. This
means that edges may be ignored if it is known that the edge could never be
seen by the receiving logic. This algorithm may improve in the future.
The net result is coverage may be lower than what would be seen by looking
at traces, but the coverage is a more accurate representation of the
quality of stimulus into the design.
There may be edges counted near time zero while the model stabilizes. It's
a good practice to zero all coverage just before releasing reset to prevent
counting such behavior.
A /*verilator coverage_off/on */ comment pair can be used around signals
that do not need toggle analysis, such as RAMs and register files.
=item --coverage-user
Enables user inserted functional coverage. Currently, all functional
coverage points are specified using PSL which must be separately enabled
with --psl.
For example, the following PSL statement will add a coverage point, with
the comment "DefaultClock":
// psl default clock = posedge clk;
// psl cover {cyc==9} report "DefaultClock,expect=1";
=item --debug
Select the debug built image of Verilator (if available), and enable more
internal assertions, debugging messages, and intermediate form dump files.
=item --debug-check
Rarely needed. Enable internal debugging assertion checks, without
changing debug verbosity. Enabled automatically when --debug specified.
=item --debugi <level>
=item --debugi-<srcfile> <level>
Rarely needed - for developer use. Set internal debugging level globally
or on the specified source file to the specified level.
=item --dump-tree
Rarely needed. Enable writing .tree debug files. This is enabled with
--debug, so "--debug --no-dump-tree" may be useful if the dump files are
large and not desired.
=item -E
Preprocess the source code, but do not compile, as with 'gcc -E'. Output
is written to standard out. Beware of enabling debugging messages, as they
will also go to standard out.
=item --error-limit <value>
After this number of errors or warnings are encountered, exit. Defaults to
50.
=item --exe
Generate a executable. You will also need to pass additional .cpp files on
the command line that implement the main loop for your simulation.
=item --help
Displays this message and program version and exits.
=item --inhibit-sim
Rarely needed. Create a "inhibitSim(bool)" function to enable and disable
evaluation. This allows a upper level testbench to disable modules that
are not important in a given simulation, without needing to recompile or
change the SystemC modules instantiated.
=item --inline-mult I<value>
Tune the inlining of modules. The default value of 2000 specifies that up
to 2000 new operations may be added to the model by inlining, if more than
this number of operations would result, the module is not inlined. Larger
values, or a value <= 1 will inline everything, will lead to longer compile
times, but potentially faster runtimes. This setting is ignored for very
small modules; they will always be inlined, if allowed.
=item --language I<value>
Select the language to be used when first processing each Verilog file.
The language value must be "1364-1995", "1364-2001", "1364-2001",
"1364-2005", or "1800-2005". This should only be used for legacy code, as
the preferable option is to edit the code to repair new keywords, or add
appropriate `begin_keywords.
=item --lint-only
Check the files for lint violations only, do not create any other output.
If the design is not to be completely Verilated see also the --bbox-sys
option.
=item --MMD
Enable creation of .d dependency files, used for make dependency detection,
similar to gcc -MMD option. On by default, use --no-MMD to disable.
=item --MP
When creating .d dependency files with --MMD, make phony targets. Similar
to gcc -MP option.
=item --Mdir I<directory>
Specifies the name of the Make object directory. All generated files will
be placed in this directory. If not specified, "obj_dir" is used.
=item --mod-prefix I<topname>
Specifies the name to prepend to all lower level classes. Defaults to
the same as --prefix.
=item --no-pins64
Backward compatible alias for "--pins-bv 33".
=item --no-skip-identical
Rarely needed. Disables skipping execution of Verilator if all source
files are identical, and all output files exist with newer dates.
=item -O0
Disables optimization of the model.
=item -O3
Enables slow optimizations. This may reduce simulation runtimes at the
cost of compile time. This currently sets --inline-mult -1.
=item -OI<optimization-letter>
Rarely needed. Enables or disables a specific optimizations, with the
optimization selected based on the letter passed. A lowercase letter
disables an optimization, an upper case letter enables it. This is
intended for debugging use only; see the source code for version-dependent
mappings of optimizations to -O letters.
=item --output-split I<bytes>
Enables splitting the output .cpp/.sp files into multiple outputs. When a
C++ file exceeds the specified number of operations, a new file will be
created at the next function boundary. In addition, any slow routines will
be placed into __Slow files. This accelerates compilation by as
optimization can be disabled on the slow routines, and the remaining files
can be compiled on parallel machines. Using --output-split should have
only a trivial impact on performance. With GCC 3.3 on a 2GHz Opteron,
--output-split 20000 will result in splitting into approximately
one-minute-compile chunks.
=item --output-split-cfuncs I<statements>
Enables splitting functions in the output .cpp/.sp files into multiple
functions. When a generated function exceeds the specified number of
operations, a new function will be created. With --output-split, this will
enable GCC to compile faster, at a small loss in performance that gets
worse with decreasing split values. Note that this option is stronger than
--output-split in the sense that --output-split will not split inside a
function.
=item --pins64
Backward compatible alias for "--pins-bv 65". Note that's a 65, not a 64.
=item --pins-bv I<width>
Specifies SystemC inputs/outputs of greater than or equal to I<width> bits
wide should use sc_bv's instead of uint32/uint64_t's. The default is
"--pins-bv 65". Versions before Verilator 3.671 defaulted to "--pins-bv
33". The more sc_bv is used, the worse for performance.
=item --pins-uint8
Specifies SystemC inputs/outputs that are smaller than the --pins-bv
setting and 8 bits or less should use uint8_t instead of uint32_t.
Likewise pins of width 9-16 will use uint16_t instead of uint32_t.
=item --prefix I<topname>
Specifies the name of the top level class and makefile. Defaults to V
prepended to the name of the --top-module switch, or V prepended to the
first Verilog filename passed on the command line.
=item --profile-cfuncs
Modify the created C++ functions to support profiling. The functions will
be minimized to contain one "basic" statement, generally a single always
block or wire statement. (Note this will slow down the executable by ~5%.)
Furthermore, the function name will be suffixed with the basename of the
Verilog module and line number the statement came from. This allows gprof
or oprofile reports to be correlated with the original Verilog source
statements.
=item --private
Opposite of --public. Is the default; this option exists for backwards
compatibility.
=item --psl
Enable PSL parsing. Without this switch, PSL meta-comments are ignored.
See the --assert flag to enable all assertions, and --coverage-user to
enable functional coverage.
=item --public
This is only for historical debug use. Using it may result in
mis-simulation of generated clocks.
Declares all signals and modules public. This will turn off signal
optimizations as if all signals had a /*verilator public*/ comments and
inlining. This will also turn off inlining as if all modules had a
/*verilator public_module*/, unless the module specifically enabled it with
/*verilator inline_module*/.
=item --sc
Specifies SystemC output mode; see also --cc and -sp.
=item --sp
Specifies SystemPerl output mode; see also --cc and -sc.
=item --stats
Creates a dump file with statistics on the design in {prefix}__stats.txt.
=item --top-module I<topname>
When the input Verilog contains more than one top level module, specifies
the name of the top level Verilog module to become the top, and sets the
default for if --prefix is not used. This is not needed with standard
designs with only one top.
=item --trace
Adds waveform tracing code to the model. Verilator will generate
additional {prefix}__Trace*.cpp files that will need to be compiled. In
addition Sp.cpp (for SystemC traces) or SpTraceVcdC.c (for C++ only) from
the SystemPerl kit's src directory must be compiled and linked in. If
using the Verilator generated Makefiles, these will be added as source
targets for you. If you're not using the Verilator makefiles, you will
need to add these to your Makefile manually.
Having tracing compiled in may result in some small performance losses,
even when waveforms are not turned on during model execution.
=item --trace-depth I<levels>
Specify the number of levels deep to enable tracing, for example
--trace-level 1 to only see the top level's signals. Defaults to the
entire model. Using a small number will decrease visibility, but greatly
improve runtime and trace file size.
=item --underline-zero
Rarely needed. Signals starting with a underline should be initialized to
zero, as was done in Verilator 2. Default is for all signals including
those with underlines being randomized. This option may be depreciated in
future versions.
=item --unroll-count I<loops>
Rarely needed. Specifies the maximum number of loop iterations that may be
unrolled. See also BLKLOOPINIT warning.
=item --unroll-stmts I<statements>
Rarely needed. Specifies the maximum number of statements in a loop for
that loop to be unrolled. See also BLKLOOPINIT warning.
=item -Werror-I<message>
Convert the specified warning message into a error message. This is
generally to discourage users from violating important site-wide rules, for
example C<-Werror-NOUNOPTFLAT>.
=item -Wfuture-I<message>
Suppress unknown Verilator comments or warning messages with the given
message code. This is used to allow code written with pragmas for a later
version of Verilator to run under a older version; add -Wfuture- arguments
for each message code or comment that the new version supports which the
older version does not support.
=item -Wno-I<message>
Disable the specified warning message.
=item -Wno-lint
Disable all lint related warning messages. This is equivalent to
"-Wno-CASEINCOMPLETE -Wno-CASEOVERLAP -Wno-CASEX -Wno-CASEWITHX
-Wno-CMPCONST -Wno-IMPLICIT -Wno-LITENDIAN -Wno-UNDRIVEN -Wno-UNSIGNED
-Wno-UNUSED -Wno-VARHIDDEN -Wno-WIDTH".
