| |
| \chapter{Implementation Overview} |
| \label{chapter:overview} |
| |
| Yosys is an extensible open source hardware synthesis tool. It is aimed at |
| designers who are looking for an easily accessible, universal, and |
| vendor-independent synthesis tool, as well as scientists who do research in |
| electronic design automation (EDA) and are looking for an open synthesis |
| framework that can be used to test algorithms on complex real-world designs. |
| |
| Yosys can synthesize a large subset of Verilog 2005 and has been tested with a |
| wide range of real-world designs, including the OpenRISC 1200 CPU |
| \citeweblink{OR1200}, the openMSP430 CPU \citeweblink{openMSP430}, the |
| OpenCores I$^2$C master \citeweblink{i2cmaster} and the k68 CPU \citeweblink{k68}. |
| |
| As of this writing a Yosys VHDL frontend is in development. |
| |
| Yosys is written in C++ (using some features from the new C++11 standard). This |
| chapter describes some of the fundamental Yosys data structures. For the sake |
| of simplicity the C++ type names used in the Yosys implementation are used in |
| this chapter, even though the chapter only explains the conceptual idea behind |
| it and can be used as reference to implement a similar system in any language. |
| |
| \section{Simplified Data Flow} |
| |
| Figure~\ref{fig:Overview_flow} shows the simplified data flow within Yosys. |
| Rectangles in the figure represent program modules and ellipses internal |
| data structures that are used to exchange design data between the program |
| modules. |
| |
| Design data is read in using one of the frontend modules. The high-level HDL |
| frontends for Verilog and VHDL code generate an abstract syntax tree (AST) that |
| is then passed to the AST frontend. Note that both HDL frontends use the same |
| AST representation that is powerful enough to cover the Verilog HDL and VHDL |
| language. |
| |
| The AST Frontend then compiles the AST to Yosys's main internal data format, |
| the RTL Intermediate Language (RTLIL). A more detailed description of this format |
| is given in the next section. |
| |
| There is also a text representation of the RTLIL data structure that can be |
| parsed using the ILANG Frontend. |
| |
| The design data may then be transformed using a series of passes that all |
| operate on the RTLIL representation of the design. |
| |
| Finally the design in RTLIL representation is converted back to text by one |
| of the backends, namely the Verilog Backend for generating Verilog netlists |
| and the ILANG Backend for writing the RTLIL data in the same format that is |
| understood by the ILANG Frontend. |
| |
| With the exception of the AST Frontend, which is called by the high-level HDL |
| frontends and can't be called directly by the user, all program modules are |
| called by the user (usually using a synthesis script that contains text |
| commands for Yosys). |
| |
| By combining passes in different ways and/or adding additional passes to Yosys |
| it is possible to adapt Yosys to a wide range of applications. For this to be |
| possible it is key that (1) all passes operate on the same data structure |
| (RTLIL) and (2) that this data structure is powerful enough to represent the design |
| in different stages of the synthesis. |
| |
| \begin{figure}[t] |
| \hfil |
| \begin{tikzpicture} |
| \tikzstyle{process} = [draw, fill=green!10, rectangle, minimum height=3em, minimum width=10em, node distance=15em] |
| \tikzstyle{data} = [draw, fill=blue!10, ellipse, minimum height=3em, minimum width=7em, node distance=15em] |
| \node[process] (vlog) {Verilog Frontend}; |
| \node[process, dashed, fill=green!5] (vhdl) [right of=vlog] {VHDL Frontend}; |
| \node[process] (ilang) [right of=vhdl] {ILANG Frontend}; |
| \node[data] (ast) [below of=vlog, node distance=5em, xshift=7.5em] {AST}; |
| \node[process] (astfe) [below of=ast, node distance=5em] {AST Frontend}; |
| \node[data] (rtlil) [below of=astfe, node distance=5em, xshift=7.5em] {RTLIL}; |
| \node[process] (pass) [right of=rtlil, node distance=5em, xshift=7.5em] {Passes}; |
| \node[process] (vlbe) [below of=rtlil, node distance=7em, xshift=-13em] {Verilog Backend}; |
| \node[process] (ilangbe) [below of=rtlil, node distance=7em, xshift=0em] {ILANG Backend}; |
