Creation of implicit nets requires knowledge of whether an identifier
has been declared before it is used. Currently implicit nets are
created during elaboration, but by this stage the order of declaration
and use is not known. This patch moves the creation of implicit nets
into the parser stage.
When checking for name collisions, the compiler looks for genvar
declarations in the enclosing module rather than in the current
scope, which leads to false positives. The compiler also places
all genvar declarations in the enclosing module scope, even when
the declarations are inside a generate block which has its own
scope. This patch fixes both these faults. It also fixes some
typos and outdated information in comments.
There was a small memory leak in parm_to_defparam_list where space for
"key" and "value" was being allocated via strdup and never freed.
This was fixed by freeing them at each return point.
In that function, key and value were defined to be const char* but
were later mutated. gcc4.4 is more strict with const-ness in some
functions than previous versions (see
http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.4/porting_to.html section "Strict
null-terminated sequence utilities"), so this caused compilation to
fail. Fixed by removing the const modifier in the declaration of
those two variables and related nkey variable. This also necessitated
malloc'ing room for value in one path through the code, which made
memory management easier as well.
This patch is based on one from "bruce <bruce1914@gmail.com>".
I've applied all but the elaboration code, which I rewrote to
properly work with the elaboration work queue. I also constrained
the implementation so that the parameter name must have exactly
two components: the root scope name and the parameter name. This
is necessary to keep the defparm processing sane. The comments
from bruce's original patch are as follows:
--
This patch would provide function to define parameter from command
line. This serves the same functionality as 'defparam' in Verilog
source code, but provide much more ease for using. Parameter
definition can be write in command file, with following syntax:
+parameter+<scope>.<parameter>=<val>
*Do not apply any space between them*
The scope name should be full hierachical name with root name at
the begining. The following example would override test.T1 with
new value 2'b01:
+parameter+test.T1=2'b01
'test' here is the root module name. The parameter value here
should be constant. Parameter definition can also be write in
the command line:
iverilog -Ptest.T1=2'b01
This serves the same functionality with the previous example.
If we define the same parameter in command file and command line,
the one in command line would over-write all others.
This patch adds genvars to the elaboration process. It adds checks
that a genvar is defined for a generate loop and that a genvar does
not conflict with any other items in its name space.
This patch modifies the original SystemVerilog timeunit/timeprecision
patch in the following way:
Removed trailing space.
Reworked some code to use standard spacing rules.
Added some comments.
Combined some code.
Major rework of local/global timeunit/timeprecision logic.
Major rework of timeunit/timeprecision declaration/check code.
This was needed to remove the shift/reduce warnings.
Add a number of checks for invalid combinations.
This patch cleans up some unneeded code. Releases some allocated
memory before the compiler quits and fixes a couple minor memory
leaks in the compiler and vvp code generator.
Icarus has recognized this directive, but it did not do anything
with the information. This patch adds the functionality for most
common cases. It adds this by changing the input net type from
wire/tri to tri1 or tri0 depending on the pull. The issue is that
if the input net is not a wire or tri this is not safe and should
really be done as an external pull gate connected to the input.
We will need to handle this is it ever comes up. For now a sorry
message is printed.
This patch adds support for the `resetall directive.
It also changes `celldefine, `endcelldefine and `resetall
to no longer grab text following them. These directives do
not take an argument so they should not be grabbing any
text and silently discarding it.
The `timescale processing was reworked to handle being
reset and hooks were added to easily change the default
time units and precision when we add that feature request.
This patch adds real functionality for `celldefine and pushes this
property to the run time which can access this with vpiCellInstance.
This is technically only available for a module, but all scopes
have the property and only modules should return true when the
'endmodule' is between a `celldefine and `endcelldefine directive.
In 1364-2005 it is an explicit error to take the select of a scalar
or real value. We added the checks for real a while ago. This patch
adds the functionality for scalar values. In the future we may want
to push the scalar property to the run time.
This patch add code to print a warning message if it finds both a
default and `timescale based delays. The -Wall or more specifically
the -Wtimescale flag can be used to find the module with the missing
`timescale directive.
The STRING lexical token was malloc based, but then was passed
to routines that are expecting a new based result. This patch
standardizes on a new/delete based approach.
Functions that appear in continuous assignment expressions and that
have hidden dependencies or side effects need to be re-evaluated
whenever any input to the expression changes. This patch adds support
in the compiler and vvp runtime to enable this. This is currently
activated for any system function call that has no arguments. The
user may also force it to be used for any user function by passing
the option -gstrict-ca-eval to the compiler driver.
This patch also removes the -dautomatic option which was used for
gaining confidence in the code that supports automatic tasks and
functions. It is believed that the testsuite provides reasonable
fault coverage, and further tests can be added if bugs are found.
Verilog generate schemes support a special case where conditional
generate schemes that contain only a nested conditional generate
scheme do not create a new scope. Instead, it relies on the nested
generate scheme to generate the scope.
When the parser detects a signal type conflict, print a more useful
error message. In the process, be more careful with what line number
is actually attributed to the declaration.
The goal is to completely remove the svector class because the standard
vector class works perfectly well. This removes the uses in the Module.h
header file.