It is strongly recommended you cleanup your code rather than using this
option, it is only intended to be use when running test-cases of code
received from third parties.
=item -Wwarn-I<message>
Enables the specified warning message.
=item -x-assign 0
=item -x-assign 1
=item -x-assign fast (default)
=item -x-assign unique
Controls the two-state value that is replaced when an assignment to X is
encountered. -x-assign=fast, the default, converts all Xs to whatever is
best for performance. -x-assign=0 converts all Xs to 0s, and is also fast.
-x-assign=1 converts all Xs to 1s, this is nearly as fast as 0, but more
likely to find reset bugs as active high logic will fire. -x-assign=unique
will call a function to determine the value, this allows randomization of
all Xs to find reset bugs and is the slowest, but safest for finding reset
bugs in code.
If using -x-assign unique, you may want to seed your random number
generator such that each regression run gets a different randomization
sequence. Use the system's srand48() or for Windows srand() function to do
this. You'll probably also want to print any seeds selected, and code to
enable rerunning with that same seed so you can reproduce bugs.
=back
=head1 VERILOG ARGUMENTS
The following arguments are compatible with GCC, VCS and most Verilog
programs.
=over 4
=item +define+I<var>+I<value>
=item -DI<var>=I<value>
Defines the given preprocessor symbol.
=item -f I<file>
Read the specified file, and act as if all text inside it was
specified as command line parameters.
=item +incdir+I<dir>
=item -II<dir>
=item -y I<dir>
Add the directory to the list of directories that should be searched
for include directories or libraries.
=item +libext+I<ext>+I<ext>...
Specify the extensions that should be used for finding modules. If for
example module I<x> is referenced, look in I<x>.I<ext>.
=item -UI<var>
Undefines the given preprocessor symbol.
=item -V
Shows the verbose version, including configuration information compiled
into Verilator. (Similar to perl -V.)
=item -v I<filename>
Read the filename as a Verilog library. Any modules in the file may be
used to resolve cell instantiations in the top level module, else ignored.
=back
=head1 EXAMPLE C++ EXECUTION
We'll compile this example into C++.
mkdir test_our
cd test_our
cat <<EOF >our.v
module our;
initial begin \$display("Hello World"); \$finish; end
endmodule
EOF
cat <<EOF >sim_main.cpp
#include "Vour.h"
#include "verilated.h"
int main(int argc, char **argv, char **env) {
Vour* top = new Vour;
while (!Verilated::gotFinish()) { top->eval(); }
exit(0);
}
EOF
Now we run Verilator on our little example.
export VERILATOR_ROOT=/path/to/where/verilator/was/installed
$VERILATOR_ROOT/bin/verilator --cc our.v --exe sim_main.cpp
We can see the source code under the "obj_dir" directory. See the FILES
section below for descriptions of some of the files that were created.
ls -l obj_dir
We then can compile it
cd obj_dir
make -f Vour.mk Vour
(Verilator included a default compile rule and link rule, since we used
--exe and passed a .cpp file on the Verilator command line. You can also
write your own compile rules, as we'll show in the SYSTEMC section.)
And now we run it
cd ..
obj_dir/Vour
And we get as output
Hello World
- our.v:2: Verilog $finish
Really, you're better off writing a Makefile to do all this for you. Then,
when your source changes it will automatically run all of these steps. See
the test_c directory in the distribution for an example.
=head1 EXAMPLE SYSTEMC EXECUTION
This is an example similar to the above, but using SystemPerl.
mkdir test_our_sc
cd test_our_sc
cat <<EOF >our.v
module our (clk);
input clk; // Clock is required to get initial activation
always @ (posedge clk)
begin \$display("Hello World"); \$finish; end
endmodule
EOF
cat <<EOF >sc_main.cpp
#include "Vour.h"
int sc_main(int argc, char **argv) {
sc_clock clk ("clk",10, 0.5, 3, true);
Vour* top;
top = new Vour("top"); // SP_CELL (top, Vour);
top->clk(clk); // SP_PIN (top, clk, clk);
while (!Verilated::gotFinish()) { sc_start(1, SC_NS); }
exit(0);
}
EOF
Now we run Verilator on our little example.
export VERILATOR_ROOT=/path/to/where/verilator/was/installed
$VERILATOR_ROOT/bin/verilator --sp our.v
Then we convert the SystemPerl output to SystemC.
cd obj_dir
export SYSTEMPERL=/path/to/where/systemperl/kit/came/from
$SYSTEMPERL/sp_preproc --preproc *.sp
(You can also skip the above sp_preproc by getting pure SystemC from
Verilator by replacing the verilator --sp flag in the previous step with
-sc.)
We then can compile it
make -f Vour.mk Vour__ALL.a
make -f Vour.mk ../sc_main.o
make -f Vour.mk verilated.o
And link with SystemC. Note your path to the libraries may vary,
depending on the operating system.
export SYSTEMC=/path/to/where/systemc/was/built/or/installed
g++ -L$SYSTEMC/lib-linux ../sc_main.o Vour__ALL*.o verilated.o \
-o Vour -lsystemc
And now we run it
cd ..
obj_dir/Vour
And we get the same output as the C++ example:
Hello World
- our.v:2: Verilog $finish
Really, you're better off using a Makefile to do all this for you. Then,
when your source changes it will automatically run all of these steps. See
the test_sp directory in the distribution for an example.
=head1 CADENCE NC-SYSTEMC EXECUTION
Similar to compiling Verilated designs with gcc, Verilated designs may be
compiled inside other simulators that support SystemC models. One such
simulator is Cadence's NC-SystemC, part of their Incisive Verification
Suite. (Highly recommended.)
Using the example files above, the following command will build the model
underneath NC:
cd obj_dir
ncsc_run \
sc_main.cpp \
Vour__ALLcls.cpp \
Vour__ALLsup.cpp \
verilated.cpp
For larger designs you'll want to automate this using makefiles, which pull
the names of the .cpp files to compile in from the make variables generated
in obj_dir/Vour_classes.mk.
=head1 BENCHMARKING & OPTIMIZATION
For best performance, run Verilator with the "-O3 -x-assign=fast
--noassert" flags. The -O3 flag will require longer compile times, and
-x-assign=fast may increase the risk of reset bugs in trade for
performance; see the above documentation for these flags.
Minor Verilog code changes can also give big wins. You should not have any
UNOPTFLAT warnings from Verilator. Fixing these warnings can result in
huge improvements; one user fixed their one UNOPTFLAT warning by making a
simple change to a clock latch used to gate clocks and gained a 60%
performance improvement.
Beyond that, the performance of a Verilated model depends mostly on your
C++ compiler and size of your CPU's caches.
By default, the lib/verilated.mk file has optimization turned off. This is
for the benefit of new users, as it improves compile times at the cost of
runtimes. To add optimization as the default, set one of three variables,
OPT, OPT_FAST, or OPT_SLOW in lib/verilated.mk. Or, just for one run, pass
them on the command line to make:
make OPT_FAST="-O2" -f Vour.mk Vour__ALL.a
OPT_FAST specifies optimizations for those programs that are part of the
fast path, mostly code that is executed every cycle. OPT_SLOW specifies
optimizations for slow-path files (plus tracing), which execute only
rarely, yet take a long time to compile with optimization on. OPT
specifies overall optimization and affects all compiles, including those
OPT_FAST and OPT_SLOW affect. For best results, use OPT="-O2", and link
with "-static". Nearly the same results can be had with much better
compile times with OPT_FAST="-O1 -fstrict-aliasing".
Unfortunately, using the optimizer with SystemC files can result in
compiles taking several minutes. (The SystemC libraries have many little
inlined functions that drive the compiler nuts.)
For best results, use GCC 3.3 or newer. GCC 3.2 and earlier have
optimization bugs around pointer aliasing detection, which can result in 2x
performance losses.
If you will be running many simulations on a single compile, investigate
feedback driven compilation. With GCC, using -fprofile-arcs, then
-fbranch-probabilities will yield another 15% or so.
You may uncover further tuning possibilities by profiling the Verilog code.
Use Verilator's --profile-cfuncs, then GCC's -g -pg. You can then run
either oprofile or gprof to see where in the C++ code the time is spent.
Run the gprof output through verilator_profcfunc and it will tell you what
Verilog line numbers on which most of the time is being spent.
When done, please let the author know the results. I like to keep tabs on
how Verilator compares, and may be able to suggest additional improvements.
=head1 FILES
All output files are placed in the output directory name specified with the
-Mdir option, or "obj_dir" if not specified.
