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author | Nao Pross <np@0hm.ch> | 2021-05-22 01:49:10 +0200 |
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committer | Nao Pross <np@0hm.ch> | 2021-05-22 01:49:10 +0200 |
commit | 10224a1584851e6c229c1695c5890aa665db8cad (patch) | |
tree | 85207566f0bf418e9c00cec8c4b7c5589ff560fc /tex | |
parent | Start testing (diff) | |
download | DigDes-10224a1584851e6c229c1695c5890aa665db8cad.tar.gz DigDes-10224a1584851e6c229c1695c5890aa665db8cad.zip |
Write on conflict and libraries
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | tex/testbench.tex | 16 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | tex/vhdl.tex | 52 |
2 files changed, 61 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/tex/testbench.tex b/tex/testbench.tex index b555feb..60e654b 100644 --- a/tex/testbench.tex +++ b/tex/testbench.tex @@ -22,6 +22,7 @@ be ignored. This is much more typical and realistic, thus when unspecified, \begin{lstlisting}[language=vhdl] y <= `\reqph{expression}` after `\reqph{time}`; \end{lstlisting} +%% TODO: tikz timing diagram \subsection{Generate stimuli} Simple stimuli (signals) are generated using processes. For example a clock @@ -75,7 +76,7 @@ For loops are also available, and can be synthesised if they run over a finite range. \begin{lstlisting}[language=vhdl] `\optionalph{label}:` for `\reqph{parameter}` in `\reqph{range}` loop - -- sequentail statements + -- sequential statements end loop `\optionalph{label}`; \end{lstlisting} A concrete example: @@ -89,7 +90,7 @@ signal a, b : std_ulogic_vector(n-1 downto 0); for i in 0 to 2**n -1 loop a <= std_ulogic_vector( to_unsigned(i, n)); - for k in 0 to 2**n - 1 loop + for k in 0 to 2**n -1 loop b <= std_ulogic_vector( to_unsigned(k, n)); end loop; @@ -97,3 +98,14 @@ end loop; \end{lstlisting} \subsection{Assertions} +Assertions are used write tests to check that a signal is in the correct state. +\begin{lstlisting}[language=vhdl] +`\optionalph{label}`: assert `\reqph{condition}` report `\reqph{string}` severity `\reqph{severity}`; +\end{lstlisting} +The \vhdl{report} and \vhdl{severity} are optional but strongly advised. The +severity can take one of 4 values: \vhdl{note}, \vhdl{warning}, \vhdl{error}, +\vhdl{failure}. Simulations can be configured to stop in when an error of the +desired severity occurrs. An example: +\begin{lstlisting}[language=vhdl] +assert (tb_y = '0') report "error at vector 11" severity error; +\end{lstlisting} diff --git a/tex/vhdl.tex b/tex/vhdl.tex index 4674f4a..e42ab27 100644 --- a/tex/vhdl.tex +++ b/tex/vhdl.tex @@ -18,6 +18,28 @@ Two dashes in a row cause the rest of the line to be interpreted as a comment. expression; -- comment \end{lstlisting} +\subsection{Structure and Libraries} +The VHDL code is organized into \emph{libraries} declared with the +\vhdl{library} keyword. The library of your code is called \texttt{work}, +standard features (\texttt{bit}, \texttt{integer}, \ldots) are found in +\texttt{std}, and IEEE standard parts are in \texttt{ieee}. \texttt{work} and +\texttt{std} are always implicit and must not be declared. +\begin{lstlisting}[language=vhdl] +library `\reqph{library name}`; +\end{lstlisting} +Once declared a library is composed of \emph{packages}, which can contain +elements (constants, entities, \ldots). To access the elements the syntax is +\begin{lstlisting}[language=vhdl] +`\reqph{library}`.`\reqph{package}`.`\reqph{element}`; +\end{lstlisting} +To avoid having to write a long name every time it is possible to import names +using +\begin{lstlisting}[language=vhdl] +use `\reqph{library}`.`\reqph{element or {\tt all}}`; +use `\reqph{library}`.`\reqph{package}`.`\reqph{element or {\tt all}}`; +\end{lstlisting} + + \subsection{Entities and Architectures} In VHDL the concept of \emph{entity} describes a black box of which only inputs and outputs are known. The internals of an entity are described through @@ -73,8 +95,8 @@ entity `\reqph{name}` is end `\reqph{name}`; \end{lstlisting} -Architectures are normally named after the design model, example are -\texttt{behavioral}, \texttt{structural}, \texttt{selective}, etc. +Architectures are normally named after the design model, examples are +\texttt{behavioral}, \texttt{structural}. \begin{lstlisting}[language=vhdl] architecture `\reqph{name}` of `\reqph{entity}` is -- declare used variables, signals and component types @@ -83,7 +105,7 @@ begin end `\optionalph{name}`; \end{lstlisting} -\subsection{Electric types and Libraries} +\subsection{Electric types} VHDL provides some types such as \begin{itemize} \item \vhdl{boolean} true or false, @@ -94,7 +116,7 @@ VHDL provides some types such as From external libraries other types are available: \begin{itemize} \item \vhdl{std_logic} advanced logic with 9 states, - \item \vhdl{std_ulogic} + \item \vhdl{std_ulogic} same as the previous but \emph{unresolved}. \end{itemize} The above are from the \vhdl{ieee.std_logic_1164} library, and can take the values described in the following table. @@ -115,7 +137,27 @@ values described in the following table. \bottomrule \end{tabularx} \end{center} -%% TODO: copy conflict resolutiontable +For the \emph{resolved} types, i.e. \vhdl{std_logic} types, when a signal is +multiply driven the conflict is resolved according to the table below. +Unresolved type will give a synthesization error. +\begin{center} + \ttfamily + \begin{tabular}{c|ccccccccc} + \toprule + & U & X & 0 & 1 & Z & W & L & H & - \\ + \midrule + U & U & U & U & U & U & U & U & U & U \\ + X & U & X & X & X & X & X & X & X & X \\ + 0 & U & X & 0 & X & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 & X \\ + 1 & U & X & X & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & X \\ + Z & U & X & 0 & 1 & Z & W & L & H & X \\ + W & U & X & 0 & 1 & W & W & W & W & X \\ + L & U & X & 0 & 1 & L & W & L & W & X \\ + H & U & X & 0 & 1 & H & W & W & H & X \\ + - & U & X & X & X & X & X & X & X & X \\ + \bottomrule + \end{tabular} +\end{center} \subsection{Declarations} \label{sec:declarations} Before a \vhdl{begin} -- \vhdl{end} block, there is usually a list of declarations. |