X-Git-Url: https://git.libre-soc.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=CodingReadme;h=7d4ded93d2ffb12e88b81d0a254f6b804c6e1127;hb=63246a5c0eb5780675384d00443e6e46b5e59603;hp=2404a7a5affe9fbfc4398d8161bbeb525927afa2;hpb=4569a747f8af3880e23408eb93323afc8088b78b;p=yosys.git diff --git a/CodingReadme b/CodingReadme index 2404a7a5a..7d4ded93d 100644 --- a/CodingReadme +++ b/CodingReadme @@ -1,31 +1,258 @@ +This file contains some very brief documentation on things like programming APIs. +Also consult the Yosys manual and the section about programming in the presentation. +(Both can be downloaded as PDF from the yosys webpage.) + +--snip-- only the lines below this mark are included in the yosys manual --snip-- Getting Started =============== -Reading List ------------- +Outline of a Yosys command +-------------------------- + +Here is a the C++ code for a "hello_world" Yosys command (hello.cc): + + #include "kernel/yosys.h" + + USING_YOSYS_NAMESPACE + PRIVATE_NAMESPACE_BEGIN + + struct HelloWorldPass : public Pass { + HelloWorldPass() : Pass("hello_world") { } + void execute(vector, Design*) override { + log("Hello World!\n"); + } + } HelloWorldPass; + + PRIVATE_NAMESPACE_END + +This can be built into a Yosys module using the following command: + + yosys-config --exec --cxx --cxxflags --ldflags -o hello.so -shared hello.cc --ldlibs + +Or short: + + yosys-config --build hello.so hello.cc + +And then executed using the following command: + + yosys -m hello.so -p hello_world + + +Yosys Data Structures +--------------------- + +Here is a short list of data structures that you should make yourself familiar +with before you write C++ code for Yosys. The following data structures are all +defined when "kernel/yosys.h" is included and USING_YOSYS_NAMESPACE is used. + + 1. Yosys Container Classes + +Yosys uses dict and pool as main container classes. dict is +essentially a replacement for std::unordered_map and pool is a +replacement for std::unordered_set. The main characteristics are: + + - dict and pool are about 2x faster than the std containers -To write Yosys C++ code you need to know at least the following classes in kernel/rtlil.h: + - references to elements in a dict or pool are invalidated by + insert and remove operations (similar to std::vector on push_back()). + + - some iterators are invalidated by erase(). specifically, iterators + that have not passed the erased element yet are invalidated. (erase() + itself returns valid iterator to the next element.) + + - no iterators are invalidated by insert(). elements are inserted at + begin(). i.e. only a new iterator that starts at begin() will see the + inserted elements. + + - the method .count(key, iterator) is like .count(key) but only + considers elements that can be reached via the iterator. + + - iterators can be compared. it1 < it2 means that the position of t2 + can be reached via t1 but not vice versa. + + - the method .sort() can be used to sort the elements in the container + the container stays sorted until elements are added or removed. + + - dict and pool will have the same order of iteration across + all compilers, standard libraries and architectures. + +In addition to dict and pool there is also an idict that +creates a bijective map from K to the integers. For example: + + idict si; + log("%d\n", si("hello")); // will print 42 + log("%d\n", si("world")); // will print 43 + log("%d\n", si.at("world")); // will print 43 + log("%d\n", si.at("dummy")); // will throw exception + log("%s\n", si[42].c_str())); // will print hello + log("%s\n", si[43].c_str())); // will print world + log("%s\n", si[44].c_str())); // will throw exception + +It is not possible to remove elements from an idict. + +Finally mfp implements a merge-find set data structure (aka. disjoint-set or +union-find) over the type K ("mfp" = merge-find-promote). + + 2. Standard STL data types + +In Yosys we use std::vector and std::string whenever applicable. When +dict and pool are not suitable then std::map and std::set +are used instead. + +The types std::vector and std::string are also available as vector +and string in the Yosys namespace. + + 3. RTLIL objects + +The current design (essentially a collection of modules, each defined by a +netlist) is stored in memory using RTLIL object (declared in kernel/rtlil.h, +automatically included by kernel/yosys.h). You should glance over at least +the declarations for the following types in kernel/rtlil.h: + + RTLIL::IdString + This is a handle for an identifier (e.g. cell or wire name). + It feels a lot like a std::string, but is only a single int + in size. (The actual string