Verilator creates the following files in the output directory:
{prefix}.mk // Make include file for compiling
{prefix}_classes.mk // Make include file with class names
For -cc and -sc mode, it also creates:
{prefix}.cpp // Top level C++ file
{prefix}.h // Top level header
{prefix}{each_verilog_module}.cpp // Lower level internal C++ files
{prefix}{each_verilog_module}.h // Lower level internal header files
For -sp mode, instead of .cpp and .h it creates:
{prefix}.sp // Top level SystemC file
{prefix}{each_verilog_module}.sp // Lower level internal SC files
In certain optimization modes, it also creates:
{prefix}__Inlines.h // Inline support functions
{prefix}__Slow.cpp // Constructors and infrequent routines
{prefix}__Syms.cpp // Global symbol table C++
{prefix}__Syms.h // Global symbol table header
{prefix}__Trace.cpp // Wave file generation code (--trace)
{prefix}__stats.txt // Statistics (--stats)
It also creates internal files that can be mostly ignored:
{each_verilog_module}.vpp // Post-processed verilog (--debug)
{prefix}.flags_vbin // Verilator dependencies
{prefix}.flags_vpp // Pre-processor dependencies
{prefix}{misc}.d // Make dependencies (-MMD)
{prefix}{misc}.dot // Debugging graph files (--debug)
{prefix}{misc}.tree // Debugging files (--debug)
After running Make, the C++ compiler should produce the following:
{prefix} // Final executable (w/--exe argument)
{prefix}__ALL.a // Library of all Verilated objects
{prefix}{misc}.o // Intermediate objects
=head1 ENVIRONMENT
=over 4
=item SYSTEMC
Required for SystemC output mode. If set, specifies the directory
containing the SystemC distribution. This is used to find the SystemC
include files. If not specified, it will come from a default optionally
specified at configure time (before Verilator was compiled).
=item SYSTEMC_ARCH
Specifies the architecture name used by the SystemC kit. This is the part
after the dash in the lib-{...} directory name created by a 'make' in the
SystemC distribution. If not set, Verilator will try to intuit the proper
setting, or use the default optionally specified at configure time (before
Verilator was compiled). .
=item SYSTEMC_CXX_FLAGS
Specifies additional flags that are required to be passed to GCC when
building the SystemC model.
=item SYSTEMPERL
Specifies the directory containing the SystemPerl distribution kit. This
is used to find the SystemPerl library and include files. If not
specified, it will come from a default optionally specified at configure
time (before Verilator was compiled). See also SYSTEMPERL_INCLUDE.
=item SYSTEMPERL_INCLUDE
Specifies the directory containing the Verilog-Perl include .cpp files,
from the src/ directory of the SystemPerl kit. If not specified, it will
be computed from the SYSTEMPERL environment variable if it is set, and if
SYSTEMPERL is not set SYSTEMPERL_INCLUDE will come from a default
optionally specified at configure time (before Verilator was compiled).
=item VCS_HOME
If set, specifies the directory containing the Synopsys VCS distribution.
When set, a 'make test' in the Verilator distribution will also run VCS
baseline regression tests.
=item VERILATOR_BIN
If set, specifies an alternative name of the Verilator binary. May be used
for debugging and selecting between multiple operating system builds.
=item VERILATOR_ROOT
Specifies the directory containing the distribution kit. This is used to
find the executable, Perl library, and include files. If not specified, it
will come from a default optionally specified at configure time (before
Verilator was compiled).
=back
=head1 CONNECTING TO C++
Verilator creates a .h and .cpp file for the top level module and all
modules under it. See the test_c directory in the kit for an example.
After the modules are completed, there will be a I<module>.mk file that may
be used with Make to produce a I<module>__ALL.a file with all required
objects in it. This is then linked with the user's top level to create the
simulation executable.
The user must write the top level of the simulation. Here's a simple
example:
#include <verilated.h> // Defines common routines
#include "Vtop.h" // From Verilating "top.v"
Vtop *top; // Instantiation of module
unsigned int main_time = 0; // Current simulation time
double sc_time_stamp () { // Called by $time in Verilog
return main_time;
}
int main() {
top = new Vtop; // Create instance
top->reset_l = 0; // Set some inputs
while (!Verilated::gotFinish()) {
if (main_time > 10) {
top->reset_l = 1; // Deassert reset
}
if ((main_time % 10) == 1) {
top->clk = 1; // Toggle clock
}
if ((main_time % 10) == 6) {
top->clk = 0;
}
top->eval(); // Evaluate model
cout << top->out << endl; // Read a output
main_time++; // Time passes...
}
top->final(); // Done simulating
// // (Though this example doesn't get here)
}
Note signals are read and written as member variables of the lower module.
You call the eval() method to evaluate the model. When the simulation is
complete call the final() method to wrap up any SystemVerilog final blocks,
and complete any assertions.
=head1 CONNECTING TO SYSTEMC
Verilator will convert the top level module to a SC_MODULE. This module
will plug directly into a SystemC netlist.
The SC_MODULE gets the same pinout as the Verilog module, with the
following type conversions: Pins of a single bit become bool. Pins 2-32
bits wide become uint32_t's. Pins 33-64 bits wide become sc_bv's or
uint64_t's depending on the --no-pins64 switch. Wider pins become sc_bv's.
(Uints simulate the fastest so are used where possible.)
Lower modules are not pure SystemC code. This is a feature, as using the
SystemC pin interconnect scheme everywhere would reduce performance by an
order of magnitude.
=head1 CROSS COMPILATION
Verilator supports cross-compiling Verilated code. This is generally used
to run Verilator on a Linux system and produce C++ code that is then compiled
on Windows.
Cross compilation involves up to three different OSes. The build system is
where you configured and compiled Verilator, the host system where you run
Verilator, and the target system where you compile the Verilated code and
run the simulation.
Currently, Verilator requires the build and host system type to be the
same, though the target system type may be different. To support this,
./configure and make Verilator on the build system. Then, run Verilator on
the host system. Finally, the output of Verilator may be compiled on the
different target system.
To support this, none of the files that Verilator produces will reference
any configure generated build-system specific files, such as config.h
(which is renamed in Verilator to config_build.h to reduce confusion.) The
disadvantage of this approach is that include/verilatedos.h must
self-detect the requirements of the target system, rather than using
configure.
The target system may also require edits to the Makefiles, the simple
Makefiles produced by Verilator presume the target system is the same type
as the build system.
=head1 VERILOG 2001 (IEEE 1364-2001) SUPPORT
Verilator supports almost all Verilog 2001 language features. This
includes signed numbers, "always @*", comma separated sensitivity lists,
generate statements, multidimensional arrays, localparam, and C-style
declarations inside port lists.
=head1 VERILOG 2005 (IEEE 1364-2005) SUPPORT
Verilator supports the `begin_keywords and `end_keywords compiler
directives.
Verilator supports $clog2.
Verilator partially supports the uwire keyword.
=head1 SYSTEMVERILOG (IEEE 1800-2005) SUPPORT
Verilator currently has very minimal support for SystemVerilog. As
SystemVerilog features enter common usage they will be added. Contact the
author if a feature you need is missing.
Verilator implements the full SystemVerilog 1800-2005 preprocessor,
including function call-like preprocessor defines.
Verilator supports ==? and !=? operators, $bits, $countones, $error,
$fatal, $info, $isunknown, $onehot, $onehot0, $warning, always_comb,
always_ff, always_latch, do-while, final, logic, priority case/if, and
unique case/if.
It also supports .name and .* interconnection.
Verilator partially supports concurrent assert and cover statements; see
the enclosed coverage tests for the syntax which is allowed.
=head1 SUGAR/PSL SUPPORT
Most future work is being directed towards improving SystemVerilog
assertions instead of PSL. If you are using these PSL features, please
contact the author as they may be depreciated in future versions.
With the --assert switch, Verilator enables support of the Property
Specification Language (PSL), specifically the simple PSL subset without
time-branching primitives. Verilator currently only converts PSL
assertions to simple "if (...) error" statements, and coverage statements
to increment the line counters described in the coverage section.
Verilator implements these keywords: assert, assume (same as assert),
default (for clocking), countones, cover, isunknown, onehot, onehot0,
report, true.
Verilator implements these operators: -> (logical if).
Verilator does not support SEREs yet. All assertion and coverage
statements must be simple expressions that complete in one cycle. PSL
vmode/vprop/vunits are not supported. PSL statements must be in the module
they reference, at the module level where you would put an
initial... statement.
Verilator only supports (posedge CLK) or (negedge CLK), where CLK is the
name of a one bit signal. You may not use arbitrary expressions as
assertion clocks.
=head1 SYNTHESIS DIRECTIVE ASSERTION SUPPORT
With the --assert switch, Verilator reads any "//synopsys full_case" or "//
synopsys parallel_case" directives. The same applies to any "//cadence" or
"// ambit synthesis" directives of the same form.
When these synthesis directives are discovered, Verilator will either
formally prove the directive to be true, or failing that, will insert the
appropriate code to detect failing cases at runtime and print an "Assertion
failed" error message.
Verilator likewise also asserts any "unique" or "priority" SystemVerilog
keywords on case statements. However, "unique if" and "priority if" are
currently simply ignored.
=head1 LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS
The following additional constructs are the extensions Verilator supports
on top of standard Verilog code. Using these features outside of comments
or `ifdef's may break other tools.
=over 4
=item `__FILE__
The __FILE__ define expands to the current filename, like C++'s __FILE__.
This is in the draft SystemVerilog 2009 standard (but supported by
Verilator since 2006!)
