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Introduction to HDLs
Hardware Description Languages
CSET 4650
Field Programmable Logic Devices
Dan Solarek
Hardware Description Languages
Hardware Description Languages, or HDLs, are
languages used to design hardware.
Similar to procedural programming languages (e.g., C)
Digital hardware only
An HDL can also be used to describe the functionality
of hardware as well as its implementation.
Leads to simulation
Allows functional verification
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Hardware Description Languages
In electronics, a hardware description language or
HDL is any language from a class of computer
languages for formal description of digital
electronic circuits.
An HDL can describe digital circuit's
operation
its design
and tests to verify its operation
by means of simulation
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Hardware Description Languages
Describe hardware modules at varying levels of
abstraction (more later …)
Structural description
Textual replacement for schematic
Hierarchical composition of modules from primitives
Behavioral/functional description
Describe what module does, not how
Synthesis step generates circuit for module
Simulation semantics are included
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Levels of Design Abstraction
Levels of abstraction for VLSI circuit design.
Adapted from Michael D. Ciletti.
HDLs
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Why HDLs ?
The complexity of logic circuits has increased
dramatically in the past few decades
Other forms of EDAs are no longer effective
HDLs offer a consistent and efficient method for
both design and synthesis
HDLs are relatively easy to learn
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Why HDLs ?
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Why HDLs ?
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Why HDLs ?
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Hardware Description Languages
The principal feature of a hardware description
language is that it contains the capability to describe
the function (behavior) of hardware independent of
implementation.
The great advance with modern HDLs was the
recognition that a single language could be used to
describe the function of the design and also to
describe the implementation.
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History of HDLs
The first HDL was ISP*,
invented by C. Gordon
Bell and Alan Newell at
Carnegie Mellon
University (CMU) and
described in their book
Computer Structures
published in 1972.
* Instruction-set Processor language
Gordon Bell
Alan Newell
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History of HDLs
ISP was the first HDL to use
the term register-transfer level
(RTL).
This term came from the use
of ISP in describing the
behavior of the PDP-8
computer as a set of registers
and logical functions
describing the transfer of data
from source register to
destination register.
DEC PDP-8
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History of HDLs
Subsequent HDLs included
VHSIC HDL (VHDL) which was begun in 1979
Verilog
ABEL
UDLI which was developed by NTT
HiLo, which was the predecessor to Verilog
ISP', which was a successor to ISP (implemented by the
N-dot simulator).
and more …
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HDLs
ISP (circa 1971) - research project at CMU
Written by Bell and Newell
Simulation, but no synthesis
ABEL (circa 1983) - developed by Data-I/O
Targeted to programmable logic devices
Not good for much more than state machines
Verilog (circa 1985) - developed by Gateway (absorbed by
Cadence)
Similar to Pascal and C
Delays is only interaction with simulator
Fairly efficient and easy to write
IEEE standard
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HDLs
VHDL (circa 1987) - DoD sponsored standard
Similar to Ada (emphasis on re-use and maintainability)
Simulation semantics visible
Very general but can get verbose
IEEE standard
Updated in 1993
The current trend is to move away from proprietary
HDLs and towards the two leading standards,
VHDL and Verilog HDL.
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HDLs vs. Programming Languages
An HDL is a standard text-based expression of the
temporal behavior (timing) and/or (spatial) circuit
structure of an electronic system.
In contrast to a software programming language,
an HDL's syntax and semantics include explicit
notations for expressing time and concurrency
which are the primary attributes of hardware.
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HDLs vs. Programming Languages
An HDL is analogous to a software programming
language, but with subtle differences.
Both types of language are processed by a compiler.
An HDL compiler often works in several stages, first
producing a logic description file in a proprietary format,
then converting that to a logic description file in the
industry-standard EDIF format, then converting that to a
JEDEC-format file.
The JEDEC file contains instructions to a PLD
programmer for building logic.
Joint Electron Device Engineering Council
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HDLs vs. Programming Languages
Program Structure
Instantiation of multiple components of the same type
Specify interconnections between modules via schematic
Hierarchy of modules
Assignment
Continuous assignment (logic always produces an output
signal)
Propagation delay (signals take time)
Timing of signals is important (when does a specific
signal or set of signals have an effect on the circuit)
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HDLs vs. Programming Languages
Data structures
Size explicitly spelled out - no dynamic structures
No pointers
Parallelism
Hardware is naturally parallel (must support multiple
threads)
Assignments can occur in parallel (not just sequentially)
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HDLS and Combinational Logic
Modules: specification of inputs, outputs, bidirectional, and
internal signals
Continuous assignment: a gate's output is a function of its
inputs at all times (doesn't need to wait to be "called")
Propagation delay: concept of time and delay in input affecting
gate output
Composition: connecting modules together with wires
Hierarchy: modules encapsulate functional blocks
Specification of don't care conditions (accomplished by setting
output to “x”)
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HDLs and Sequential Logic
Flip-Flops
Representation of clocks - timing of state changes
Asynchronous vs. synchronous
FSMs
Structural view (FFs separate from combinational logic)
Behavioral view (synthesis of sequencers)
Data-paths = ALUs + registers
Use of arithmetic/logical operators
Control of storage elements
Parallelism
Multiple state machines running in parallel
Sequential don't cares
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