reading GDS files, caused by an unneeded change to pass both
the "original" filename and the actual filename when handling
compressed files---The original filename is unneeded.
(2) Implemented several new methods for parasitic extraction. The
first is an option offset value to apply to sidewall calculations.
This handles issues where actual wire separation is different
from drawn wire separation, which can be significant for the
1/d calculation of sidewall coupling. The second method is to
use the recently-added fringe halo to compute the coupling of the
fringe capacitance to nearby wires. Prior to this change, all
fringe capacitance was applied to surfaces directly under a wire
edge as if the fringe capacitance did not extend outward from the
edge. Now the capacitance is properly pro-rated for the position
of any overlapped shape inside the fringing field. Finally, the
third method added is a new search algorithm for finding the
nearest shapes along the length of a boundary. This is used for
sidewall coupling and fringe shielding, where the nearest shape
dominates the coupling, and any shapes behind are shielded and
may (to first order) be ignored. Previously, the entire halo
was searched without regard to shapes shielding other shapes
behind, and a recent correction added an ad-hoc search for
blocking shapes that was inefficient and not always correct.
The new method is both efficient and accurate.
Compression levels of the output can be controlled with the "gds
compress [<value>]" command, where <value> 0 (default) is uncompressed
output, 6 is "normal" gzip compression, and 9 is maximum compression.
pointing GDS_FILE to a compressed filename when using "gds readonly
true" on a compressed file. The start and end pointers still point
to data bounds in the uncompressed file.
of systems calls to "gzip" and "gunzip". A compressed GDS file can
be made simply by doing "gds write <name>.gds.gz", and can be read
simply by doing "gds read <name>.gds.gz". Names of compressed files
can be put in the GDS_FILE property of a cell.
The extSubtree() routine cuts a layout into squares and extracts
each separately, checking for subcell interactions. In each
square it parses all labels looking for unconnected ones. This
section of code not only parses all labels M x N times, but it
then marks interaction areas where there may be none, forcing
additional unnecessary processing. This commit makes the first
quick optimization, which is to change the return value of
DRCFindInteractions() from boolean to integer, allowing it to
return a value indicating that there are no subcells in the
area. This prevents the loop through labels from happening in
cases where there can never be interactions. More to come.
timestamps that are fixed, since the timestamp update routine is
called from too many places, too many times. Instead created a
new cell definition flag indicating a fixed timestamp, which can
be set by "cellname timestamp" for an individual cell, or with
"gds datestamp" for cells read from a GDS file.
yesterday's commit to allow the syntax "gds maskhints <types>", in
which mask hints can be restricted to a specific list of layers
rather than all layers which define mask hints in the cifoutput
rule.
"gds datestamp <value>" as an option to force a specific datestamp
on the GDS output. This is a third option beyond the previous two
which were either to use the current time or to write zero. The
new option allows an entire library to get a common timestamp, for
example, related to a PDK version number. The "gds nodatestamp"
option has been retained for backwards compatibility.
in a cell to account for the difference between what's in an input
GDS file and what magic would write out itself from the processed
data. This potentially allows library cells to be read in that
will generate the equivalent mask data as output without resorting
to using GDS file references as properties. The method is activated
with the new command option "gds maskhints on" and the default is
off.
If cells are instanced before being defined, causing the GDS parser
to rewind the cell from the top, then the "already defined" error
messages will be suppressed, since it is to be expected that cells
will be seen twice (and ignored the 2nd time). When rewinding, an
output message is issued so that it is clear that the file contains
instances that are used before they are defined, and recommends the
"gds ordering on" setting. Also: Fixed the "gds ordering" command
code so that the command with no third argument returns the state
of the "gds ordering" setting instead of generating a parser error.
there was no distinction between a locked file and a new cell
(initial state) before writing to disk. This prevents any new cell
from being saved! Also: Revised the behavior of the "select short"
search, but this still has issues with long run-times on complex
layouts, so this is an ongoing effort.
whenever a process writes a cell to disk, it immediately releases the
file lock it had on that cell, which is clearly not the intent of file
locking. Fixed this issue. On a related topic, revised the "cellname
writeable" command so that it can make a cell editable even if the cell
has an advisory lock and cannot be made writeable. Perhaps there should
be a clearer distinction here between "writeable" and "editable". Also:
Reconsidered the previous commit, which removed the "--disable-locking"
from the configuration options. Because some operating systems may not
implement fnctl()-based file locking (Cygwin, for one, apparently doesn't),
it is still useful to be able to completely remove the function, in case
the operating system will fail to recognize the fnctl() values in the
code. Now, file locking behavior can be permanently removed through the
configuration option, or temporarily disabled from the command line.
behave as one would expect; e.g., "cellname self" returns the name
of the currently edited cell if nothing is selected; "cellname
rename <name>" renames the currently edited cell to <name>.
Modified the "extract" command so that it will not extract a cell
named "(UNNAMED)" but will insist that the cell must be given a
proper name, much like the "writeall" command does.
that can be used to force renaming of a read-only cell. The
action revokes the read-only status of the cell and removes any
GDS filename and pointers from the cell's properties. This can be
used to swap out a library cell in a layout for a custom version,
by first forcing a rename of the cell, and then resetting the
filepath of the cell and flushing.
name conflict and renames a cell, the name was not pointing to
the new name and immediately caused a crash condition. However,
it got to that point by believing that cell "path/x" and "path/x.mag"
were different files. The name was stripped of the extension but
the full file path was not, causing the confusion.
the "getcell" command) so that the "parent" and "child" arguments
will accept the standard syntax for coordinates used by most other
commands (will accept SI units or trailing suffix i/l for internal
or lambda units).
in which if a cell is read from GDS that has the same name as a cell
in memory, then the cell in memory is renamed to keep all cell names
unique in the database.
worded warning if an abstract cell view is written to GDS.