This patch splits any VVP net functor that needs to access both
statically and automatically allocated state into two sub-classes,
one for handling operations on statically allocated state, the
other for handling operations on automatically allocated state.
This undoes the increase in run-time memory use introduced when
automatic task/function support was first introduced.
This patch also fixes various issues with event handling in automatic
scopes. Event expressions in automatic scopes may now reference either
statically or automatically allocated variables or arrays, or part
selects or word selects thereof. More complex expressions (e.g.
containing arithmetic or logical operators, function calls, etc.) are
not currently supported.
This patch introduces some error checking for language constructs
that may not reference automatically allocated variables. Further
error checking will follow in a subsequent patch.
Put together the infrastructure for elaborating analog statements,
including create the NetAnalogTop objects that hold analog statements
and are in turn held by the design.
While doing this, clean up the various unique initial/always enumerations
to use the ivl_process_type_t type.
Continue cleaning up shadowed variables, flagged by turning on -Wshadow.
No intended change in functionality. Patch looks right, and is tested
to compile and run on my machine. No regressions in test suite.
This patch removes all the checks for constant expressions performed
during the parsing phase, as these checks are (mostly) repeated during
elaboration. It adds the missing check in the elaboration phase (the
RHS of a register initialisation), and improves the error reporting
and error recovery in other checks.
This patch fixes pr2132552, which was caused by a fault in the parser
constant expression checking.
Currently, parameters and localparams declared in tasks, functions,
generate blocks, and named blocks are placed in the parent module
scope. Event declarations in these scopes are not permitted (a
syntax error is reported). This patch corrects this behaviour, so
that all the above declarations are accepted and are placed in the
scope in which they are declared.
Note that the IEEE standard does not permit parameter declarations
in generate blocks. This patch causes the parser to reject such
declarations.
Statements can have attributes attached to them. Handle a few cases in
the parser where attributes may be attached to statements, and get them
as far as the pform.
This patch pushes the automatic property for both tasks and
functions to the code generators. The vvp back end does not
currently support this so it will error out during code
generation. The VHDL back end should be able to use this
property and tgt-stub prints the property. Having this will
also make it easier when we do adding this to the runtime.
The l-value of a defparam assignment is a hierarchical name that may
include array selects to select scopes from module arrays. Therefore
it makes no sense to store parsed defparams in a map. Instead, they
should go into an ordered list. This also maked more sense because later
defparams *may* have the same name as a previous defparam, and will
override the previous defparam. So replace the map of parsed defparams
with a list of parsed defparams.
Also, as soon as the defparam expression is elaborated, the list entry
is no longer needed, so delete it. Save memory.
Within generate schemes it is possible to have nested scopes, even
more liberally then outside generate blocks. So see to it that the
scopes properly stack with the generate blocks, and that wires and
behaviors are put in the right scopes.
Generating task/function definitions involves getting the functions
to put themselves into the generate scheme instead of the module,
and getting elaboration to elaborate those definitions in the
generate scheme.
Named begin/end blocks burried within generate schemes need to be
elaborated. Handle this by remembering to elaborate_scope on the
statements within the generate scheme.
In the process, clean up/regularize some of the member names and
methods.
Before this, the types of parameters were always logic, only the
width and signed-ness could be controlled. A parameter may take
on implicit real values if the expression were real.
With this patch, the type for the parameter can be explicitly set
to logic or real. This also means that the parameter real valued
expressions need to be more crefully treated, possibly with casting
integral expressions to real values, or real expressions to integral
values.
The pform is now translated/elaborated into NetScope objects. All that
remains is to check the parameter values against the ranges. This is
to be done in the evaluate_parameters() method.
Handle parameter value ranges as far as the pform. The +-inf expressions
are not handled yet, nor is the single value exclude, but the other
cases are handled.
Parse discipline declarations, net discipline declarations, and
analog contribution statements. Don't yet do anything useful with
these, just give a sorry message where they are encountered.
This patch adds file and line information for parameters and
local parameters. It also adds file/line stubs for signals in
the tgt-* files. It adds the pform code needed to eventually
do genvar checks and passing of genvar file/line information.
It verifies that a genvar does not have the same name as a
parameter/local parameter.
Normally processes are found in the lexical scope of a module, but
there are special cases where processes (other then task/function
definitions) are in other lexical scopes. The most likely case is
initilizations that are in the lexical scope where the assigned
variable is declared.
In the process, the behaviors list is kept in the base PScope class
instead of the Module or any other derived lexical scope class.
Move the storage of wires (signals) out of the Module class into
the PScope base class, and instead of putting the PWires all into
the Module object, distribute them into the various lexical scopes
(derived from PScope) so that the wire names do not need to carry
scope information.
This required some rewiring of elaboration of signals, and rewriting
of lexical scope handling.
All the pform objects that represent lexical scope now are derived
from the PScope class, and are kept in a lexical_scope table so that
the scope can be managed.
Generate case is a complex generate scheme where the items are
sub-schemes of the case generate itself. The parser handles them
something like nested generate statements, but storing the case
guards as the test expression. Then the elaborator notes the
case scheme and reaches into the case item schemes inside to make
up tests, select the generate item, and elaborate.