- Allow arbitrary number of open array dimensions, not just 3. Note
right now this only works with the array querying functions specified
in IEEE 1800-2017 H.12.2
- Issue error when passing dynamic array or queue as DPI open array
(currently unsupported)
- Also tweaked AstVar::vlArgTypeRecurse, which should now error or fail
for unsupported types.
- Issue an error when --build is used together with --make
- When given --build, always use GNU Make to perform the build
- Update documentation (examples were good as they were)
- Remove the broken t_flag_build_cmake test
Fixes#2280
Use SIMD intrinsics to render VCD traces.
I have measured 10-40% single threaded performance increase with VCD
tracing on SweRV EH1 and lowRISC Ibex using SSE2 intrinsics to render
the trace. Also helps a tiny bit with FST, but now almost all of the FST
overhead is in the FST library.
I have reworked the tracing routines to use more precisely sized
arguments. The nice thing about this is that the performance without the
intrinsics is pretty much the same as it was before, as we do at most 2x
as much work as necessary, but in exchange there are no data dependent
branches at all.
- 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.
The FST trace timescale used to be set in the constructor via
set_time_unit, but at that point we haven't normally opened the
file yet so it was just dropped. On top of that, we actually want
to use set_time_resolution... FST trace timescales now match the VCD.
If the first dump was not at time zero, then the FST trace used
to contain the initial values as if they were set at time zero. Now
they only appear at the time the first dump call is actually made,
and hence match the VCD trace exactly.
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".