Xilinx XST 9.1, Verilog 2-D arrays, always @* : verilog
This is a discussion on Xilinx XST 9.1, Verilog 2-D arrays, always @* within the verilog forums in Programming Languages category; I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* block. Here's a (perhaps poor) example: reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; reg signed [23:0] sum; integer i; always @* begin sum = 0; for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal imbalanced adder-tree! end...
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#1
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| block. Here's a (perhaps poor) example: reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; reg signed [23:0] sum; integer i; always @* begin sum = 0; for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal imbalanced adder-tree! end |
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#2
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| On 3月17日, 下午2时28分, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > block. > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > reg signed [23:0] sum; > > integer i; > always @* > begin > sum = 0; > for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal > imbalanced adder-tree! > end I think the code can not be synthesize correctly by any tool not only ISE! |
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#3
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| > "Homuncilus" <Sha.Craig@gmail.com> wrote in message > news:1174121624.193180.150560@n59g2000hsh.googlegroups.com... > On 3??17è?, ????2ê±28·?, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > > block. > > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > > > reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > > reg signed [23:0] sum; > > > > integer i; > > always @* > > begin > > sum = 0; > > for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > > sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a > > suboptimal > > imbalanced adder-tree! > > end > > I think the code can not be synthesize correctly by any tool not only > ISE! ASIC synthesis tools (like Synopsys Design Compiler, Cadence RTL Compiler, etc.) have no difficulty synthesizing the above example. |
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#4
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| On 3鏈18鏃, 涓婂崍6鏃17鍒, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > > "Homuncilus" <Sha.Cr...@gmail.com> wrote in message > >news:1174121624.193180.150560@n59g2000hsh.googlegroups.com... > > On 3??17篓篓?, ????2篓潞隆脌28隆陇?, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > > > block. > > > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > > > reg 聽signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > > > reg 聽signed [23:0] sum; > > > > integer i; > > > always @* > > > begin > > > 聽 sum = 0; > > > 聽 for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > > > 聽 聽 sum = sum + table[i]; 聽// yes, I know this will synthesize a > > > suboptimal > > > imbalanced adder-tree! > > > end > > > I think the code can not be synthesize correctly by any tool not only > > ISE! > > ASIC synthesis tools (like Synopsys Design Compiler, Cadence RTL > Compiler, etc.) have no difficulty synthesizing the above example.- 闅愯棌琚紩鐢ㄦ枃瀛 - > > - 鏄剧ず寮曠敤鐨勬枃瀛 - Could you tell me the result about the above example being synthesized by the ASIC tools and could you sure that the function runs well? |
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#5
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| On Mar 16, 11:28 pm, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > block. > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > reg signed [23:0] sum; > > integer i; > always @* > begin > sum = 0; > for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal > imbalanced adder-tree! > end Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that this is not valid verilog - you cannot use an array as a term in the always() sensitivity list, and the always* implies that the array is in the sensitivity list. I know that the ncverilog simulator warns about this (but does work). It states that this is non-portable verilog. Synopsys DC does indeed synthesize this correctly, but it's not a good idea to use non- standard verilog statements. ISE seems to err on the side of adhering to the strict rules of the verilog language. I could be wrong about this, but from the warning given by ncverilog, I believe this to be the case. Maybe try a verilog linting tool? formality/conformal should set you straight, if you have them. Cheers John |
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#6
