Structured Logic design With VHDL
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Transcript Structured Logic design With VHDL
VHDL
Structured Logic Design
School of Electrical Engineering
University of Belgrade
Department of Computer Engineering
Ivan Dugic [email protected]
Veljko Milutinovic [email protected]
Table of contents
HDL Introduction
Structured Design Concepts
Basic Features of VHDL
Design Process Highlights
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HDL Introduction
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HDL Introduction
Modern chip design aspects
Modern chips became too complex
The number of transistors in a modern chip is over a 100 M
Transistor count per chip and chip speed rise up to 50% per year
Estimated time needed for manual implementation
(100 M transistor, 10 sec/transistor) – 135.5 years!!!
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HDL Introduction
Modern ASIC design approach
ASIC – Application Specific Integrated Circuit
Modeling system should be designed and described
in the highest abstraction level possible
Simulation and testing at high abstraction level
Conversion of the modeled system
into the low abstraction level model (gate, circuit, silicon level)
using sophisticated synthesis tools
Key point – CAD (Computer Aided Design)
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HDL Introduction
Modern ASIC design approach
Design
RTL Model
Description
Simulation & Testing
HIGH ABSTRACTION LEVEL
Conversion
LOW ABSTRACTION LEVEL
Gate Level Model
HDLs (Hardware Description Languages)
are used for system description at the high abstraction level
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HDL Introduction
VHDL
VHDL - VHSIC Hardware Description Language
VHSIC - Very High Speed Integrated Circuit
Development of VHDL began in 1983, sponsored by
Department of defense, further developed by the IEEE
and released as IEEE Standard 1076 in 1987
Today it is De facto industry standard for hardware description
languages
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Structural Design Concepts
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Structural Design Concepts
The abstraction hierarchy
The abstraction hierarchy can be expressed in two domains:
structural domain, behavioral domain
Structural domain – component model is described
in terms of an interconnection of more primitive components
Behavioral domain – component model is described
by defining its input/output response
VHDL is used for both structural and behavioral description
Six abstraction hierarchy levels of detail commonly used in design:
silicon, circuit, gate, register, chip and system
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Structural Design Concepts
Design process
The design cycle consists of a series of transformations,
synthesis steps:
(1) Transformation from English to an algorithmic representation,
natural language synthesis
(2) Translation from an algorithmic representation
to a data flow representation,
algorithmic synthesis
(3) Translation from data flow representation
to a structural logic gate representation,
logic synthesis
(4) Translation from logic gate to layout and circuit representation,
layout synthesis
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Structural Design Concepts
Design process
The design cycle steps can be carried out automatically
in all stages except the first that is currently an active area of research
VHDL tools are used for algorithmic synthesis
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Structural Design Concepts
Design tools
Editors – textual (circuit level – SPICE gate, register, chip – VHDL)
or graphic (used at all levels)
Simulators – stochastic (system level)
or deterministic (all levels above the silicon level)
Checkers and Analyzers – employed at all levels, used for example
(1) to insure that the circuit layout
can be fabricated reliably (rule checkers),
(2) to check for the longest path through a logic circuit or system
(timing analyzers)
Synthesizers and Optimizers – improving a form
of the design representation
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Basic Features of VHDL
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Basic Features of VHDL
Design entities
In VHDL a logic circuit is represented as a design entity
A design entity consists of two different VHDL types of description:
(1) Interface description (reserved word is entity)
(2) One or more architectural bodies (reserved word is architecture)
entity D_FF
D
Q
defining D FF interface (ports)
D FF
CLK
R
architecture of D_FF
specifying the behavior of the entity
Designed digital device
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VHDL representation
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Basic Features of VHDL
Entity
The entity part provides system’s interface specification
as seen from the outside and is generally comprised of:
(1) Parameters (such as bus width or max clock frequency)
(2) Connections (system input and output ports)
entity DesignEntityName is
-- parameters
…
-- connections
port (ports);
end entity DesignEntityName;
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Basic Features of VHDL