=item `__LINE__
The __LINE__ define expands to the current line number, like C++'s
__LINE__. This is in the draft SystemVerilog 2009 standard (but supported
by Verilator since 2006!)
=item `error I<string>
This will report an error when encountered, like C++'s #error.
=item _(I<expr>)
A underline followed by an expression in parenthesis returns a Verilog
expression. This is different from normal parenthesis in special contexts,
such as PSL expressions, and can be used to embed bit concatenation ({})
inside of PSL statements.
=item $c(I<string>, ...);
The string will be embedded directly in the output C++ code at the point
where the surrounding Verilog code is compiled. It may either be a
standalone statement (with a trailing ; in the string), or a function that
returns up to a 32-bit number (without a trailing ;). This can be used to
call C++ functions from your Verilog code.
String arguments will be put directly into the output C++ code. Expression
arguments will have the code to evaluate the expression inserted. Thus to
call a C++ function, $c("func(",a,")") will result in 'func(a)' in the
output C++ code. For input arguments, rather than hard-coding variable
names in the string $c("func(a)"), instead pass the variable as an
expression $c("func(",a,")"). This will allow the call to work inside
Verilog functions where the variable is flattened out, and also enable
other optimizations.
If you will be reading or writing any Verilog variables inside the C++
functions, the Verilog signals must be declared with /*verilator public*/.
You may also append a arbitrary number to $c, generally the width of the
output. [signal_32_bits = $c32("...");] This allows for compatibility with
other simulators which require a differently named PLI function name for
each different output width.
=item $display, $write, $fdisplay, $fwrite
Format arguments may use C fprintf sizes after the % escape. Per the
Verilog standard, %x prints a number with the natural width, %0x prints a
number with minimum width, however %5x prints 5 digits per the C standard
(it's unspecified in Verilog).
=item `coverage_block_off
Specifies the entire begin/end block should be ignored for coverage analysis.
Same as /* verilator coverage_block_off */.
=item `systemc_header
Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and
place it verbatim into the output .h file's header. Despite the name of this
macro, this also works in pure C++ code.
=item `systemc_ctor
Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and
place it verbatim into the C++ class constructor. Despite the name of this
macro, this also works in pure C++ code.
=item `systemc_dtor
Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and
place it verbatim into the C++ class destructor. Despite the name of this
macro, this also works in pure C++ code.
=item `systemc_interface
Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and
place it verbatim into the C++ class interface. Despite the name of this
macro, this also works in pure C++ code.
=item `systemc_imp_header
Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and
place it verbatim into the header of all files for this C++ class
implementation. Despite the name of this macro, this also works in pure
C++ code.
=item `systemc_implementation
Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and
place it verbatim into a single file of the C++ class implementation.
Despite the name of this macro, this also works in pure C++ code.
If you will be reading or writing any Verilog variables in the C++
functions, the Verilog signals must be declared with /*verilator public*/.
See also the public task feature; writing a accessor may result in cleaner
code.
=item `verilator
=item `verilator3
The verilator and verilator3 defines are set by default so you may `ifdef
around compiler specific constructs.
=item `verilog
Switch back to processing Verilog code after a `systemc_... mode switch.
The Verilog code returns to the last language mode specified with
`begin_keywords, or SystemVerilog if none were specified.
=item /*verilator clock_enable*/
Used after a signal declaration to indicate the signal is used to gate a
clock, and the user takes responsibility for insuring there are no races
related to it. (Typically by adding a latch, and running static timing
analysis.) This will cause the clock gate to be ignored in the scheduling
algorithm, improving performance.
=item /*verilator coverage_block_off*/
Specifies the entire begin/end block should be ignored for coverage
analysis purposes.
=item /*verilator coverage_off*/
Specifies that following lines of code should have coverage disabled.
Often used to ignore an entire module for coverage analysis purposes.
=item /*verilator coverage_on*/
Specifies that following lines of code should have coverage reenabled (if
appropriate --coverage flags are passed) after being disabled earlier with
/*verilator coverage_off*/.
=item /*verilator inline_module*/
Specifies the module the comment appears in may be inlined into any modules
that use this module. This is useful to speed up simulation time with some
small loss of trace visibility and modularity. Note signals under inlined
submodules will be named I<submodule>__DOT__I<subsignal> as C++ does not
allow "." in signal names. SystemPerl when tracing such signals will
replace the __DOT__ with the period.
=item /*verilator isolate_assignments*/
Used after a signal declaration to indicate the assignments to this signal
in any blocks should be isolated into new blocks. When there is a large
combinatorial block that is resulting in a UNOPTFLAT warning, attaching
this to the signal causing a false loop may clear up the problem.
IE, with the following
reg splitme /* verilator isolate_assignments*/;
// Note the placement of the semicolon above
always @* begin
if (....) begin
splitme = ....;
other assignments
end
end
Verilator will internally split the block that assigns to "splitme" into
two blocks:
It would then internally break it into (sort of):
// All assignments excluding those to splitme
always @* begin
if (....) begin
other assignments
end
end
// All assignments to splitme
always @* begin
if (....) begin
splitme = ....;
end
end
=item /*verilator lint_off I<msg>*/
Disable the specified warning message for any warnings following the comment.
=item /*verilator lint_on I<msg>*/
Re-enable the specified warning message for any warnings following the comment.
=item /*verilator lint_restore*/
After a /*verilator lint_save*/, pop the stack containing lint message
state. Often this is useful at the bottom of include files.
=item /*verilator lint_save*/
Push the current state of what lint messages are turned on or turned off to
a stack. Later meta-comments may then lint_on or lint_off specific
messages, then return to the earlier message state by using /*verilator
lint_restore*/. For example:
// verilator lint_save
// verilator lint_off SOME_WARNING
... // code needing SOME_WARNING turned off
// verilator lint_restore
If SOME_WARNING was on before the lint_off, it will now be restored to on,
and if it was off before the lint_off it will remain off.
=item /*verilator no_inline_task*/
Used in a function or task variable definition section to specify the
function or task should not be inlined into where it is used. This may
reduce the size of the final executable when a task is used a very large
number of times. For this flag to work, the task and tasks below it must
be pure; they cannot reference any variables outside the task itself.
=item /*verilator public*/ (variable)
Used after a input, output, register, or wire declaration to indicate the
signal should be declared so that C code may read or write the value
of the signal. This will also declare this module public, otherwise use
/*verilator public_flat*/.
=item /*verilator public*/ (task/function)
Used inside the declaration section of a function or task declaration to
indicate the function or task should be made into a C++ function, public to
outside callers. Public tasks will be declared as a void C++ function,
public functions will get the appropriate non-void (bool, uint32_t, etc)
return type. Any input arguments will become C++ arguments to the
function. Any output arguments will become C++ reference arguments. Any
local registers/integers will become function automatic variables on the
stack.
Wide variables over 64 bits cannot be function returns, to avoid exposing
complexities. However, wide variables can be input/outputs; they will be
passed as references to an array of 32 bit numbers.
Generally, only the values of stored state (flops) should be written, as
the model will NOT notice changes made to variables in these functions.
(Same as when a signal is declared public.)
=item /*verilator public_flat*/ (variable)
Used after a input, output, register, or wire declaration to indicate the
signal should be declared so that C code may read or write the value of the
signal. This will not declare this module public, which means the name of
the signal or path to it may change based upon the module inlining which
takes place.
=item /*verilator public_module*/
Used after a module statement to indicate the module should not be inlined
(unless specifically requested) so that C code may access the module.
Verilator automatically sets this attribute when the module contains any
public signals or `systemc_ directives. Also set for all modules when
using the --public switch.
=item /*verilator sc_clock*/
Used after a input declaration to indicate the signal should be declared in
SystemC as a sc_clock instead of a bool. This was needed in SystemC 1.1
and 1.2 only; versions 2.0 and later do not require clock pins to be
sc_clocks and this is no longer needed.
=item /*verilator tracing_off*/
Disable waveform tracing for all future signals that are declared in this
module. Often this is placed just after a primitive's module statement, so
that the entire module is not traced.
=item /*verilator tracing_on*/
Re-enable waveform tracing for all future signals that are declared.
=back
=head1 LANGUAGE LIMITATIONS
There are some limitations and lack of features relative to a commercial
simulator, by intent. User beware.
It is strongly recommended you use a lint tool before running this program.
Verilator isn't designed to easily uncover common mistakes that a lint
program will find for you.
=head2 Synthesis Subset
Verilator supports only the Synthesis subset with a few minor additions
such as $stop, $finish and $display. That is, you cannot use hierarchical
references, events or similar features of the Verilog language. It also
simulates as Synopsys's Design Compiler would; namely a block of the form
always @ (x) y = x & z;
will recompute y when there is a change in x or a change in z, which is
what Design Compiler will synthesize. A compliant simulator would only
calculate y if x changes. (Use verilog-mode's /*AS*/ or Verilog 2001's
always @* to prevent these issues.)
=head2 Dotted cross-hierarchy references
Verilator supports dotted references to variables, functions and tasks in
different modules. However, references into named blocks and function-local
variables are not supported. The portion before the dot must have a
constant value; for example a[2].b is acceptable, while a[x].b is not.