| \node[process, dashed, fill=green!5] (otherbe) [below of=rtlil, node distance=7em, xshift=+13em] {Other Backends}; |
| |
| \draw[-latex] (vlog) -- (ast); |
| \draw[-latex] (vhdl) -- (ast); |
| \draw[-latex] (ast) -- (astfe); |
| \draw[-latex] (astfe) -- (rtlil); |
| \draw[-latex] (ilang) -- (rtlil); |
| \draw[latex-latex] (rtlil) -- (pass); |
| \draw[-latex] (rtlil) -- (vlbe); |
| \draw[-latex] (rtlil) -- (ilangbe); |
| \draw[-latex] (rtlil) -- (otherbe); |
| \end{tikzpicture} |
| \caption{Yosys simplified data flow (ellipses: data structures, rectangles: program modules)} |
| \label{fig:Overview_flow} |
| \end{figure} |
| |
| \section{The RTL Intermediate Language} |
| |
| All frontends, passes and backends in Yosys operate on a design in RTLIL\footnote{The {\it Language} in {\it RTL Intermediate Language} |
| refers to the fact, that RTLIL also has a text representation, usually referred to as {\it Intermediate Language} (ILANG).} representation. |
| The only exception are the high-level frontends that use the AST representation as an intermediate step before generating RTLIL |
| data. |
| |
| In order to avoid reinventing names for the RTLIL classes, they are simply referred to by their full C++ name, i.e.~including |
| the {\tt RTLIL::} namespace prefix, in this document. |
| |
| Figure~\ref{fig:Overview_RTLIL} shows a simplified Entity-Relationship Diagram (ER Diagram) of RTLIL. In $1:N$ relationships the arrow |
| points from the $N$ side to the $1$. For example one RTLIL::Design contains $N$ (zero to many) instances of RTLIL::Module. |
| A two-pointed arrow indicates a $1:1$ relationship. |
| |
| The RTLIL::Design is the root object of the RTLIL data structure. There is always one ``current design'' in memory |
| which passes operate on, frontends add data to and backends convert to exportable formats. But in some cases passes |
| internally generate additional RTLIL::Design objects. For example when a pass is reading an auxiliary Verilog file such |
| as a cell library, it might create an additional RTLIL::Design object and call the Verilog frontend with this |
| other object to parse the cell library. |
| |
| \begin{figure}[t] |
| \hfil |
| \begin{tikzpicture} |
| \tikzstyle{entity} = [draw, fill=gray!10, rectangle, minimum height=3em, minimum width=7em, node distance=5em, font={\ttfamily}] |
| \node[entity] (design) {RTLIL::Design}; |
| \node[entity] (module) [right of=design, node distance=11em] {RTLIL::Module} edge [-latex] node[above] {\tiny 1 \hskip3em N} (design); |
| |
| \node[entity] (process) [fill=green!10, right of=module, node distance=10em] {RTLIL::Process} (process.west) edge [-latex] (module); |
| \node[entity] (memory) [fill=red!10, below of=process] {RTLIL::Memory} edge [-latex] (module); |
| \node[entity] (wire) [fill=blue!10, above of=process] {RTLIL::Wire} (wire.west) edge [-latex] (module); |
| \node[entity] (cell) [fill=blue!10, above of=wire] {RTLIL::Cell} (cell.west) edge [-latex] (module); |
| |
| \node[entity] (case) [fill=green!10, right of=process, node distance=10em] {RTLIL::CaseRule} edge [latex-latex] (process); |
| \node[entity] (sync) [fill=green!10, above of=case] {RTLIL::SyncRule} edge [-latex] (process); |
| \node[entity] (switch) [fill=green!10, below of=case] {RTLIL::SwitchRule} edge [-latex] (case); |
| \draw[latex-] (switch.east) -- ++(1em,0) |- (case.east); |
| \end{tikzpicture} |
| \caption{Simplified RTLIL Entity-Relationship Diagram} |
| \label{fig:Overview_RTLIL} |
| \end{figure} |
| |
| There is only one active RTLIL::Design object that is used by all frontends, |
| passes and backends called by the user, e.g.~using a synthesis script. The RTLIL::Design then contains |
| zero to many RTLIL::Module objects. This corresponds to modules in Verilog or entities in VHDL. Each |
| module in turn contains objects from three different categories: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item RTLIL::Cell and RTLIL::Wire objects represent classical netlist data. |
| \item RTLIL::Process objects represent the decision trees (if-then-else statements, etc.) and synchronization |
| declarations (clock signals and sensitivity) from Verilog {\tt always} and VHDL {\tt process} blocks. |