Architectural bodies
Architectural bodies are specifying the behavior of the entity
architecture ArchitectureName of DesignEntityName is
-- signal declarations
begin
-- concurrent statements
end architecture ArchitectureName;
There are two types of architectural bodies: algorithmic, structural
Algorithmic - at the beginning of the design process,
designers usually would like to check the accuracy of the algorithm
without specifying the detailed implementation
Structural - the logic design stage, detailed implementation,
entity as a set of interrelated components
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Basic Features of VHDL
Processes
Process is another major modeling element in VHDL:
ProcessLabel: ProcessName (sensitivity_list_of_signals) is
begin
-- sequential statements;
end process;
Processes are used inside architectural bodies,
specifying entity behavioral in algorithmic way
Whenever a signal in sensitivity list changes,
the process is activated
Process execution is similar to program execution,
barring one important difference:
a process generally repeats indefinitely
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Basic Features of VHDL
Sequential and parallel processing
The statements within process are performed sequentially
The statements within architectural body are performed concurrent
Sequential and concurrent combination is called VHDL duality and
it presents powerful mechanism
for description of complex systems
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Basic Features of VHDL
Variables and signals
VHDL variable concept in many ways correspondents
to a variable inherited from traditional sequential programming
Signals are the basic vehicle for information transmission
in electronic systems
Signals model real devices’ wires and buses
Variable assignment is different from signal assignment
Main difference between variables and signals
is that signal changes are visible only after process termination
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Design Process Highlights
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Design Process Highlights
MAC (Multiply Accumulator) unit
Incoming part is based on MAC unit design and synthesis
as part of Computer VLSI Systems,
subject lectured by Dr. Veljko Milutinovic
Basic specification elements of MAC unit:
(1) purpose – hardware support for numerous succeeding
multiplication
(2) Wishbone compatible
(3) structural elements: FIFO, sequential multiplier, accumulator
MAC units are used as special CPU resource
for digital signal processing
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Design Process Highlights
MAC (Multiply Accumulator) unit
MAC unit conceptual scheme:
MAC unit
FIFO
Sequential Multiplier
Accumulator
Wishbone Interface
data flow
control data flow
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Design Process Highlights
MAC (Multiply Accumulator) unit
MAC unit detailed scheme – synthesis outcome:
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Design Process Highlights
MAC: Lessons Learned
Testing is extremely important aspect of device design
In the component design process it is essential
to test all structure components of top-level entity separately,
and after that top-level entity itself
While projecting MAC unit so called Regression Testing is used
Regression Testing includes
testing both structural and behavioral architecture
of every entity simultaneously
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Design Process Highlights
MAC: Lessons Learned
An example of regressive testing:
entity TestBench is
end entity TestBench;
architecture Regression of TestBench is
-- signal declaration
begin
BehModel: entity myModel (beh)
port map (…);
StructModel:entity myModel (struct)
port map (…);
stimulus: process is
begin
-- stimulation
end process stimulus;
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Design Process Highlights
MAC: Lessons Learned
verify: process (…) is
begin
assert behOutSignal_i= structOutSignal_i and
behOutSignal_j = structOutSignal_j
report “Implementation Error!”
severity error;
end process verify;
end architecture Regression;
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Design Process Highlights
MAC: Lessons Learned
Special problem in hardware component design:
accommodation of VHDL source code with tool for synthesis
It is possible that VHDL code can be compiled regularly
but synthesis tool registers errors
The solution of the problem:
VHDL coding concerning synthesis tool requirements
It is necessary that VHDL code describes designed device
as close as possible to the particular hardware elements
which synthesis tool recognizes and synthesizes easily
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References
James R. Armstrong, F. Gail Gray,
Structured Logic Design with VHDL
Peter J. Ashenden,
The Designer’s Guide to VHDL
Milutinovic Veljko,
Surviving the Design of a 200 MHz RISC Microprocessor:
Lessons Learned
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Authors
Ivan Dugic, [email protected]
Dr. Veljko Milutinovic, [email protected]
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