* Tests: Add t_hier_block_sc_trace(fst|vcd) that tests tracing hierarchical block on SystemC.
* Add a check that elaboration is done before a trace file is opened.
* Add a check that elaboration is done before trace() is called to verilated SystemC model.
* Tests: call sc_core::sc_start(sc_core::SC_ZERO_TIME) before opening a trace file
* Tests: Fix t_trace_two_sc to call sc_start before opening trace
* Use vl_fatal as suggested in PR review.
This patch partitions AstCFuncs under an AstNodeModule based on which
header files they require for their implementation, and emits them
into separate files based on the distinct dependency sets. This helps
with incremental recompilation of the output C++.
Tests used to silently pass when vcddiff aborted. Now fixed. Updated
large array trace reference files for FST, added same reference files
for VCD.
Developers need to update their local vcddiff.
This commit adds the '--simbenchmark' option to the regression test compile command.
The option is not intended as a fully-fledged benchmarking infrastructure, but rather a
utility for easily generating cycle- and execution time information when executing a verilated test.
As an example use case, the included test file shows how optimization level is varied across
three different builds+simulations, with the statistics for each run output to the same file in
the output directory.
Future work:
- 'sim_time' in the generated top-level main file should be a parameter.
- Given the above, the test execution script from verilog-sim-benchmark can be integrated
to generate better estimates of cycles/second through varying 'sim_time' over multiple executions.
Using the standard model Makefile, when in addition to an explicit
target, the target 'ccache-report' is also given, a summary of ccache
hits/misses during this invocation of 'make' will be prited at the end
of the build.
** Add simulation context (VerilatedContext) to allow multiple fully independent
models to be in the same process. Please see the updated examples.
** Add context->time() and context->timeInc() API calls, to set simulation time.
These now are recommended in place of the legacy sc_time_stamp().
* Fix memory leak of t_trace_cat and t_trace_cat_renew
* Fix memory leak of t_trace_c_api
* Fix memory leak in t_trace_public_func and t_trace_public_func_vlt
* Fix memory leaks in t_flat_build (and probably more).
* Use unique_ptr in testcases
Change the Travis builds to use workspaces and persistent ccache
We proceed in 2 stages (as before, but using workspaces for
persistence):
1. In the 'build' stage, we clone the repo, build it and
save the whole checkout ($TRAVIS_BUILD_DIR) as a workspace
2. In the 'test' stage, rather than cloning the repo, multiple jobs
pull down the same workspace we built to run the tests from
This enables:
- Reuse of the build in multiple test jobs (this is what we used the Travis
cache for before)
- Each job having a separate persistent Travis cache, which now only
contains the ccache. This means all jobs, including 'build' and 'test'
jobs can make maximum use of ccache across runs. This drastically cuts
down build times when the ccache hits, which is very often the case for
'test' jobs. Also, the separate caches only store the objects build by
the particular job that owns the cache, so we can keep the per job
ccache small.
If the commit message contains '[travis ccache clear]', the ccache will
be cleared at the beginning of the build. This can be used to test build
complete within the 50 minute timeout imposed by Travis, even without a
persistent ccache.
This allows compiling the run-time library with optimization even when OPT_FAST is not used in order to imporove model build speed, possibly during debug cycles.
- Packaged SystemC lives in /usr so needed to update regex in test
driver
- Clang 10 complains about mixed named and positional initializers in
struct definitions.
The --trace-threads option can now be used to perform tracing on a
thread separate from the main thread when using VCD tracing (with
--trace-threads 1). For FST tracing --trace-threads can be 1 or 2, and
--trace-fst --trace-threads 1 is the same a what --trace-fst-threads
used to be (which is now deprecated).
Performance numbers on SweRV EH1 CoreMark, clang 6.0.0, Intel i7-3770 @
3.40GHz, IO to ramdisk, with numactl set to schedule threads on different
physical cores. Relative speedup:
--trace -> --trace --trace-threads 1 +22%
--trace-fst -> --trace-fst --trace-threads 1 +38% (as --trace-fst-thread)
--trace-fst -> --trace-fst --trace-threads 2 +93%
Speed relative to --trace with no threaded tracing:
--trace 1.00 x
--trace --trace-threads 1 0.82 x
--trace-fst 1.79 x
--trace-fst --trace-threads 1 1.23 x
--trace-fst --trace-threads 2 0.87 x
This means FST tracing with 2 extra threads is now faster than single
threaded VCD tracing, and is on par with threaded VCD tracing. You do
pay for it in total compute though as --trace-fst --trace-threads 2 uses
about 240% CPU vs 150% for --trace-fst --trace-threads 1, and 155% for
--trace --trace threads 1. Still for interactive use it should be
helpful with large designs.
Includes `timescale, $printtimescale, $timeformat.
VL_TIME_MULTIPLIER, VL_TIME_PRECISION, VL_TIME_UNIT have been removed
and the time precision must now match the SystemC time precision.
To get closer behavior to older versions, use e.g. --timescale-override
"1ps/1ps".