References into generated and arrayed instances use the instance names
specified in the Verilog standard; arrayed instances are named
{cellName}[{instanceNumber}] in Verilog, which becomes
{cellname}__BRA__{instanceNumber}__KET__ inside the generated C++ code.
Verilator creates numbered "genblk" when a begin: name is not specified
around a block inside a generate statement. These numbers may differ
between other simulators, but the Verilog specification does not allow
users to use these names, so it should not matter.
If you are having trouble determining where a dotted path goes wrong, note
that Verilator will print a list of known scopes to help your debugging.
=head2 Floating Point
Floating Point numbers are not synthesizable, and so not supported.
=head2 Latches
Verilator is optimized for edge sensitive (flop based) designs. It will
attempt to do the correct thing for latches, but most performance
optimizations will be disabled around the latch.
=head2 Time
All delays (#) are ignored, as they are in synthesis.
=head2 Two State
Verilator is a two state simulator, not a four state simulator. However, it
has two features which uncover most initialization bugs (including many that
a four state simulator will miss.)
First, assigning a variable to a X will actually assign the variable to a
random value (see the -x-assign switch.) Thus if the value is actually
used, the random value should cause downstream errors. Integers also
randomize, even though the Verilog 2001 specification says they initialize
to zero.
Identity comparisons (=== or !==) are converted to standard ==/!== when
neither side is a constant. This may make the expression result differ
from a four state simulator.
All variables are initialized using a function. By running several
random simulation runs you can determine that reset is working correctly.
On the first run, the function initializes variables to zero. On the
second, have it initialize variables to one. On the third and following
runs have it initialize them randomly. If the results match, reset works.
(Note this is what the hardware will really do.) In practice, just setting
all variables to one at startup finds most problems.
=head2 Tri/Inout
Verilator converts some simple tristate structures into two state. An assignment
of the form:
inout driver;
wire driver = (enable) ? output_value : 1'bz;
Will be converted to
input driver__in; // Value being driven in from "external" drivers
output driver__en; // True if driven from this module
output driver__enout; // Value being driven from this module
Pullup, pulldown, bufif0, bufif1, notif0, notif1 are also supported.
External logic will be needed to combine these signals with any external
drivers.
Tristate drivers are not supported inside functions and tasks; a inout
there will be considered a two state variable that is read and written
instead of a four state variable.
=head2 Functions & Tasks
All functions and tasks will be inlined (will not become functions in C.)
The only support provided is for simple statements in tasks (which may
affect global variables).
Recursive functions and tasks are not supported. All inputs and outputs
are automatic, as if they had the Verilog 2001 "automatic" keyword
prepended. (If you don't know what this means, Verilator will do what you
probably expect -- what C does. The default behavior of Verilog is
different.)
=head2 Generated Clocks
Verilator attempts to deal with generated clocks correctly, however new
cases may turn up bugs in the scheduling algorithm. The safest option is
to have all clocks as primary inputs to the model, or wires directly
attached to primary inputs.
=head2 Ranges must be big-bit-endian
Bit ranges must be numbered with the MSB being numbered greater or the same
as the LSB. Little-bit-endian busses [0:15] are not supported as they
aren't easily made compatible with C++.
=head2 32-Bit Divide
The division and modulus operators are limited to 32 bits. This can be
easily fixed if someone contributes the appropriate wide-integer math
functions.
=head2 Gate Primitives
The 2-state gate primitives (and, buf, nand, nor, not, or, xnor, xor) are
directly converted to behavioral equivalents. The 3-state and MOS gate
primitives are not supported. Tables are not supported.
=head2 Specify blocks
All specify blocks and timing checks are ignored.
=head2 Array Initialization
When initializing a large array, you need to use non-delayed assignments.
Verilator will tell you when this needs to be fixed; see the BLKLOOPINIT
error for more information.
=head2 Array Out of Bounds
Writing a memory element that is outside the bounds specified for the array
may cause a different memory element inside the array to be written
instead. For power-of-2 sized arrays, Verilator will give a width warning
and the address. For non-power-of-2-sizes arrays, index 0 will be written.
Reading a memory element that is outside the bounds specified for the array
will give a width warning and wrap around the power-of-2 size. For
non-power-of-2 sizes, it will return a unspecified constant of the
appropriate width.
=head2 Assertions
Verilator is beginning to add support for assertions. Verilator currently
only converts assertions to simple "if (...) error" statements, and
coverage statements to increment the line counters described in the
coverage section.
Verilator does not support SEREs yet. All assertion and coverage
statements must be simple expressions that complete in one cycle.
(Arguably SEREs are much of the point, but one must start somewhere.)
=head1 LANGUAGE KEYWORD LIMITATIONS
This section describes specific limitations for each language keyword.
=over 4
=item `__FILE__, `__LINE__, `begin_keywords, `begin_keywords, `begin_keywords,
`begin_keywords, `begin_keywords, `define, `else, `elsif, `end_keywords,
`endif, `error, `ifdef, `ifndef, `include, `line, `systemc_ctor,
`systemc_dtor, `systemc_header, `systemc_imp_header,
`systemc_implementation, `systemc_interface, `timescale, `undef, `verilog
Fully supported.
=item always, always_comb, always_ff, always_latch, and, assign, begin,
buf, case, casex, casez, default, defparam, do-while, else, end, endcase,
endfunction, endgenerate, endmodule, endspecify, endtask, final, for,
function, generate, genvar, if, initial, inout, input, integer, localparam,
macromodule, module, nand, negedge, nor, not, or, output, parameter,
posedge, reg, scalared, signed, supply0, supply1, task, tri, vectored,
while, wire, xnor, xor
Generally supported.
=item priority if, unique if
Priority and unique if's are treated as normal ifs and not asserted to be
full nor unique.
=item specify specparam
All specify blocks and timing checks are ignored.
=item timeunit, timeprecision
All timing control statements are ignored.
=item uwire
Verilator does not perform warning checking on uwires, it treats the uwire
keyword as if it were the normal wire keyword.
=item $bits, $countones, $error, $fatal, $finish, $info, $isunknown,
$onehot, $onehot0, $readmemb, $readmemh, $signed, $stime, $stop, $time,
$unsigned, $warning.
Generally supported.
=item $display, $write, $fdisplay, $fwrite
$display and friends must have a constant format string as the first
argument (as with C's printf), you cannot simply list variables standalone.
=item $displayb, $displayh, $displayo, $writeb, $writeh, $writeo, etc
The sized display functions are rarely used and so not supported. Replace
them with a $write with the appropriate format specifier.
=item $finish, $stop
The rarely used optional parameter to $finish and $stop is ignored.
=item $fopen, $fclose, $fdisplay, $feof, $fflush, $fgetc, $fgets, $fscanf, $fwrite
File descriptors passed to the file PLI calls must be file descriptors, not
MCDs, which includes the mode parameter to $fopen being mandatory.
Verilator will convert the integer used to hold the file descriptor into a
internal FILE*. To prevent core dumps due to mis-use, and because integers
are 32 bits while FILE*s may be 64 bits, the descriptor must be stored in a
reg [63:0] rather than an integer. The define `verilator_file_descriptor in
verilated.v can be used to hide this difference.
=item $fscanf, $sscanf
Only integer formats are supported; %e, %f, %m, %r, %v, and %z are not
supported.
=item $fullskew, $hold, $nochange, $period, $recovery, $recrem, $removal,
$setup, $setuphold, $skew, $timeskew, $width
All specify blocks and timing checks are ignored.
=item $random
$random does not support the optional argument to set the seed. Use the
srand function in C to accomplish this, and note there is only one random
number generator (not one per module).
=item $readmemb, $readmemh
Read memory commands should work properly. Note Verilator and the Verilog
specification does not include support for readmem to multi-dimensional
arrays.
=item $realtime
Treated as $time.
=back
=head1 ERRORS AND WARNINGS
Warnings may be disabled in two ways. First, when the warning is
printed it will include a warning code. Simply surround the offending
line with a warn_off/warn_on pair:
// verilator lint_off UNSIGNED
if (`DEF_THAT_IS_EQ_ZERO <= 3) $stop;
// verilator lint_on UNSIGNED
Warnings may also be globally disabled by invoking Verilator with the
C<-Wno-I<warning>> switch. This should be avoided, as it removes all
checking across the designs, and prevents other users from compiling your
code without knowing the magic set of disables needed to successfully
compile your design.
List of all warnings:
=over 4
=item BLKANDNBLK
BLKANDNBLK is an error that a variable comes from a mix of blocked and
non-blocking assignments. Generally, this is caused by a register driven
by both combo logic and a flop:
always @ (posedge clk) foo[0] <= ...
always @* foo[1] = ...
Simply use a different register for the flop:
always @ (posedge clk) foo_flopped[0] <= ...
always @* foo[0] = foo_flopped[0];
always @* foo[1] = ...
This is good coding practice anyways.
It is also possible to disable this error when one of the assignments is
inside a public task.
Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other
simulators.
