We need to elaborate expressions so that function calls in
expressions (i.e. ranges) get bound to their proper scope.
This binding is in turn used to emit package scopes. This
is particularly interesting for ports of entities.
When concatenation expressions have aggregate arguments, we need to
get the type of the result down to the aggregate expressions so that
it can know how to interpret the elements.
When signals/variables are records, they are often referenced by
their members, using a prefix.name syntax. Parse that syntax and
generate "sorry" messages in elaboration.
Entity generics are easily implemented as module parameters, so make
it so. Give the parameters their default values from the generic declaration.
Array bounds may use values that cannot be evaluated right away, so
put off their evaluation.
Type cast expressions and some function calls are syntactically
identical to array element select, so we can only tell the difference
by looking up the name of the identifier being selected. If it is a
type name, then create an ExpCast instead of an ExpName object.
Also, parse and emit vector part selects.
R-value expressions are more general then L-value expressions, in that
the expression type may be a bit more complex. If the R-value expression
is part of an assignment, then elaborate with the constrained type from
the L-value. In other cases, where the expression type is not as obvious,
use expression type probes to figure out the type of the expression and
elaborate using that calculated type.
VHDL doesn't have a direct way to express "always @(posedge...)"
statements, but we do want to detect common paradigms that naturally
translate. This makes for a better translation.
Get to the point where our sample program parses completely, and
the sequential statements generate SequentialStmt objects and a
process object in the architecture.
Also add a few missing expression types.
Significant rework of scope management to unify the handling of
types in the ieee library and types/constants/components in packages.
This involved adjusting the parser rules to manage a stack of scopes
and rewriting the IEEE library support to not use global maps for
the loaded types.