| \item RTLIL::Memory objects represent addressable memories (arrays). |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| \begin{sloppypar} |
| Usually the output of the synthesis procedure is a netlist, i.e. all |
| RTLIL::Process and RTLIL::Memory objects must be replaced by RTLIL::Cell and |
| RTLIL::Wire objects by synthesis passes. |
| \end{sloppypar} |
| |
| All features of the HDL that cannot be mapped directly to these RTLIL classes must be |
| transformed to an RTLIL-compatible representation by the HDL frontend. This includes |
| Verilog-features such as generate-blocks, loops and parameters. |
| |
| The following sections contain a more detailed description of the different |
| parts of RTLIL and rationale behind some of the design decisions. |
| |
| \subsection{RTLIL Identifiers} |
| |
| All identifiers in RTLIL (such as module names, port names, signal names, cell |
| types, etc.) follow the following naming convention: they must either start with |
| a backslash (\textbackslash) or a dollar sign (\$). |
| |
| Identifiers starting with a backslash are public visible identifiers. Usually |
| they originate from one of the HDL input files. For example the signal name ``{\tt \textbackslash sig42}'' |
| is most likely a signal that was declared using the name ``{\tt sig42}'' in an HDL input file. |
| On the other hand the signal name ``{\tt \$sig42}'' is an auto-generated signal name. The backends |
| convert all identifiers that start with a dollar sign to identifiers that do not collide with |
| identifiers that start with a backslash. |
| |
| This has three advantages: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item First, it is impossible that an auto-generated identifier collides with |
| an identifier that was provided by the user. |
| \item Second, the information about which identifiers were originally |
| provided by the user is always available which can help guide some optimizations. For example the ``opt\_rmunused'' |
| tries to preserve signals with a user-provided name but doesn't hesitate to delete signals that have |
| auto-generated names when they just duplicate other signals. |
| \item Third, the delicate job of finding suitable auto-generated public visible |
| names is deferred to one central location. Internally auto-generated names that |
| may hold important information for Yosys developers can be used without |
| disturbing external tools. For example the Verilog backend assigns names in the form {\tt \_{\it integer}\_}. |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| In order to avoid programming errors, the RTLIL data structures check if all |
| identifiers start with either a backslash or a dollar sign and generate a |
| runtime error if this rule is violated. |
| |
| All RTLIL identifiers are case sensitive. |
| |
| \subsection{RTLIL::Design and RTLIL::Module} |
| |
| The RTLIL::Design object is basically just a container for RTLIL::Module objects. In addition to |
| a list of RTLIL::Module objects the RTLIL::Design also keeps a list of {\it selected objects}, i.e. |
| the objects that passes should operate on. In most cases the whole design is selected and therefore |
| passes operate on the whole design. But this mechanism can be useful for more complex synthesis jobs |
| in which only parts of the design should be affected by certain passes. |
| |
| Besides the objects shown in the ER diagram in Fig.~\ref{fig:Overview_RTLIL} an RTLIL::Module object |
| contains the following additional properties: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item The module name |
| \item A list of attributes |
| \item A list of connections between wires |
| \item An optional frontend callback used to derive parametrized variations of the module |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| The attributes can be Verilog attributes imported by the Verilog frontend or attributes assigned |
| by passes. They can be used to store additional metadata about modules or just mark them to be |
| used by certain part of the synthesis script but not by others. |
| |
| Verilog and VHDL both support parametric modules (known as ``generic entities'' in VHDL). The RTLIL |
| format does not support parametric modules itself. Instead each module contains a callback function |
