The vvp_vector2_t constructor that takes a vvp_vector4_t value was
documented as creating a NaN value if the supplied vector contained
any X or Z bits, but instead used the standard Verilog 4-state to
2-state conversion semantics (X or Z translate to 0). I've added an
optional second parameter to the constructor to allow the user to
choose which semantics they want, as both are needed.
If a strength aware net has an unambiguous HiZ1 strength, VVP treats
it as a logic '1'. It should be treated as a logic 'z'. An ambiguous
HiZ1/HiZ0 strength should also be treated as a logic 'z'.
The vvp_darray_real class cal be used for static arrays as well
and this is a more general solution anyhow. Kill the now useless
vvp_realarray_t class.
Clean up the vector4_to_value to use templates and explicit
instantiations. This makes the interface much cleaner for a
wider variety of integral types.
This patch implements the $countdrivers system function. It does not
yet support wires connected to islands (and outputs a suitable "sorry"
message when this is detected).
In vvp, create the .var/str variable for representing strings, and
handle strings in the $display system task.
Add to vvp threads the concept of a stack of strings. This is going to
be how complex objects are to me handled in the future: forth-like
operation stacks. Also add the first two instructions to minimally get
strings to work.
In the parser, handle the variable declaration and make it available
to the ivl_target.h code generator. The vvp code generator can use this
information to generate the code for new vvp support.
Full vector assigns are able to short circuit the propagation of
the value if it finds that there are no value changes. This patch
supports that behavior in writes to parts as well. Put this change
to use in logic devices as well.
This patch makes the code consistently use struct/class in the C++ files,
it removes a couple shadow warnings and where a class pointer is passed to
the C routines, it defines the pointer as a class for C++ and as struct for
C and it removes a namespace std duplication.
Create the v2009.vpi module to include SystemVerilog core
functions, and start out with some of the enum methods.
Add to vvp support for creating enum types, including some
vpi access methods.
In ivl_alloc.h we redefine malloc(), realloc() and calloc() to have
standard error checking. We don't want to do this for anything that
comes from the standard headers. This specifically doesn't work if
a C++ header files does std::malloc, etc.
Also change to -W instead of -Wextra since that is more portable. I
plan to add a check from -Wextra and use it when available since it
is more descriptive.
This patch adds -Wextra to the compilation flags for C++ files in
the vvp and vpi subdirectories. It also fixes all the problems
found while adding -Wextra. This mostly entailed removing some of
the unused arguments, removing the name for others and using the
correct number of initializers.
The functions (malloc, free, etc.) that used to be provided in
malloc.h are now provided in cstdlib for C++ files and stdlib.h for
C files. Since we require a C99 compliant compiler it makes sense
that malloc.h is no longer needed.
This patch also modifies all the C++ files to use the <c...>
version of the standard C header files (e.g. <cstdlib> vs
<stdlib.h>). Some of the files used the C++ version and others did
not. There are still a few other header changes that could be done,
but this takes care of much of it.
Some new shadow issues have crept in. This patch fixes these new
issues and adds -Wshadow to the normal warning flags to keep any
new occurrences from happening.
Tran islands must do their calculations using the forced values,
if any. But the output from a port must also be subject to force
filtering. It's a little ugly, but hopefully won't hurt the more
normal case.
Under certain circumnstances, the vvp code generator can generate
a .part/pv that directly feeds an input port of a .concat. This
patch adds a recv_vec4_pv method to the vvp_fun_concat class to
handle this case. It also changes the initial value of the stored
vector from X to Z to correctly handle bits which are not driven.
The process of inverting and copying can be collapsed into a single
operation that should run a little faster. Also, inverting readily
vectorizes itself. I've also possibly reduced useless vvp_not_fun
iterations.
Also, include some minor tweaks to the vvp_vector8_t handling of
vector copies. This is more to clean up code, although it should
slightly improve performance as well.
The vvp thread word storage had previously been changed to always store
64-bit values, but some instructions still only operate on native long
values. This patch ensures all instructions that modify thread words
support 64-bit values.
For the %mov instruction, implement a vvp_vector4_t::mov method to
manipulate the thread vector directly.
For the %load/v instruction, rework the vec4_value() methods to
avoid creating vvp_vector4_t temporaries, and therefore reduce the
copy overhead.
This patch adds cleanup code that cleans up the memory that is
allocated by the of_EXEC_UFUNC command. This knocks a few more
files off the valgrind list.
Whether and what to propagate after a release of a part needs to
match the behavior of the full-vector release. Nets need to restore
their driver, and regs need to hold their forced value.
filters need to be able to cope with parts of vectors moving through
the net. It makes the most sense to handle every filter as a part-
selected filter.
When releasing a net, the release needs to propagate the driven
value. When releasing a variable, the driven value must be set
to the previously forced value.
Handle the case where the input to a net is a constant. Since nets
do not exist anymore as nodes in their own right, we need to create
a driver to drive a net from a constant.
Handle forward references of net inputs.
Two small fixes: Threads should load signal values from signal_value
objects, not signal functors, and the force method should not run
its value through the filter.
Take wires out of the signals/variables and move them into a filter
instead. This is a big shift, and finally starts us on the path to
divide wires out of signals.