This patch adds IEEE-1800 compliant scheduling support for the Inactive
scheduling region used for #0 delays.
Implementing this requires that **all** IEEE-1800 active region events
are placed in the internal 'act' section. This has simulation
performance implications. It prevents some optimizations (e.g.
V3LifePost), which reduces single threaded performance. It also reduces
the available work and parallelism in the internal 'nba' section, which
reduced the effectiveness of multi-threading severely.
Performance impact on RTLMeter when using scheduling adjusted to support
proper #0 delays is ~10-20% slowdown in single-threaded mode, and ~100%
(2x slower) with --threads 4.
To avoid paying this performance penalty unconditionally, the scheduling
is only adjusted if either:
1. The input contains a statically known #0 delay
2. The input contains a variable #x delay unknown at compile time
If no #0 is present, but #x variable delays are, a ZERODLY warning is
issued advising the use of '--no-sched-zero-delay' which is a promise
by the user that none of the variable delays will evaluate to a zero
delay at run-time. This warning is turned off if '--sched-zero-delay'
is explicitly given. This is similar to the '--timing' option.
If '--no-sched-zero-delay' was used at compile time, then executing
a zero delay will fail at runtime.
A ZERODLY warning is also issued if a static #0 if found, but the user
specified '--no-sched-zero-delay'. In this case the scheduling is not
adjusted to support #0, so executing it will fail at runtime. Presumably
the user knows it won't be executed.
The intended behaviour with all this is the following:
No #0, no #var in the design (#constant is OK)
-> Same as current behaviour, scheduling not adjusted,
same code generated as before
Has static #0 and '--no-sched-zero-delay' is NOT given:
-> No warnings, scheduling adjusted so it just works, runs slow
Has static #0 and '--no-sched-zero-delay' is given:
-> ZERODLY on the #0, scheduling not adjusted, fails at runtime if hit
No static #0, but has #var and no option is given:
-> ZERODLY on the #var advising use of '--no-sched-zero-delay' or
'--sched-zero-delay' (similar to '--timing'), scheduling adjusted
assuming it can be a zero delay and it just works
No static #0, but has #var and '--no-sched-zero-delay' is given:
-> No warning, scheduling not adjusted, fails at runtime if zero delay
No static #0, but has #var and '--sched-zero-delay' is given:
-> No warning, scheduling adjusted so it just works
* logging for the unsatisfied constraints
* Apply 'make format'
* fix teh quote error in the array indexing
* Apply 'make format'
* Len change for the hash for randomity when named assertion is used
* seperate name assertion and satisfied case
* Apply 'make format'
* simply comments and display info
* refine code and fix protect case
* format
* update display in test and .out file
* add an enable flag and warning type, add a protect_id version test and update out files
* Apply 'make format'
* simplify some comments
* update out file, ready to be merged.
* update .py file to set the hash key solid
* rename and reformate the warning message to follow the verilator style
* add a nowarn test
* Apply 'make format'
* ordering
---------
Co-authored-by: Udaya Raj Subedi <075bei047.udaya@pcampus.edu.np>
Co-authored-by: github action <action@example.com>
Track the location based message/feature enable bits separately for code
and control file directives. A message/feature is disabled if disabled
either in the control file, or in code directives/metacomments. That is,
enabled only if both agree should be enabled.
The manual for the BLKANDNBLK warning describes that it is safe to
disable that error if the updated ranges are non-overlapping. This
however was not true (see the added t_nba_mixed_update* tests).
In this patch we change V3Delayed to use a new ShadowVarMasked
scheme for variables that have mixed blocking and non-blocking
updates (or the FlagUnique scheme for unpacked variables), which
is in fact safe to use when the updated parts are non-overlapping.
Furthermore, mixed assignments are safe as far as scheduling is
concerned if either:
- They are to independent parts (bits/members/etc) (with this patch)
- Or if the blocking assignment is in clocked (or suspendable) logic.
The risk in scheduling is a race between the Post scheduled NBA
commit, and blocking assignments in combinational logic, which might
order incorrectly.
The second point highlights that we can handle stuff like this safely,
which is sometimes used in testbenches:
```systemverilog
always @(posedge clk) begin
if ($time == 0) a = 0;
end
always @(posedge clk) begin
if ($time > 0) a <= 2;
end
````
The only dangerous case is:
```systemverilog
always @(posedge clk) foo[idx] <= val;
assign foo[0] = bar;
```
Whit this patch, this will still resolve fine at run-time if 'idx' is
never zero, but might resolve incorrectly if 'idx' is zero.
With the above in mind, the BLKANDNBLK warning is now only issued if:
- We can't prove that the assignments are to non-overlapping bits
- And the blocking assignment is in combinational logic
These are the cases that genuinely require user attention to resolve.
With this patch, there are no more BLKANDNBLK warnings in the RTLMeter
designs.
Fixes#6122.