=item BLKLOOPINIT
This indicates that the initialization of an array needs to use non-delayed
assignments. This is done in the interest of speed; if delayed assignments
were used, the simulator would have to copy large arrays every cycle. (In
smaller loops, loop unrolling allows the delayed assignment to work, though
it's a bit slower than a non-delayed assignment.) Here's an example
always @ (posedge clk)
if (~reset_l) begin
for (i=0; i<`ARRAY_SIZE; i++) begin
array[i] = 0; // Non-delayed for verilator
end
This message is only seen on large or complicated loops because Verilator
generally unrolls small loops. You may want to try increasing
--unroll-count (and occasionally --unroll-stmts) which will raise the small
loop bar to avoid this error.
=item CASEINCOMPLETE
Warns that inside a case statement there is a stimulus pattern for which
there is no case item specified. This is bad style, if a case is
impossible, it's better to have a "default: $stop;" or just "default: ;" so
that any design assumption violations will be discovered in simulation.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item CASEOVERLAP
Warns that inside a case statement you have case values which are detected
to be overlapping. This is bad style, as moving the order of case values
will cause different behavior. Generally the values can be respecified to
not overlap.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item CASEX
Warns that it is simply better style to use casez, and C<?> in place of
C<x>'s. See
L<http://www.sunburst-design.com/papers/CummingsSNUG1999Boston_FullParallelCase_rev1_1.pdf>
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item CASEWITHX
Warns that a case statement contains a constant with a C<x>. Verilator is
two-state so interpret such items as always false. Note a common error is
to use a C<X> in a case or casez statement item; often what the user
instead intended is to use a casez with C<?>.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item CMPCONST
Warns that you are comparing a value in a way that will always be constant.
For example "X > 1" will always be true when X is a single bit wide.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item COMBDLY
Warns that you have a delayed assignment inside of a combinatorial block.
Using delayed assignments in this way is considered bad form, and may lead
to the simulator not matching synthesis. If this message is suppressed,
Verilator, like synthesis, will convert this to a non-delayed assignment,
which may result in logic races or other nasties. See
L<http://www.sunburst-design.com/papers/CummingsSNUG2000SJ_NBA_rev1_2.pdf>
Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other
simulators.
=item GENCLK
Warns that the specified signal is generated, but is also being used as a
clock. Verilator needs to evaluate sequential logic multiple times in this
situation. In somewhat contrived cases having any generated clock can
reduce performance by almost a factor of two. For fastest results,
generate ALL clocks outside in C++/SystemC and make them primary inputs to
your Verilog model. (However once need to you have even one, don't sweat
additional ones.)
Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other
simulators.
=item IMPERFECTSCH
Warns that the scheduling of the model is not absolutely perfect, and some
manual code edits may result in faster performance. This warning defaults
to off, and must be turned on explicitly before the top module statement is
processed.
=item IMPLICIT
Warns that a wire is being implicitly declared (it is a single bit wide
output from a sub-module.) While legal in Verilog, implicit declarations
only work for single bit wide signals (not buses), do not allow using a
signal before it is implicitly declared by a cell, and can lead to dangling
nets. A better option is the /*AUTOWIRE*/ feature of Verilog-Mode for
Emacs, available from L<http://www.veripool.org/>
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item IMPURE
Warns that a task or function that has been marked with /*verilator
no_inline_task*/ references variables that are not local to the task.
Verilator cannot schedule these variables correctly.
Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other
simulators.
=item LITENDIAN
Warns that a vector is declared with little endian bit numbering
(i.e. [0:7]). Big endian bit numbering is now the overwhelming standard,
and little numbering is now thus often due to simple oversight instead of
intent.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item MULTIDRIVEN
Warns that the specified signal comes from multiple always blocks. This is
often unsupported by synthesis tools, and is considered bad style. It will
also cause longer runtimes due to reduced optimizations.
Ignoring this warning will only slow simulations, it will simulate
correctly.
=item MULTITOP
Error that there are multiple top level modules, that is modules not
instantiated by any other module. Verilator only supports a single top
level, if you need more, create a module that wraps all of the top modules.
Often this error is because some low level cell is being read in, but is
not really needed. The best solution is to insure that each module is in a
unique file by the same name. Otherwise, make sure all library files are
read in as libraries with -v, instead of automatically with -y.
=item REDEFMACRO
Warns that you have redefined the same macro with a different value, for
example:
`define MACRO def1
//...
`define MACRO otherdef
The best solution is to use a different name for the second macro. If this
is not possible, add a undef to indicate the code is overriding the value:
`define MACRO def1
//...
`undef MACRO
`define MACRO otherdef
=item STMTDLY
Warns that you have a statement with a delayed time in front of it, for
example:
#100 $finish;
Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other
simulators.
=item SYMRSVDWORD
Error that a symbol matches a C++ reserved word and using this as a symbol
name would result in odd C compiler errors. You may disable this error
message as you would disable warnings, but the symbol will be renamed by
Verilator to avoid the conflict.
=item TASKNSVAR
Error when a call to a task or function has a output from that task tied to
a non-simple signal. Instead connect the task output to a temporary signal
of the appropriate width, and use that signal to set the appropriate
expression as the next statement. For example:
task foo; output sig; ... endtask
always @* begin
foo(bus_we_select_from[2]); // Will get TASKNSVAR error
end
Change this to:
reg foo_temp_out;
always @* begin
foo(foo_temp_out);
bus_we_select_from[2] = foo_temp_out;
end
Verilator doesn't do this conversion for you, as some more complicated
cases would result in simulator mismatches.
=item UNDRIVEN
Warns that the specified signal is never sourced.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item UNOPT
Warns that due to some construct, optimization of the specified signal or
block is disabled. The construct should be cleaned up to improve runtime.
A less obvious case of this is when a module instantiates two submodules.
Inside submodule A, signal I is input and signal O is output. Likewise in
submodule B, signal O is an input and I is an output. A loop exists and a
UNOPT warning will result if AI & AO both come from and go to combinatorial
blocks in both submodules, even if they are unrelated always blocks. This
affects performance because Verilator would have to evaluate each submodule
multiple times to stabilize the signals crossing between the modules.
Ignoring this warning will only slow simulations, it will simulate
correctly.
=item UNOPTFLAT
Warns that due to some construct, optimization of the specified signal is
disabled. The signal specified includes a complete scope to the signal; it
may be only one particular usage of a multiply instantiated block. The
construct should be cleaned up to improve runtime; two times better
performance may be possible by fixing these warnings.
Unlike the UNOPT warning, this occurs after netlist flattening, and
indicates a more basic problem, as the less obvious case described under
UNOPT does not apply.
Often UNOPTFLAT is caused by logic that isn't truly circular as viewed by
synthesis which analyzes interconnection per-bit, but is circular to
simulation which analyzes per-bus:
wire [2:0] x = {x[1:0],shift_in};
This statement needs to be evaluated multiple times, as a change in
"shift_in" requires "x" to be computed 3 times before it becomes stable.
This is because a change in "x" requires "x" itself to change value, which
causes the warning.
For significantly better performance, split this into 2 separate signals:
wire [2:0] xout = {x[1:0],shift_in};
and change all receiving logic to instead receive "xout". Alternatively,
change it to
wire [2:0] x = {xin[1:0],shift_in};
and change all driving logic to instead drive "xin".
With this change this assignment needs to be evaluated only once. These
sort of changes may also speed up your traditional event driven simulator,
as it will result in fewer events per cycle.
The most complicated UNOPTFLAT path we've seen was due to low bits of a bus
being generated from an always statement that consumed high bits of the
same bus processed by another series of always blocks. The fix is the
same; split it into two separate signals generated from each block.
The UNOPTFLAT warning may also be due to clock enables, identified from the
reported path going through a clock gating cell. To fix these, use the
clock_enable meta comment described above.
The UNOPTFLAT warning may also occur where outputs from a block of logic
are independent, but occur in the same always block. To fix this, use the
isolate_assignments meta comment described above.
Ignoring this warning will only slow simulations, it will simulate
correctly.
=item UNSIGNED
Warns that you are comparing a unsigned value in a way that implies it is
signed, for example "X < 0" will always be true when X is unsigned.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item UNUSED
Warns that the specified signal is never sinked. This is a future message,
currently Verilator will not produce this warning.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item VARHIDDEN
Warns that a task, function, or begin/end block is declaring a variable by
the same name as a variable in the upper level module or begin/end block
(thus hiding the upper variable from being able to be used.) Rename the
variable to avoid confusion when reading the code.
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item WIDTH
Warns that based on width rules of Verilog, two operands have different
widths. Verilator generally can intuit the common usages of widths, and
you shouldn't need to disable this message like you do with most lint
programs. Generally other than simple mistakes, you have two solutions:
If it's a constant 0 that's 32 bits or less, simply leave it
unwidthed. Verilator considers zero to be any width needed.
Concatenate leading zeros when doing arithmetic. In the statement
wire [5:0] plus_one = from[5:0] + 6'd1 + carry[0];
The best fix, which clarifies intent and will also make all tools happy is:
wire [5:0] plus_one = from[5:0] + 6'd1 + {5'd0,carry[0]};
Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate
correctly.