| into the AST frontend to generate a parametrized variation of the RTLIL::Module as needed. This |
| callback then returns the auto-generated name of the parametrized variation of the module. (A hash |
| over the parameters and the module name is used to prohibit the same parametrized variation from being |
| generated twice. For modules with only a few parameters, a name directly containing all parameters |
| is generated instead of a hash string.) |
| |
| \subsection{RTLIL::Cell and RTLIL::Wire} |
| |
| A module contains zero to many RTLIL::Cell and RTLIL::Wire objects. Objects of |
| these types are used to model netlists. Usually the goal of all synthesis efforts is to convert |
| all modules to a state where the functionality of the module is implemented only by cells |
| from a given cell library and wires to connect these cells with each other. Note that module |
| ports are just wires with a special property. |
| |
| An RTLIL::Wire object has the following properties: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item The wire name |
| \item A list of attributes |
| \item A width (buses are just wires with a width > 1) |
| \item If the wire is a port: port number and direction (input/output/inout) |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| As with modules, the attributes can be Verilog attributes imported by the |
| Verilog frontend or attributes assigned by passes. |
| |
| In Yosys, busses (signal vectors) are represented using a single wire object |
| with a width > 1. So Yosys does not convert signal vectors to individual signals. |
| This makes some aspects of RTLIL more complex but enables Yosys to be used for |
| coarse grain synthesis where the cells of the target architecture operate on |
| entire signal vectors instead of single bit wires. |
| |
| An RTLIL::Cell object has the following properties: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item The cell name and type |
| \item A list of attributes |
| \item A list of parameters (for parametric cells) |
| \item Cell ports and the connections of ports to wires and constants |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| The connections of ports to wires are coded by assigning an RTLIL::SigSpec |
| to each cell port. The RTLIL::SigSpec data type is described in the next section. |
| |
| \subsection{RTLIL::SigSpec} |
| |
| A ``signal'' is everything that can be applied to a cell port. I.e. |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item Any constant value of arbitrary bit-width \\ |
| \null\hskip1em For example: \lstinline[language=Verilog]{1337, 16'b0000010100111001, 1'b1, 1'bx} |
| \item All bits of a wire or a selection of bits from a wire \\ |
| \null\hskip1em For example: \lstinline[language=Verilog]{mywire, mywire[24], mywire[15:8]} |
| \item Concatenations of the above \\ |
| \null\hskip1em For example: \lstinline[language=Verilog]|{16'd1337, mywire[15:8]}| |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| The RTLIL::SigSpec data type is used to represent signals. The RTLIL::Cell |
| object contains one RTLIL::SigSpec for each cell port. |
| |
| In addition, connections between wires are represented using a pair of |
| RTLIL::SigSpec objects. Such pairs are needed in different locations. Therefore |
| the type name RTLIL::SigSig was defined for such a pair. |
| |
| \subsection{RTLIL::Process} |
| |
| When a high-level HDL frontend processes behavioural code it splits it up into |
| data path logic (e.g.~the expression {\tt a + b} is replaced by the output of an |
| adder that takes {\tt a} and {\tt b} as inputs) and an RTLIL::Process that models |
| the control logic of the behavioural code. Let's consider a simple example: |
| |
| \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=left,frame=single,language=Verilog] |
| module ff_with_en_and_async_reset(clock, reset, enable, d, q); |
| input clock, reset, enable, d; |
| output reg q; |
| always @(posedge clock, posedge reset) |
| if (reset) |
| q <= 0; |
| else if (enable) |
| q <= d; |
| endmodule |
| \end{lstlisting} |
| |
| In this example there is no data path and therefore the RTLIL::Module generated by |
| the frontend only contains a few RTLIL::Wire objects and an RTLIL::Process. |
| The RTLIL::Process in ILANG syntax: |
| |
