Add a new pass to split up (recursively):
foo = {l, r};
into the following, with the right indices, iff the concatenation
straddles a wide word boundary.
foo[_:_] = r;
foo[_:_] = l;
This eliminates more wide temporaries.
Another 23% speedup on VeeR EH2 high_perf. Also brings the predicted
stack size from 8M to 40k.
`$psprintf` is a non-standard system function present in some other
simulators, and has been rejected for standardization by IEEE because
of being basically the same as `$sformatf`.
To encourage users to fix their codebase, a warning is emitted by
default, but it gets otherwise interpreted as `$sformatf` as early as
during lexing.
Signed-off-by: Arkadiusz Kozdra <akozdra@antmicro.com>
* wording/formatting
Signed-off-by: Arkadiusz Kozdra <akozdra@antmicro.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: Arkadiusz Kozdra <akozdra@antmicro.com>
For NBAs that might execute a dynamic number of times in a single
evaluation (specifically: those that assign to array elements inside
loops), we introduce a new run-time VlNBACommitQueue data-structure
(currently a vector), which stores all pending updates and the necessary
info to reconstruct the LHS reference of the AstAssignDly at run-time.
All variables needing a commit queue has their corresponding unique
commit queue.
All NBAs to a variable that requires a commit queue go through the
commit queue. This is necessary to preserve update order in sequential
code, e.g.:
a[7] <= 10
for (int i = 1 ; i < 10; ++i) a[i] <= i;
a[2] <= 10
needs to end with array elements 1..9 being 1, 10, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
This enables supporting common forms of NBAs to arrays on the left hand
side of <= in non-suspendable/non-fork code. (Suspendable/fork
implementation is unclear to me so I left it unchanged, see #5084).
Any NBA that does not need a commit queue (i.e.: those that were
supported before), use the same scheme as before, and this patch should
have no effect on the generated code for those NBAs.