=item WIDTHCONCAT
Warns that based on width rules of Verilog, a concatenate or replication
has a indeterminate width. In most cases this violates the Verilog rule
that widths inside concatenates and replicates must be sized, and should be
fixed in the code.
wire [63:0] concat = {1,2};
An example where this is technically legal (though still bad form) is:
parameter PAR = 1;
wire [63:0] concat = {PAR,PAR};
The correct fix is to either size the 1 ("32'h1"), or add the width to the
parameter definition ("parameter [31:0]"), or add the width to the
parameter usage ("{PAR[31:0],PAR[31:0]}".
=back
The following describes the less obvious errors:
=over 4
=item Internal Error
This error should never occur first, though may occur if earlier warnings
or error messages have corrupted the program. If there are no other
warnings or errors, submit a bug report.
=item Unsupported: ....
This error indicates that you are using a Verilog language construct
that is not yet supported in Verilator. See the Limitations chapter.
=item Verilated model didn't converge
Verilator sometimes has to evaluate combinatorial logic multiple times,
usually around code where a UNOPTFLAT warning was issued, but disabled.
For example:
always @ (a) b=~a;
always @ (b) a=b
will toggle forever and thus the executable will give the didn't converge
error to prevent an infinite loop.
To debug this, run Verilator with --profile-cfuncs. Run make on the
generated files with "OPT=-DVL_DEBUG". Then call Verilated::debug(1) in
your main.cpp.
This will cause each change in a variable to print a message. Near the
bottom you'll see the code and variable that causes the problem. For the
program above:
CHANGE: filename.v:1: b
CHANGE: filename.v:2: a
=back
=head1 FAQ/FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
=over 4
=item Does it run under Windows?
Yes, using Cygwin. Verilated output should also compile under Microsoft
Visual C++ Version 7 or newer, but this is not tested by the author.
=item Can you provide binaries?
Verilator is available as a RPM for SuSE, Fedora, and perhaps other
systems; this is done by porters and may slightly lag the primary
distribution. If there isn't a binary build for your distribution, how
about you set one up? Please contact the authors for assistance.
Note people sometimes request binaries when they are having problems with
their C++ compiler. Alas, binaries won't help this, as in the end a fully
working C++ compiler is required to compile the output of Verilator.
=item How can it be faster than (name-the-simulator)?
Generally, the implied part of the question is "... with all of their
manpower they can put into it."
Most commercial simulators have to be Verilog compliant, meaning event
driven. This prevents them from being able to reorder blocks and make
netlist-style optimizations, which are where most of the gains come from.
Non-compliance shouldn't be scary. Your synthesis program isn't compliant,
so your simulator shouldn't have to be -- and Verilator is closer to the
synthesis interpretation, so this is a good thing for getting working
silicon.
=item Will Verilator output remain under my own copyright?
Yes, it's just like using GCC on your programs; this is why Verilator uses
the "GNU *Lesser* Public License Version 3" instead of the more typical
"GNU Public License". See the licenses for details, but in brief, if you
change Verilator itself or the header files Verilator includes, you must
make the source code available under the GNU Lesser Public License.
However, Verilator output (the Verilated code) only "include"s the licensed
files, and so you are NOT required to release any output from Verilator.
You also have the option of using the Perl Artistic License, which again
does not require you release your Verilog or generated code, and also
allows you to modify Verilator for internal use without distributing the
modified version. But please contribute back to the community!
One limit is that you cannot under either license release a commercial
simulation product incorporating Verilator without making the source code
available.
=item Why is running Verilator so slow?
Verilator needs more memory than the resulting simulator will require, as
Verilator creates internally all of the state of the resulting simulator in
order to optimize it. If it takes more than a minute or so (and you're not
using --debug), see if your machine is paging; most likely you need to run
it on a machine with more memory. Verilator is a full 64 bit application
and may use more than 4GB, but about 1GB is the maximum typically needed.
=item How do I generate waveforms (traces) in C++?
See the next question for tracing in SystemPerl mode.
Add the --trace switch to Verilator, and make sure the SystemPerl package
is installed. SystemC itself does not need to be installed for C++ only
tracing. You do not even need to compile SystemPerl; you may simply untar
the SystemPerl kit and point the SYSTEMPERL environment variable to the
untarred directory.
In your top level C code, call Verilated::traceEverOn(true). Then create a
SpTraceVcdC object, and in your main loop call "trace_object->dump(time)"
every time step, and finally call "trace_object->close()". For an example,
see below and the test_c/sim_main.cpp file of the distribution.
You also need to compile SpTraceVcdC.cpp and add it to your link. This is
done for you if using the Verilator --exe flag.
Note you can also call ->trace on multiple Verilated objects with the same
trace file if you want all data to land in the same output file.
#include "SpTraceVcdC.cpp"
...
int main(int argc, char **argv, char **env) {
...
Verilated::traceEverOn(true);
SpTraceVcdCFile* tfp = new SpTraceVcdCFile;
topp->trace (tfp, 99);
tfp->open ("obj_dir/t_trace_ena_cc/simx.vcd");
...
while (sc_time_stamp() < sim_time && !Verilated::gotFinish()) {
main_time += #;
tfp->dump (main_time);
}
tfp->close();
}
=item How do I generate waveforms (traces) in SystemC/SystemPerl?
Add the --trace switch to Verilator, and make sure the SystemPerl package
is installed.
In your top level C sc_main code, include SpTraceVcd.h. Then call
Verilated::traceEverOn(true). Then create a SpTraceFile object as you
would create a normal SystemC trace file. For an example, see the call to
SpTraceFile in the test_sp/sc_main.cpp file of the distribution, and below.
Alternatively you may use the C++ trace mechanism described in the previous
question, however the timescale and timeprecision will not inherited from
your SystemC settings.
You'll then need to compile in Sp.cpp, which includes SpTraceVcd.cpp among
other things.
Note you can also call ->trace on multiple Verilated objects with the same
trace file if you want all data to land in the same output file.
#include "SpTraceVcd.cpp"
...
int main(int argc, char **argv, char **env) {
...
Verilated::traceEverOn(true);
SpTraceFile* tfp = new SpTraceFile;
topp->trace (tfp, 99);
tfp->open ("obj_dir/t_trace_ena_cc/simx.vcd");
...
sc_start(1);
...
tfp->close();
}
=item How do I view waveforms (traces)?
Verilator makes standard VCD (Value Change Dump) files. They are viewable
with the public domain Dinotrace or GtkWave programs, or any of the many
commercial offerings.
=item How do I reduce the size of large waveform (trace) files?
First, instead of calling SpTraceVcdCFile->open at the beginning of time,
delay calling it until the time stamp where you want to tracing to begin.
Likewise you can also call SpTraceVcdCFile->open before the end of time
(perhaps a short period after you detect a verification error.)
Next, add /*verilator tracing_off*/ to any very low level modules you never
want to trace (such as perhaps library cells). Finally, use the
--trace-depth option to limit the depth of tracing, for example
--trace-depth 1 to see only the top level signals.
Also be sure you write your trace files to a local disk, instead of to a
network disk. Network disks are generally far slower.
=item How do I do coverage analysis?
Verilator supports both block (line) coverage and user inserted functional
coverage. First, run verilator with the --coverage option. If you're
using your own makefile, compile the model with the GCC flag
-DSP_COVERAGE_ENABLE (if using Verilator's, it will do this for you.)
Run your tests in different directories. Each test will create a
logs/coverage.pl file.
After running all of your tests, the vcoverage utility (from the SystemPerl
package) is executed. Vcoverage reads the logs/coverage.pl file(s), and
creates an annotated source code listing showing code coverage details.
For an example, after running 'make test' in the Verilator distribution,
see the test_sp/logs/coverage_source directory. Grep for lines starting
with '%' to see what lines Verilator believes need more coverage.
=item Where is the translate_off command? (How do I ignore a construct?)
Translate on/off pragmas are generally a bad idea, as it's easy to have
mismatched pairs, and you can't see what another tool sees by just
preprocessing the code. Instead, use the preprocessor; Verilator defines
the "verilator" define for you, so just wrap the code in a ifndef region:
`ifndef verilator
Something_Verilator_Dislikes;
`endif
=item Why do I get "unexpected `do'" or "unexpected `bit'" errors?
Do, bit, ref, return, and other words are now SystemVerilog keywords. You
should change your code to not use them to insure it works with newer
tools. Alternatively, surround them by the Verilog 2005/SystemVerilog
begin_keywords pragma to indicate Verilog 2001 code.
`begin_keywords "1364-2001"
integer bit; initial bit = 1;
`end_keywords
If you want the whole file to be parsed as Verilog 2001, just create a
file with
`begin_keywords "1364-2001"
and add it before other Verilog files on the command line. (Note this will
also change the default for --prefix, so if you're not using --prefix, you
will now need to.)
=item How do I prevent my assertions from firing during reset?
Call Verilated::assertOn(false) before you first call the model, then turn
it back on after reset. It defaults to true. When false, all assertions
controlled by --assert are disabled.
=item Why do I get "undefined reference to `sc_time_stamp()'"?
In C++ (non SystemC) code you need to define this function so that the
simulator knows the current time. See the "CONNECTING TO C++" examples.
=item Why do I get "undefined reference to `VL_RAND_RESET_I' or `Verilated::...'"?
You need to link your compiled Verilated code against the verilated.cpp
file found in the include directory of the Verilator kit.