| \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=left,frame=single,language=rtlil] |
| process $proc$ff_with_en_and_async_reset.v:4$1 |
| assign $0\q[0:0] \q |
| switch \reset |
| case 1'1 |
| assign $0\q[0:0] 1'0 |
| case |
| switch \enable |
| case 1'1 |
| assign $0\q[0:0] \d |
| case |
| end |
| end |
| sync posedge \clock |
| update \q $0\q[0:0] |
| sync posedge \reset |
| update \q $0\q[0:0] |
| end |
| \end{lstlisting} |
| |
| This RTLIL::Process contains two RTLIL::SyncRule objects, two RTLIL::SwitchRule |
| objects and five RTLIL::CaseRule objects. The wire {\tt \$0\textbackslash{}q[0:0]} |
| is an automatically created wire that holds the next value of {\tt \textbackslash{}q}. The lines |
| $2 \dots 12$ describe how {\tt \$0\textbackslash{}q[0:0]} should be calculated. The |
| lines $13 \dots 16$ describe how the value of {\tt \$0\textbackslash{}q[0:0]} is used |
| to update {\tt \textbackslash{}q}. |
| |
| An RTLIL::Process is a container for zero or more RTLIL::SyncRule objects and |
| exactly one RTLIL::CaseRule object, which is called the {\it root case}. |
| |
| An RTLIL::SyncRule object contains an (optional) synchronization condition (signal and edge-type) and zero or |
| more assignments (RTLIL::SigSig). The {\tt always} synchronization condition is used to break combinatorial |
| loops when a latch should be inferred instead. |
| |
| An RTLIL::CaseRule is a container for zero or more assignments (RTLIL::SigSig) |
| and zero or more RTLIL::SwitchRule objects. An RTLIL::SwitchRule objects is a |
| container for zero or more RTLIL::CaseRule objects. |
| |
| In the above example the lines $2 \dots 12$ are the root case. Here {\tt \$0\textbackslash{}q[0:0]} is first |
| assigned the old value {\tt \textbackslash{}q} as default value (line 2). The root case |
| also contains an RTLIL::SwitchRule object (lines $3 \dots 12$). Such an object is very similar to the C {\tt switch} |
| statement as it uses a control signal ({\tt \textbackslash{}reset} in this case) to determine |
| which of its cases should be active. The RTLIL::SwitchRule object then contains one RTLIL::CaseRule |
| object per case. In this example there is a case\footnote{The |
| syntax {\tt 1'1} in the ILANG code specifies a constant with a length of one bit (the first ``1''), |
| and this bit is a one (the second ``1'').} for {\tt \textbackslash{}reset == 1} that causes |
| {\tt \$0\textbackslash{}q[0:0]} to be set (lines 4 and 5) and a default case that in turn contains a switch that |
| sets {\tt \$0\textbackslash{}q[0:0]} to the value of {\tt \textbackslash{}d} if {\tt |
| \textbackslash{}enable} is active (lines $6 \dots 11$). |
| |
| A case can specify zero or more compare values that will determine whether it matches. Each of the compare values |
| must be the exact same width as the control signal. When more than one compare value is specified, the case matches |
| if any of them matches the control signal; when zero compare values are specified, the case always matches (i.e. |
| it is the default case). |
| |
| A switch prioritizes cases from first to last: multiple cases can match, but only the first matched case becomes |
| active. This normally synthesizes to a priority encoder. The {\tt parallel\_case} attribute allows passes to assume |
| that no more than one case will match, and {\tt full\_case} attribute allows passes to assume that exactly one |
| case will match; if these invariants are ever dynamically violated, the behavior is undefined. These attributes |
| are useful when an invariant invisible to the synthesizer causes the control signal to never take certain |
| bit patterns. |
| |
| The lines $13 \dots 16$ then cause {\tt \textbackslash{}q} to be updated whenever there is |
| a positive clock edge on {\tt \textbackslash{}clock} or {\tt \textbackslash{}reset}. |
| |
| In order to generate such a representation, the language frontend must be able to handle blocking |
| and nonblocking assignments correctly. However, the language frontend does not need to identify |
| the correct type of storage element for the output signal or generate multiplexers for the |
| decision tree. This is done by passes that work on the RTLIL representation. Therefore it is |
| relatively easy to substitute these steps with other algorithms that target different target |