is stored in a global lookup + table.) + + RTLIL::SigBit + A single signal bit. I.e. either a constant state (0, 1, + x, z) or a single bit from a wire. + + RTLIL::SigSpec + Essentially a vector of SigBits. RTLIL::Wire RTLIL::Cell + The building blocks of the netlist in a module. + RTLIL::Module - RTLIL::SigSpec + RTLIL::Design + The module is a container with connected cells and wires + in it. The design is a container with modules in it. + +All this types are also available without the RTLIL:: prefix in the Yosys +namespace. + + 4. SigMap and other Helper Classes + +There are a couple of additional helper classes that are in wide use +in Yosys. Most importantly there is SigMap (declared in kernel/sigtools.h). + +When a design has many wires in it that are connected to each other, then a +single signal bit can have multiple valid names. The SigMap object can be used +to map SigSpecs or SigBits to unique SigSpecs and SigBits that consistently +only use one wire from such a group of connected wires. For example: + + SigBit a = module->addWire(NEW_ID); + SigBit b = module->addWire(NEW_ID); + module->connect(a, b); + + log("%d\n", a == b); // will print 0 + + SigMap sigmap(module); + log("%d\n", sigmap(a) == sigmap(b)); // will print 1 + + +Using the RTLIL Netlist Format +------------------------------ + +In the RTLIL netlist format the cell ports contain SigSpecs that point to the +Wires. There are no references in the other direction. This has two direct +consequences: + +(1) It is very easy to go from cells to wires but hard to go in the other way. + +(2) There is no danger in removing cells from the netlists, but removing wires +can break the netlist format when there are still references to the wire +somewhere in the netlist. + +The solution to (1) is easy: Create custom indexes that allow you to make fast +lookups for the wire-to-cell direction. You can either use existing generic +index structures to do that (such as the ModIndex class) or write your own +index. For many application it is simplest to construct a custom index. For +example: + + SigMap sigmap(module); + dict sigbit_to_driver_index; + + for (auto cell : module->cells()) + for (auto &conn : cell->connections()) + if (cell->output(conn.first)) + for (auto bit : sigmap(conn.second)) + sigbit_to_driver_index[bit] = cell; + +Regarding (2): There is a general theme in Yosys that you don't remove wires +from the design. You can rename them, unconnect them, but you do not actually remove +the Wire object from the module. Instead you let the "clean" command take care +of the dangling wires. On the other hand it is safe to remove cells (as long as +you make sure this does not invalidate a custom index you are using in your code). + + +Example Code +------------ The following yosys commands are a good starting point if you are looking for examples of how to use the Yosys API: - passes/opt/wreduce.cc - passes/techmap/maccmap.cc + manual/CHAPTER_Prog/stubnets.cc + manual/PRESENTATION_Prog/my_cmd.cc + + +Script Passes +------------- + +The ScriptPass base class can be used to implement passes that just call other passes, +like a script. Examples for such passes are: + + techlibs/common/prep.cc + techlibs/common/synth.cc + +In some cases it is easier to implement such a pass as regular pass, for example when +ScriptPass doesn't provide the type of flow control desired. (But many of the +script passes in Yosys that don't use ScriptPass simply predate the ScriptPass base +class.) Examples for such passes are: + + passes/opt/opt.cc + passes/proc/proc.cc + +Whether they use the ScriptPass base-class or not, a pass should always either +call other passes without doing any non-trivial work itself, or should implement +a non-trivial algorithm but not call any other passes. The reason for this is that +this helps containing complexity in individual passes and simplifies debugging the +entire system. + +Exceptions to this rule should be rare and limited to cases where calling other +passes is optional and only happens when requested by the user (such as for +example `techmap -autoproc`), or where it is about commands that are "top-level +commands" in their own right, not components to be used in regular synthesis +flows (such as the `bugpoint` command). + +A pass that would "naturally" call other passes and also do some work itself +should be re-written in one of two ways: + +1) It could be re-written as script pass with the parts that are not calls +to other passes factored out into individual new passes. Usually in those +cases the new sub passes share the same prefix as the top-level script pass. + +2) It could be