=item Is the PLI supported?
No.
More specifically, the common PLI-ish calls $display, $finish, $stop,
$time, $write are converted to C++ equivalents. If you want something more
complex, since Verilator emits standard C++ code, you can simply write your
own C++ routines that can access and modify signal values without needing
any PLI interface code, and call it with $c("{any_c++_statement}").
=item How do I make a Verilog module that contain a C++ object?
You need to add the object to the structure that Verilator creates, then
use $c to call a method inside your object. The
test_regress/t/t_extend_class files show an example of how to do this.
=item How do I get faster build times?
Between GCC 3.0 to 3.3, each compiled progressively slower, thus if you can
use GCC 2.95, or GCC 3.4 you'll have faster builds. Two ways to cheat are
to compile on parallel machines and avoid compilations altogether. See the
--output-split option, and the web for the ccache, distcc and icecream
packages, and the Make::Cache package available from
L<http://www.veripool.org/>. Make::Cache will skip GCC runs between
identical source builds, even across different users.
=item Why do so many files need to recompile when I add a signal?
Adding a new signal requires the symbol table to be recompiled. Verilator
uses one large symbol table, as that results in 2-3 less assembly
instructions for each signal access. This makes the execution time 10-15%
faster, but can result in more compilations when something changes.
=item How do I access functions/tasks in C?
Write a Verilog function or task with input/outputs that match what you
want to call in with C. Then mark that function public.
Verilog inputs of one bit become C++ bool inputs. Inputs 32 bits or
smaller become C uint32_t inputs, 64-32 bits become C uint64_t inputs, and
wider signals become arrays of 32 bits. Outputs are passed as references
to bool, uint32_t, uint64_t or uint32_t[] arrays.
Signals wider than 64 bits are passed as an array of 32-bit uint32_t's.
Thus to read bits 31:0, access signal[0], and for bits 63:32, access
signal[1]. Unused bits (for example bit numbers 65-96 of a 65 bit vector)
will always be zero. if you change the value you must make sure to pack
zeros in the unused bits or core-dumps may result. (Because Verilator
strips array bound checks where it believes them to be unnecessary.)
In the SYSTEMC example above, if you had in our.v:
task publicSetBool;
// verilator public
input in_bool;
var_bool = in_bool;
endtask
From the sc_main.cpp file, you'd then:
#include "Vour.h"
#include "Vour_our.h"
top->v->publicSetBool(value);
See additional notes under the /*verilator public*/ section.
=item How do I access signals in C?
The best thing is to make a Verilator public task or function accessor that
can read or write that signal, as described in the previous FAQ. This will
allow Verilator to better optimize the model.
If you really want raw access to the signals, declare the signals you will
be accessing with a /*verilator public*/ comment before the closing
semicolon. Then scope into the C++ class to read the value of the signal,
as you would any other member variable.
Signals are the smallest of 8 bit chars, 16 bit shorts, 32 bit longs, or 64
bit long longs that fits the width of the signal. Generally, you can use
just uint32_t's for 1 to 32 bits, or uint64_t for 1 to 64 bits, and the
compiler will properly up-convert smaller entities.
Signals wider than 64 bits are stored as an array of 32-bit uint32_t's.
Thus to read bits 31:0, access signal[0], and for bits 63:32, access
signal[1]. Unused bits (for example bit numbers 65-96 of a 65 bit vector)
will always be zero. if you change the value you must make sure to pack
zeros in the unused bits or core-dumps may result. (Because Verilator
strips array bound checks where it believes them to be unnecessary.)
In the SYSTEMC example above, if you had in our.v:
input clk /*verilator public*/;
// Note the placement of the semicolon above
From the sc_main.cpp file, you'd then:
#include "Vour.h"
#include "Vour_our.h"
cout << "clock is " << top->v->clk << endl;
In this example, clk is a bool you can read or set as any other variable.
The value of normal signals may be set, though clocks shouldn't be changed
by your code or you'll get strange results.
=item Should a module be in Verilog or SystemC?
Sometimes there is a block that just interconnects cells, and have a choice
as to if you write it in Verilog or SystemC. Everything else being equal,
best performance is when Verilator sees all of the design. So, look at the
hierarchy of your design, labeling cells as to if they are SystemC or
Verilog. Then:
A module with only SystemC cells below must be SystemC.
A module with a mix of Verilog and SystemC cells below must be SystemC. (As
Verilator cannot connect to lower-level SystemC cells.)
A module with only Verilog cells below can be either, but for best
performance should be Verilog. (The exception is if you have a design that
is instantiated many times; in this case Verilating one of the lower
modules and instantiating that Verilated cells multiple times into a
SystemC module *may* be faster.)
=back
=head1 BUGS
First, check the the coding limitations section.
Next, try the --debug switch. This will enable additional internal
assertions, and may help identify the problem.
Finally, reduce your code to the smallest possible routine that exhibits
the bug. Even better, create a test in the test_regress/t directory, as
follows:
cd test_regress
cp -p t/t_EXAMPLE.pl t/t_BUG.pl
cp -p t/t_EXAMPLE.v t/t_BUG.v
Edit t/t_BUG.pl to suit your example; you can do anything you want in the
Verilog code there; just make sure it retains the single clk input and no
outputs. Now, the following should fail:
cd test_regress
t/t_BUG.pl
Finally, report the bug using the bug tracker at
L<http://www.veripool.org/verilator>. The bug will become publicly
visible; if this is unacceptable, mail the bug report to
C<wsnyder@wsnyder.org>.
=head1 HISTORY
Verilator was conceived in 1994 by Paul Wasson at the Core Logic Group
at Digital Equipment Corporation. The Verilog code that was converted
to C was then merged with a C based CPU model of the Alpha processor
and simulated in a C based environment called CCLI.
In 1995 Verilator started being used also for Multimedia and Network
Processor development inside Digital. Duane Galbi took over active
development of Verilator, and added several performance enhancements.
CCLI was still being used as the shell.
In 1998, through the efforts of existing DECies, mainly Duane Galbi,
Digital graciously agreed to release the source code. (Subject to the
code not being resold, which is compatible with the GNU Public
License.)
In 2001, Wilson Snyder took the kit, and added a SystemC mode, and
called it Verilator2. This was the first packaged public release.
In 2002, Wilson Snyder created Verilator3 by rewriting Verilator from
scratch in C++. This added many optimizations, yielding about a 2-5x
performance gain.
Currently, various language features and performance enhancements are added
as the need arises. Verilator is now about 2x faster than in 2002, and is
faster than many popular commercial simulators.
=head1 CONTRIBUTORS
Many people have provided ideas and other assistance with Verilator.
The major corporate sponsors of Verilator, by providing funds or equipment
grants include Compaq Corporation, Digital Equipment Corporation, Intel
Corporation, Maker Communications, MicroTune Inc., Sun Microsystems,
Nauticus Networks, and SiCortex Inc.
The people who have contributed code or other major functionality are Lane
Brooks, Duane Galbi, Paul Wasson, and Wilson Snyder. Major testers include
Jeff Dutton, Ralf Karge, David Hewson, Wim Michiels, and Gene Weber.
Some of the people who have provided ideas and feedback for Verilator
include David Addison, Hans Van Antwerpen, Vasu Arasanipalai, Jens Arm,
Jeremy Bennett, David Black, Gregg Bouchard, Chris Boumenot, Bryan Brady,
Lane Brooks, John Brownlee, Lauren Carlson, Robert A. Clark, Allan
Cochrane, Gunter Dannoritzer, Bernard Deadman, John Deroo, John Dickol,
Danny Ding, Jeff Dutton, Robert Farrell, Eugen Fekete, Sam Gladstone,
Thomas Hawkins, David Hewson, Jae Hossell, Ben Jackson, Mike Kagen,
Patricio Kaplan, Ralf Karge, Dan Katz, Sol Katzman, Jonathan Kimmitt,
Gernot Koch, Steve Kolecki, Steve Lang, Stephane Laurent, Charlie Lind, Dan
Lussier, Fred Ma, Wim Michiels, John Murphy, Richard Myers, Paul Nitza,
Lisa Noack, Mark Nodine, Niranjan Prabhu, Oleg Rodionov, Mike Shinkarovsky,
Rafael Shirakawa, Rodney Sinclair, John Stroebel, Emerson Suguimoto, Renga
Sundararajan, Stefan Thiede, Steve Tong, Holger Waechtler, Shawn Wang, Greg
Waters, Eugene Weber, Leon Wildman, Gerald Williams, Johan Wouters, and
Ding Xiaoliang.
=head1 DISTRIBUTION
The latest version is available from L<http://www.veripool.org/>.
Copyright 2003-2009 by Wilson Snyder. Verilator is free software; you can
redistribute it and/or modify the Verilator internals under the terms of
either the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 3 or the Perl Artistic
License Version 2.0.
=head1 AUTHORS
When possible, please instead report bugs to L<http://www.veripool.org/>.
Wilson Snyder <wsnyder@wsnyder.org>
Major concepts by Paul Wasson and Duane Galbi.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<verilator_profcfunc>, L<systemperl>, L<vcoverage>, L<make>
=cut
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