| architectures or perform optimizations or other transformations on the decision trees before |
| further processing them. |
| |
| One of the first actions performed on a design in RTLIL representation in most |
| synthesis scripts is identifying asynchronous resets. This is usually done using the {\tt proc\_arst} |
| pass. This pass transforms the above example to the following RTLIL::Process: |
| |
| \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=left,frame=single,language=rtlil] |
| process $proc$ff_with_en_and_async_reset.v:4$1 |
| assign $0\q[0:0] \q |
| switch \enable |
| case 1'1 |
| assign $0\q[0:0] \d |
| case |
| end |
| sync posedge \clock |
| update \q $0\q[0:0] |
| sync high \reset |
| update \q 1'0 |
| end |
| \end{lstlisting} |
| |
| This pass has transformed the outer RTLIL::SwitchRule into a modified RTLIL::SyncRule object |
| for the {\tt \textbackslash{}reset} signal. Further processing converts the RTLIL::Process |
| into e.g.~a d-type flip-flop with asynchronous reset and a multiplexer for the enable signal: |
| |
| \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=left,frame=single,language=rtlil] |
| cell $adff $procdff$6 |
| parameter \ARST_POLARITY 1'1 |
| parameter \ARST_VALUE 1'0 |
| parameter \CLK_POLARITY 1'1 |
| parameter \WIDTH 1 |
| connect \ARST \reset |
| connect \CLK \clock |
| connect \D $0\q[0:0] |
| connect \Q \q |
| end |
| cell $mux $procmux$3 |
| parameter \WIDTH 1 |
| connect \A \q |
| connect \B \d |
| connect \S \enable |
| connect \Y $0\q[0:0] |
| end |
| \end{lstlisting} |
| |
| Different combinations of passes may yield different results. Note that {\tt \$adff} and {\tt |
| \$mux} are internal cell types that still need to be mapped to cell types from the |
| target cell library. |
| |
| Some passes refuse to operate on modules that still contain RTLIL::Process objects as the |
| presence of these objects in a module increases the complexity. Therefore the passes to translate |
| processes to a netlist of cells are usually called early in a synthesis script. The {\tt proc} |
| pass calls a series of other passes that together perform this conversion in a way that is suitable |
| for most synthesis tasks. |
| |
| \subsection{RTLIL::Memory} |
| |
| For every array (memory) in the HDL code an RTLIL::Memory object is created. A |
| memory object has the following properties: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item The memory name |
| \item A list of attributes |
| \item The width of an addressable word |
| \item The size of the memory in number of words |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| All read accesses to the memory are transformed to {\tt \$memrd} cells and all write accesses to |
| {\tt \$memwr} cells by the language frontend. These cells consist of independent read- and write-ports |
| to the memory. Memory initialization is transformed to {\tt \$meminit} cells by the language frontend. |
| The \B{MEMID} parameter on these cells is used to link them together and to the RTLIL::Memory object they belong to. |
| |
| The rationale behind using separate cells for the individual ports versus |
| creating a large multiport memory cell right in the language frontend is that |
| the separate {\tt \$memrd} and {\tt \$memwr} cells can be consolidated using resource sharing. |
| As resource sharing is a non-trivial optimization problem where different synthesis tasks |
| can have different requirements it lends itself to do the optimisation in separate passes and merge |
| the RTLIL::Memory objects and {\tt \$memrd} and {\tt \$memwr} cells to multiport memory blocks after resource sharing is completed. |
| |
| The {\tt memory} pass performs this conversion and can (depending on the options passed |
| to it) transform the memories directly to d-type flip-flops and address logic or yield |
| multiport memory blocks (represented using {\tt \$mem} cells). |
| |
| See Sec.~\ref{sec:memcells} for details about the memory cell types. |
| |
| \section{Command Interface and Synthesis Scripts} |
| |
| Yosys reads and processes commands from synthesis scripts, command line arguments and |
| an interactive command prompt. Yosys commands consist of a command name and an optional |