re-written so that it already expects the design in a certain +state, expecting the calling script to set up this state before calling the +pass in questions. + +Many back-ends are examples for the 2nd approach. For example, `write_aiger` +does not convert the design into AIG representation, but expects the design +to be already in this form, and prints an `Unsupported cell type` error +message otherwise. Notes on the existing codebase ------------------------------ For historical reasons not all parts of Yosys adhere to the current coding -styles. When adding code to existing parts of the system, adhere to this guide +style. When adding code to existing parts of the system, adhere to this guide for the new code instead of trying to mimic the style of the surrounding code. @@ -50,23 +277,66 @@ Formatting of code on its own line for larger blocks, especially blocks that contains blank lines. -- Otherwise stick to the Linux Kernel Coding Stlye: +- Otherwise stick to the Linux Kernel Coding Style: https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/CodingStyle -C++ Langugage +C++ Language ------------- Yosys is written in C++11. At the moment only constructs supported by -gcc 4.6 is allowed in Yosys code. This will change in future releases. +gcc 4.8 are allowed in Yosys code. This will change in future releases. In general Yosys uses "int" instead of "size_t". To avoid compiler warnings for implicit type casts, always use "GetSize(foobar)" instead -of "foobar.size()". (GetSize() is defined by kernel/yosys.h) +of "foobar.size()". (GetSize() is defined in kernel/yosys.h) Use range-based for loops whenever applicable. +--snap-- only the lines above this mark are included in the yosys manual --snap-- + + +Creating the Visual Studio Template Project +=========================================== + +1. Create an empty Visual C++ Win32 Console App project + + Microsoft Visual Studio Express 2013 for Windows Desktop + Open New Project Wizard (File -> New Project..) + + Project Name: YosysVS + Solution Name: YosysVS + [X] Create directory for solution + [ ] Add to source control + + [X] Console applications + [X] Empty Project + [ ] SDL checks + +2. Open YosysVS Project Properties + + Select Configuration: All Configurations + + C/C++ -> General -> Additional Include Directories + Add: ..\yosys + + C/C++ -> Preprocessor -> Preprocessor Definitions + Add: _YOSYS_;_CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS + +3. Resulting file system tree: + + YosysVS/ + YosysVS/YosysVS + YosysVS/YosysVS/YosysVS.vcxproj + YosysVS/YosysVS/YosysVS.vcxproj.filters + YosysVS/YosysVS.sdf + YosysVS/YosysVS.sln + YosysVS/YosysVS.v12.suo + +4. Zip YosysVS as YosysVS-Tpl-v1.zip + + Checklist for adding internal cell types ======================================== @@ -82,7 +352,7 @@ Things to do after finalizing the cell interface: - Add support to kernel/satgen.h for the new cell type - Add to manual/CHAPTER_CellLib.tex (or just add a fixme to the bottom) - - Maybe add support to the verilog backend for dumping such cells as expression + - Maybe add support to the Verilog backend for dumping such cells as expression @@ -96,50 +366,45 @@ Update the CHANGELOG file: vi CHANGELOG -Run all tests with "make config-{clang-debug,gcc-debug,gcc-4.6,release}": +Update and check documentation: cd ~yosys - make clean - make test vloghtb - make install - - cd ~yosys-bigsim - make clean - make full + make update-manual + make manual + - sanity check the figures in the appnotes and presentation + - if there are any odd things -> investigate + - make cosmetic changes to the .tex files if necessary - cd ~vloghammer - make purge - make gen_issues gen_samples - make SYN_LIST="yosys" SIM_LIST="icarus yosim verilator" FULL=1 world - chromium-browser report.html + cd ~yosys + vi README CodingReadme + - is the information provided in those file still up to date Then with default config setting: cd ~yosys - ./yosys -p 'proc; show' tests/simple/fiedler-cooley.v - ./yosys -p 'proc; opt; show' tests/simple/fiedler-cooley.v + make vgtest cd ~yosys - make manual - - sanity check the figures in the appnotes and presentation - - if there are any odd things -> investigate - - make cosmetic changes to the .tex files if necessary + ./yosys -p 'proc; show' tests/simple/fiedler-cooley.v + ./yosys -p 'proc; opt; show' tests/simple/fiedler-cooley.v + ./yosys -p 'synth; show' tests/simple/fiedler-cooley.v + ./yosys -p 'synth_xilinx -top up3down5; show' tests/simple/fiedler-cooley.v + cd ~yosys/examples/cmos + bash testbench.sh -Also with default config setting: + cd ~yosys/examples/basys3 + bash run.sh - cd ~yosys/techlibs/cmos - bash testbench.sh - cd ~yosys/techlibs/xilinx/example_sim_counter - bash run_sim.sh +Test building plugins with various of the standard passes: - cd ~yosys/techlibs/xilinx/example_mojo_counter - bash example.sh + yosys-config --build test.so equiv_simple.cc + - also check the code examples in CodingReadme -Finally if a current verific library is available: +And if a version of the verific library is currently available: cd ~yosys cat frontends/verific/build_amd64.txt @@ -149,24 +414,35 @@ Finally if a current verific library is available: ../../yosys test_navre.ys -Release candiate: +Finally run all tests with "make config-{clang,gcc,gcc-4.8}": + + cd ~yosys + make clean + make test + make ystests + make vloghtb + make install + + cd ~yosys-bigsim + make clean + make full - - create branch yosys-x.y.z-rc and push to github - - contact the usual suspects per mail and ask them to test - - post on the reddit and ask people to test - - commit KISS fixes to the -rc branch if necessary + cd ~vloghammer + make purge gen_issues gen_samples + make SYN_LIST="yosys" SIM_LIST="icarus yosim verilator" REPORT_FULL=1 world + chromium-browser report.html Release: - set YOSYS_VER to x.y.z in Makefile + - remove "bumpversion" target from Makefile - update version string in CHANGELOG git commit -am "Yosys x.y.z" - push tag to github - post changelog on github - post short release note on reddit - - delete -rc branch from github Updating the website: @@ -184,11 +460,97 @@ Updating the website: make push -In master branch: - git merge {release-tag} - - set version to x.y.z+ in Makefile - - add section "Yosys x.y.z .. x.y.z+" to CHANGELOG - git commit --amend -am "Yosys x.y.z+" +Cross-Building for Windows with MXE +=================================== + +Check http://mxe.cc/#requirements and install all missing requirements. + +As root (or other user with write access to /usr/local/src): + + cd /usr/local/src + git clone https://github.com/mxe/mxe.git + cd mxe + + make -j$(nproc) MXE_PLUGIN_DIRS="plugins/tcl.tk" \ + MXE_TARGETS="i686-w64-mingw32.static" \ + gcc tcl readline + +Then as regular user in some directory where you build stuff: + + git clone https://github.com/cliffordwolf/yosys.git yosys-win32 + cd yosys-win32 + make config-mxe + make -j$(nproc) mxebin + + + +How to add unit test +==================== + +Unit test brings some advantages, briefly, we can list some of them (reference +[1](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_testing)): + +* Tests reduce bugs in new features; +* Tests reduce bugs in existing features; +* Tests are good documentation; +* Tests reduce the cost of change; +* Tests allow refactoring; + +With those advantages in mind, it was required to choose a framework which fits +well with C/C++ code. Hence, it was chosen (google test) +[https://github.com/google/googletest], because it is largely used and it is +relatively easy learn. + +Install and configure google test (manually) +-------------------------------------------- + +In this section, you will see a brief description of how to install google +test. However, it is strongly recommended that you take a look to the official +repository (https://github.com/google/googletest) and refers to that if you +have any problem to install it. Follow the steps below: + +* Install: cmake and pthread +* Clone google test project from: https://github.com/google/googletest and + enter in the project directory +* Inside project directory, type: + +``` +cmake -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON . +make +``` + +* After compilation, copy all "*.so" inside directory "googlemock" and + "googlemock/gtest" to "/usr/lib/" +* Done! Now you can compile your tests. + +If you have any problem, go to the official repository to find help. + +Ps.: Some distros already have googletest packed. If your distro supports it, +you can use it instead of compile. + +Create new unit test +-------------------- + +If you want to add new unit tests for Yosys, just follow the steps below: + +* Go to directory "yosys/test/unit/" +* In this directory you can find something similar Yosys's directory structure. + To create your unit test file you have to follow this pattern: + fileNameToImplementUnitTest + Test.cc. E.g.: if you want to implement the + unit test for kernel/celledges.cc, you will need to create a file like this: + tests/unit/kernel/celledgesTest.cc; +* Implement your unit test + +Run unit test +------------- +To compile and run all unit tests, just go to yosys root directory and type: +``` +make unit-test +``` +If you want to remove all unit test files, type: +``` +make clean-unit-test +```