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| On Mar 19, 11:00 am, "John McGrath" <tail...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mar 16, 11:28 pm, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > > > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > > block. > > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > > reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > > reg signed [23:0] sum; > > > integer i; > > always @* > > begin > > sum = 0; > > for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > > sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal > > imbalanced adder-tree! > > end > > Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that this is not valid verilog > - you cannot use an array as a term in the always() sensitivity list, > and the always* implies that the array is in the sensitivity list. I > know that the ncverilog simulator warns about this (but does work). It > states that this is non-portable verilog. Synopsys DC does indeed > synthesize this correctly, but it's not a good idea to use non- > standard verilog statements. ISE seems to err on the side of adhering > to the strict rules of the verilog language. I could be wrong about > this, but from the warning given by ncverilog, I believe this to be > the case. Maybe try a verilog linting tool? formality/conformal should > set you straight, if you have them. > Cheers > John I think the wrong isn't due to the sensitivity list. Do you sure the error in ISE is caused by that? |
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#7
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| On Mar 19, 5:59 am, "Homuncilus" <Sha.Cr...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mar 19, 11:00 am, "John McGrath" <tail...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Mar 16, 11:28 pm, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > > > > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > > > block. > > > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > > > reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > > > reg signed [23:0] sum; > > > > integer i; > > > always @* > > > begin > > > sum = 0; > > > for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > > > sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal > > > imbalanced adder-tree! > > > end > > > Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that this is not valid verilog > > - you cannot use an array as a term in the always() sensitivity list, > > and the always* implies that the array is in the sensitivity list. I > > know that the ncverilog simulator warns about this (but does work). It > > states that this is non-portable verilog. Synopsys DC does indeed > > synthesize this correctly, but it's not a good idea to use non- > > standard verilog statements. ISE seems to err on the side of adhering > > to the strict rules of the verilog language. I could be wrong about > > this, but from the warning given by ncverilog, I believe this to be > > the case. Maybe try a verilog linting tool? formality/conformal should > > set you straight, if you have them. > > Cheers > > John > > I think the wrong isn't due to the sensitivity list. Do you sure the > error in ISE is caused by that? I ran the following testcase through ncverilog: module test; reg [7:0] array [0:7]; reg [2:0] idx; reg [7:0] out; always@* begin out = array[idx]; end endmodule The logfile gives the following warnings: always@* | ncvlog: *W,STARMR (array.v,8|6): @* containing memory reference not standard or portable. out = array[idx]; ncvlog: *W,MRSTAR (array.v,10|11): memory reference that was not standard in @*. module worklib.test:v So clearly always @* when used with an array is non part of the verilog standard. Cheers John |
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#8
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| On Mar 19, 7:31 am, "John McGrath" <tail...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mar 19, 5:59 am, "Homuncilus" <Sha.Cr...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Mar 19, 11:00 am, "John McGrath" <tail...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Mar 16, 11:28 pm, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > > > > > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > > > > block. > > > > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > > > > reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > > > > reg signed [23:0] sum; > > > > > integer i; > > > > always @* > > > > begin > > > > sum = 0; > > > > for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > > > > sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal > > > > imbalanced adder-tree! > > > > end > > > > Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that this is not valid verilog > > > - you cannot use an array as a term in the always() sensitivity list, > > > and the always* implies that the array is in the sensitivity list. I > > > know that the ncverilog simulator warns about this (but does work). It > > > states that this is non-portable verilog. Synopsys DC does indeed > > > synthesize this correctly, but it's not a good idea to use non- > > > standard verilog statements. ISE seems to err on the side of adhering > > > to the strict rules of the verilog language. I could be wrong about > > > this, but from the warning given by ncverilog, I believe this to be > > > the case. Maybe try a verilog linting tool? formality/conformal should > > > set you straight, if you have them. > > > Cheers > > > John > > > I think the wrong isn't due to the sensitivity list. Do you sure the > > error in ISE is caused by that? > > I ran the following testcase through ncverilog: > > module test; > > reg [7:0] array [0:7]; > reg [2:0] idx; > reg [7:0] out; > > always@* > begin > out = array[idx]; > end > > endmodule > > The logfile gives the following warnings: > > always@* > | > ncvlog: *W,STARMR (array.v,8|6): @* containing memory reference not > standard or portable. > out = array[idx]; > ncvlog: *W,MRSTAR (array.v,10|11): memory reference that was not > standard in @*. > module worklib.test:v > > So clearly always @* when used with an array is non part of the > verilog standard. > > Cheers > John You could alternately use: always @(idx) in place of always@* |