| whitespace separated list of arguments. Commands are terminated using the newline character |
| or a semicolon ({\tt ;}). Empty lines and lines starting with the hash sign ({\tt \#}) are ignored. |
| See Sec.~\ref{sec:typusecase} for an example synthesis script. |
| |
| The command {\tt help} can be used to access the command reference manual. |
| |
| Most commands can operate not only on the entire design but also specifically on {\it selected} |
| parts of the design. For example the command {\tt dump} will print all selected objects |
| in the current design while {\tt dump foobar} will only print the module {\tt foobar} |
| and {\tt dump *} will print the entire design regardless of the current selection. |
| |
| The selection mechanism is very powerful. For example the command {\tt dump */t:\$add |
| \%x:+[A] */w:* \%i} will print all wires that are connected to the \B{A} port of |
| a {\tt \$add} cell. Detailed documentation of the select framework can be |
| found in the command reference for the {\tt select} command. |
| |
| \section{Source Tree and Build System} |
| |
| The Yosys source tree is organized into the following top-level directories: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| |
| \item {\tt backends/} \\ |
| This directory contains a subdirectory for each of the backend modules. |
| |
| \item {\tt frontends/} \\ |
| This directory contains a subdirectory for each of the frontend modules. |
| |
| \item {\tt kernel/} \\ |
| This directory contains all the core functionality of Yosys. This includes the |
| functions and definitions for working with the RTLIL data structures ({\tt |
| rtlil.h} and {\tt rtlil.cc}), the main() function ({\tt driver.cc}), the |
| internal framework for generating log messages ({\tt log.h} and {\tt log.cc}), |
| the internal framework for registering and calling passes ({\tt register.h} and |
| {\tt register.cc}), some core commands that are not really passes ({\tt |
| select.cc}, {\tt show.cc}, \dots) and a couple of other small utility libraries. |
| |
| \item {\tt passes/} \\ |
| This directory contains a subdirectory for each pass or group of passes. For example as |
| of this writing the directory {\tt passes/opt/} contains the code for seven |
| passes: {\tt opt}, {\tt opt\_expr}, {\tt opt\_muxtree}, {\tt opt\_reduce}, |
| {\tt opt\_rmdff}, {\tt opt\_rmunused} and {\tt opt\_merge}. |
| |
| \item {\tt techlibs/} \\ |
| This directory contains simulation models and standard implementations for the |
| cells from the internal cell library. |
| |
| \item {\tt tests/} \\ |
| This directory contains a couple of test cases. Most of the smaller tests are executed |
| automatically when {\tt make test} is called. The larger tests must be executed |
| manually. Most of the larger tests require downloading external HDL source code |
| and/or external tools. The tests range from comparing simulation results of the synthesized |
| design to the original sources to logic equivalence checking of entire CPU cores. |
| |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| \begin{sloppypar} |
| The top-level Makefile includes {\tt frontends/*/Makefile.inc}, {\tt passes/*/Makefile.inc} |
| and {\tt backends/*/Makefile.inc}. So when extending Yosys it is enough to create |
| a new directory in {\tt frontends/}, {\tt passes/} or {\tt backends/} with your sources |
| and a {\tt Makefile.inc}. The Yosys kernel automatically detects all commands linked with |
| Yosys. So it is not needed to add additional commands to a central list of commands. |
| \end{sloppypar} |
| |
| Good starting points for reading example source code to learn how to write passes |
| are {\tt passes/opt/opt\_rmdff.cc} and {\tt passes/opt/opt\_merge.cc}. |
| |
| See the top-level README file for a quick {\it Getting Started} guide and build |
| instructions. The Yosys build is based solely on Makefiles. |
| |
| Users of the Qt Creator IDE can generate a QT Creator project file using {\tt |
| make qtcreator}. Users of the Eclipse IDE can use the ``Makefile Project with |
| Existing Code'' project type in the Eclipse ``New Project'' dialog (only |
| available after the CDT plugin has been installed) to create an Eclipse project |
| in order to programming extensions to Yosys or just browse the Yosys code base. |
| |