Commit Graph

7 Commits (5c40143754c25b6cd8246602a862fe920647442c)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lars Asplund 478b787c10 Replaced VHDL assert and report with VUnit checking and logging
The VUnit log package is a SW style logging framework in VHDL and the check package is an assertion library doing its error reporting with VUnit logging.
These testbenches don't use, and do not need, very advanced logging/checking features but the following was possible to improve

- Checking equality in VHDL can be quite tedious with a lot of type conversions and long message strings to explain the data received and what was expected.
  VUnit's check_equal procedure allow comparison between same or similar types and automatically create the error message for you.
- The code has report statements used for testbench progress reporting and debugging. These were replaced with the info and debug procedures.
  info logs are visible by default while debug is not. This means that debug logs don't have to be commented, which they are now, when not used.
  Instead there is a show procedure making debug messages visible. The show procedure has been commented to hide the debug messages but a more elegant
  solution is to control visibility from a generic and then set that generic from the command line. I've left this as a TODO but the run script allow you to
  extend the standard CLI of VUnit to add new options and you can also set generics from the run script.
- VUnit log messages are color coded if color codes are supported by the terminal. It makes it quicker to spot messages of different types when there are many log messages.
  Error messages will always be made visible on the terminal but you must use the -v (verbose) to see other logs.
- Some tests have a lot of "metvalue detected" warning messages from the numeric_std package and these clutter the logs when using the -v option. VUnit has a simulator independent
  option allowing you to suppress those messages. That option has been enabled.

Signed-off-by: Lars Asplund <lars.anders.asplund@gmail.com>
3 years ago
Lars Asplund 0940b8a9d3 Organized VUnit testbenches into test cases.
Several of the testbenches have stimuli code divided into sections preceded with a header comment explaining
what is being tested. These sections have been made into VUnit test cases. The default behavior of VUnit is
to run each test case in a separate simulation which comes with a number of benefits:

* A failing test case doesn't prevent other test cases to be executed
* Test cases are independent. A test case cannot fail as a side-effect to a problem with another test case
* Test execution can be more parallelized and the overall test execution time reduced

Signed-off-by: Lars Asplund <lars.anders.asplund@gmail.com>
3 years ago
Lars Asplund 08c0c4c1b4 Make core testbenches recognized by VUnit
This commit also removes the dependencies these testbenches have on VHPIDIRECT.
The use of VHPIDIRECT limits the number of available simulators for the project. Rather than using
foreign functions the testbenches can be implemented entirely in VHDL where equivalent functionality exists.
For these testbenches the VHPIDIRECT-based randomization functions were replaced with VHDL-based functions.

The testbenches recognized by VUnit can be executed in parallel threads for better simulation performance using
the -p option to the run.py script

Signed-off-by: Lars Asplund <lars.anders.asplund@gmail.com>
3 years ago
Anton Blanchard 21f482f967 Reformat testbenches
Signed-off-by: Anton Blanchard <anton@linux.ibm.com>
4 years ago
Anton Blanchard ab86b58d95 Exit cleanly from testbench on success
Signed-off-by: Anton Blanchard <anton@linux.ibm.com>
5 years ago
Paul Mackerras 8a0a907e2f Implement the extswsli instruction
This mainly required the addition of an entry to the opcode 31 decode
table and a 32-bit sign-extender in the rotator.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@ozlabs.org>
5 years ago
Paul Mackerras f7c393ba7e Add a rotate/mask/shift unit and use it in execute1
This adds a new entity 'rotator' which contains combinatorial logic
for rotating and masking 64-bit values.  It implements the operations
of the rlwinm, rlwnm, rlwimi, rldicl, rldicr, rldic, rldimi, rldcl,
rldcr, sld, slw, srd, srw, srad, sradi, sraw and srawi instructions.
It consists of a 3-stage 64-bit rotator using 4:1 multiplexors at
each stage, two mask generators, output logic and control logic.

The insn_type_t values used for these instructions have been reduced
to just 5: OP_RLC, OP_RLCL and OP_RLCR for the rotate and mask
instructions (clear both left and right, clear left, clear right
variants), OP_SHL for left shifts, and OP_SHR for right shifts.
The control signals for the rotator are derived from the opcode
and from the is_32bit and is_signed fields of the decode_rom_t.

The rotator is instantiated as an entity in execute1 so that we can
be sure we only have one of it.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@ozlabs.org>
5 years ago