Corrected the "cellname ... writeable" command to allow an
overrride of the read-only status of a cell. That change had
been made before but apparently got reverted by the recent
rollback.
This reverts commit 8b9c47c3ef.
Reverting back to the state before messing with the substrate extraction
code. All of the substrate extraction code is now in a separate branch.
on a non-writeable cell. While technically valid, that just means
that nobody can make temporary edits on the cell in memory, which is
useful in many applications. A slight quirk of the "cellname" command
is that if applied to the cell currently in the layout window, it is
not possible to make the cell show as edited and editable until leaving
and re-entering the cell.
that the intersection of (A and-not B) can be found. This and the
(A and B) version give a large amount of capability like the cifoutput
operators available as command-line commands. Also: Fixed the new
"drop" command so that it properly redisplays and runs DRC after
executing, and modified the behavior so that the dropped material
is clipped to the area of the selection.
into subcells in a hierarchy. The intent is to use this in
conjunction with the "select intersect" command option added
yesterday to add deep nwell into the cells containing the devices
that need it.
GDS_FILE property in the same way that it handles changes to the
FIXED_BBOX property, by setting or clearing the associated flag
bit in the cell. Otherwise, it becomes impossible to make a
cell writeable, as it always has some belief that it is still
attached to a specific GDS file. Corrected an error in the
"gds" ("calma") command parsing that switched the callbacks for
the "noduplicates" and "nodatestamp" options.
it as a single value "flags" (unsigned char) with meaningful flag
names. Added new option "-fail" to the load command to allow
magic to fail on loading a cell that does not have a corresponding
file rather than the default action of creating a new cell. Added
a flag for the "-quiet" option so that behavior on "-fail" can be
done quietly.
to stop the search whenever a cell is not found. Used this to implement
a new option for GDS writes, "gds undefined allow|disallow" (default
"disallow") controls whether or not GDS with undefined references will
be allowed to be written. Similarly affects CIF and LEF writes, extraction,
and DRC (when running "drc check" from the top).
of input cells on a per-cellname basis, using glob-style pattern
matching. This is probably the best way to deal with 3rd-party vendor
GDS with unfortunate practices like dividing devices up among cells in
a hierarchy, even though it comes across as a bit of a hack solution.
true, this will force the "gds write" command to write out creation
date stamps as zero. This is very useful for avoiding changing the
contents of an otherwise-unchanged layout, especially if it is in
a git repository where it will force the entire file to be replaced.
to allow a cell to be flushed with dereferencing (i.e., discard any file
path attached to the cell, and use the search paths to find the cell when
it is reloaded).
to allow a "gds read" command to ignore cells in the GDS which already
exist in memory. This allows magic to be "pre-seeded" with specific
views of cells in the GDS. Default is false, which is backwards-
compatble behavior. (2) Changed the behavior of the the way the use
path is written to and read from a .mag file, checking the path prefix
against Tcl variables PDK_PATH, PDKPATH, PDK_ROOT, and PDKROOT, and
replacing any such leading path component with the variable name.
On reading a .mag file, any variable name at the start of the path
that matches a Tcl variable will be substituted.
used both for counting cells during GDS write and for saving
geometry data from the "copyup" operator during GDS read. The write
routine does not clear the client record, and the read routine was
checking if the cd_client value was default. Corrected the resulting
crash condition by resetting cd_client before GDS reads. However, the
underlying problem is that the GDS read is reading data into a cell
that already exists in the database, and is not handling it robustly
by renaming the existing cell. So this should be revisited.
Instead of a 6-character suffix generated randomly, the 6-character
suffix is generated by a hash algorithm from the device parameters.
If the cell parameters are changed, then the cell itself changes.
If the instance name was default (derived from the cell name) then
the instance name changes accordingly. The result is that there
cannot be two (auto-)generated cells with the same parameters but
with different cell names.
optional name field to the "substrate" line in the extract section
of the techfile. This is the default name of the substrate if not
connected to anything labeled. It may use a Tcl variable (preferred).
(2) Added command option "instance orientation [-def]" that returns
the orientation of the named or selected instance. The -def option
returns the orientation using DEF naming convention; otherwise, the
naming used with "getcell" is generated.
argument as a pointer but also set the same variable to the
return value. This is ambiguous, because the behavior depends on
whether the value being set upon return is the original value or
the reallocated value. The result is system-dependent behavior.
Conflicts:
VERSION
Merged recent changes from master back into bplane, as the efficiency of
bplane for doing extraction on large layouts is unquestionably better.
Fixed the implementation of DBMoveCell() for bplane. Corrected an error
in the bplane version of dbScaleCell() that enumerates cell uses but
does not free the list.
coordinate system origin to the specified (current) location.
This is a much more efficient method than selecting everything in
a layout and moving it, especially for very large layouts where
selection and moving becomes prohibitive.