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#9
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| On Mar 19, 7:35 am, "bluesclues" <deepak.l...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mar 19, 7:31 am, "John McGrath" <tail...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Mar 19, 5:59 am, "Homuncilus" <Sha.Cr...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Mar 19, 11:00 am, "John McGrath" <tail...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Mar 16, 11:28 pm, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > > > > > > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > > > > > block. > > > > > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > > > > > reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > > > > > reg signed [23:0] sum; > > > > > > integer i; > > > > > always @* > > > > > begin > > > > > sum = 0; > > > > > for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > > > > > sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal > > > > > imbalanced adder-tree! > > > > > end > > > > > Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that this is not valid verilog > > > > - you cannot use an array as a term in the always() sensitivity list, > > > > and the always* implies that the array is in the sensitivity list. I > > > > know that the ncverilog simulator warns about this (but does work). It > > > > states that this is non-portable verilog. Synopsys DC does indeed > > > > synthesize this correctly, but it's not a good idea to use non- > > > > standard verilog statements. ISE seems to err on the side of adhering > > > > to the strict rules of the verilog language. I could be wrong about > > > > this, but from the warning given by ncverilog, I believe this to be > > > > the case. Maybe try a verilog linting tool? formality/conformal should > > > > set you straight, if you have them. > > > > Cheers > > > > John > > > > I think the wrong isn't due to the sensitivity list. Do you sure the > > > error in ISE is caused by that? > > > I ran the following testcase through ncverilog: > > > module test; > > > reg [7:0] array [0:7]; > > reg [2:0] idx; > > reg [7:0] out; > > > always@* > > begin > > out = array[idx]; > > end > > > endmodule > > > The logfile gives the following warnings: > > > always@* > > | > > ncvlog: *W,STARMR (array.v,8|6): @* containing memory reference not > > standard or portable. > > out = array[idx]; > > ncvlog: *W,MRSTAR (array.v,10|11): memory reference that was not > > standard in @*. > > module worklib.test:v > > > So clearly always @* when used with an array is non part of the > > verilog standard. > > > Cheers > > John > > You could alternately use: > > always @(idx) in place of always@* Maybe, but it would not work if the contents of the array were updated by a different process, independent of idx. I'm not sure how this would be syntesized - It may infer latches on the output, or error out. I'd be interested to see what happens Personally, for this example (asynch read of array elements) I'd use a continuous assignment. But personally I think verilog language should support @* in an array context, it works in all other contexts, and prevents unintentional latch inferral. As we can see from Duth, this will be added to ISE soon, and some other tools support it too, but they just warn that it is not strictly part of the standard. Cheers John |
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#10
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| On Mar 16, 11:28 pm, "Ulsk" <a...@ljs.com> wrote: > I noticed XST 9.1 still doesn't support multi-dim arrays in an always @* > block. > Here's a (perhaps poor) example: > > reg signed [15:0] table [0:255]; > reg signed [23:0] sum; > > integer i; > always @* > begin > sum = 0; > for ( i =0; i < 256; i = i + 1 ) > sum = sum + table[i]; // yes, I know this will synthesize a suboptimal > imbalanced adder-tree! > end Ulsk, I've heard that this is a "grey" area of the Verilog standard. It shouldn't be at all - the intended behavior is quite clear in your example, and the tools should do the correct thing. Unfortunetly XST doesn't get it right yet. Xilinx promised to fix this is ISE9.x. Now, they've put it off again until 10.x. We've used VERY similar constructs - except we used SystemVerilog packed arrays, instead of your verilog-2001 "unpacked" array equivalent. This has worked fine for us in ASIC and FPGA flows. It works with VCS, modelsim, dc_shell, and Precision. Of course, you'll need to use the "Systemverilog" switch of the tools - which Xilinx doesn't have yet either. For your example in SystemVerilog, just change the table definition to: reg signed [ 255 : 0 ] [ 15 : 0 ] table; And it would work. I'm thinking in the IEEE Std 1800-2005 (SystemVerilog IEEE standard), they may have cleaned this up, and you're original example would work. --Mark |
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