Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bartłomiej Chmiel ffe76717c6
Thread pool rewrite (#5161)
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Bieganski <kbieganski@antmicro.com>
Signed-off-by: Bartłomiej Chmiel <bchmiel@antmicro.com>
Signed-off-by: Arkadiusz Kozdra <akozdra@antmicro.com>
Co-authored-by: Krzysztof Bieganski <kbieganski@antmicro.com>
Co-authored-by: Arkadiusz Kozdra <akozdra@antmicro.com>
Co-authored-by: Wilson Snyder <wsnyder@wsnyder.org>
2024-08-23 08:36:49 -04:00
Wilson Snyder e76f29e5ba Copyright year update 2024-01-01 03:19:59 -05:00
Mariusz Glebocki 28bd7e5b19
Rework multithreading handling to separate by code units that use/never use it. (#4228) 2023-09-24 22:12:23 -04:00
Wilson Snyder b24d7c83d3 Copyright year update 2023-01-01 10:18:39 -05:00
Krzysztof Bieganski 39af5d020e
Timing support (#3363)
Adds timing support to Verilator. It makes it possible to use delays,
event controls within processes (not just at the start), wait
statements, and forks.

Building a design with those constructs requires a compiler that
supports C++20 coroutines (GCC 10, Clang 5).

The basic idea is to have processes and tasks with delays/event controls
implemented as C++20 coroutines. This allows us to suspend and resume
them at any time.

There are five main runtime classes responsible for managing suspended
coroutines:
* `VlCoroutineHandle`, a wrapper over C++20's `std::coroutine_handle`
  with move semantics and automatic cleanup.
* `VlDelayScheduler`, for coroutines suspended by delays. It resumes
  them at a proper simulation time.
* `VlTriggerScheduler`, for coroutines suspended by event controls. It
  resumes them if its corresponding trigger was set.
* `VlForkSync`, used for syncing `fork..join` and `fork..join_any`
  blocks.
* `VlCoroutine`, the return type of all verilated coroutines. It allows
  for suspending a stack of coroutines (normally, C++ coroutines are
  stackless).

There is a new visitor in `V3Timing.cpp` which:
  * scales delays according to the timescale,
  * simplifies intra-assignment timing controls and net delays into
    regular timing controls and assignments,
  * simplifies wait statements into loops with event controls,
  * marks processes and tasks with timing controls in them as
    suspendable,
  * creates delay, trigger scheduler, and fork sync variables,
  * transforms timing controls and fork joins into C++ awaits

There are new functions in `V3SchedTiming.cpp` (used by `V3Sched.cpp`)
that integrate static scheduling with timing. This involves providing
external domains for variables, so that the necessary combinational
logic gets triggered after coroutine resumption, as well as statements
that need to be injected into the design eval function to perform this
resumption at the correct time.

There is also a function that transforms forked processes into separate
functions.

See the comments in `verilated_timing.h`, `verilated_timing.cpp`,
`V3Timing.cpp`, and `V3SchedTiming.cpp`, as well as the internals
documentation for more details.

Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Bieganski <kbieganski@antmicro.com>
2022-08-22 13:26:32 +01:00