A FPGA friendly 32 bit RISC-V CPU implementation
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README.md

Index

Description

This repository host an RISC-V implementation written in SpinalHDL. There is some specs :

  • RV32IM instruction set
  • Pipelined on 5 stages (Fetch, Decode, Execute, Memory, WriteBack)
  • 1.44 DMIPS/Mhz when all features are enabled
  • Optimized for FPGA, fully portable
  • AXI4 and Avalon ready
  • Optional MUL/DIV extension
  • Optional instruction and data caches
  • Optional MMU
  • Optional debug extension allowing eclipse debugging via an GDB >> openOCD >> JTAG connection
  • Optional interrupts and exception handling with the Machine and the User mode from the riscv-privileged-v1.9.1 spec.
  • Two implementation of shift instructions, Single cycle / shiftNumber cycles
  • Each stage could have bypass or interlock hazard logic
  • FreeRTOS port https://github.com/Dolu1990/FreeRTOS-RISCV

The hardware description of this CPU is done by using an very software oriented approach (without any overhead in the generated hardware). There is a list of software concepts used :

  • There is very few fixed things. Nearly everything is plugin based. The PC manager is a plugin, the register file is a plugin, the hazard controller is a plugin ...
  • There is an automatic a tool which allow plugins to insert data in the pipeline at a given stage, and allow other plugins to read it in another stages through automatic pipelining.
  • There is an service system which provide a very dynamic framework. As instance, a plugin could provide an exception service which could then be used by others plugins to emit exceptions from the pipeline.

There is a gitter channel for all questions about VexRiscv :
Gitter

Area usage and maximal frequency

The following number where obtains by synthesis the CPU as toplevel without any specific synthesis option to save area or to get better maximal frequency (neutral).
The clock constraint is set to a unattainable value, which tends to increase the design area.
The dhrystone benchmark were compiled with -O3 -fno-inline
All the cached configuration have some cache trashing during the dhrystone benchmark except the VexRiscv full max perf one. This of course reduce the performance. It is possible to produce dhrystone binaries which fit inside a 4KB I$ and 4KB D$ (I already had this case once) but currently it isn't the case.
The used CPU corresponding configuration can be find in src/scala/vexriscv/demo.

VexRiscv smallest (RV32I, 0.52 DMIPS/Mhz, no datapath bypass, no interrupt) ->
  Artix 7    -> 346 Mhz 481 LUT 539 FF
  Cyclone V  -> 201 Mhz 347 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 190 Mhz 673 LUT 529 FF 
  Cyclone II -> 154 Mhz 673 LUT 528 FF 
  
VexRiscv smallest (RV32I, 0.52 DMIPS/Mhz, no datapath bypass) ->
  Artix 7    -> 340 Mhz 562 LUT 589 FF 
  Cyclone V  -> 202 Mhz 387 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 180 Mhz 780 LUT 579 FF 
  Cyclone II -> 149 Mhz 780 LUT 578 FF 
  
VexRiscv small and productive (RV32I, 0.82 DMIPS/Mhz)  ->
  Artix 7    -> 327 Mhz 698 LUT 558 FF 
  Cyclone V  -> 158 Mhz 524 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 146 Mhz 1,061 LUT 552 FF 

VexRiscv small and productive with I$ (RV32I, 0.72 DMIPS/Mhz, 4KB-I$)  ->
  Artix 7 -> 331 Mhz 727 LUT 600 FF 
  Cyclone V -> 152 Mhz 536 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 156 Mhz 1,075 LUT 565 FF 

VexRiscv full no cache (RV32IM, 1.22 DMIPS/Mhz, single cycle barrel shifter, debug module, catch exceptions, static branch) ->
  Artix 7    -> 310 Mhz 1391 LUT 934 FF 
  Cyclone V  -> 143 Mhz 935 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 123 Mhz 1,916 LUT 960 FF 
  Cyclone II -> 108 Mhz 1,939 LUT 959 FF 
  
VexRiscv full (RV32IM, 1.21 DMIPS/Mhz with cache trashing, 4KB-I$,4KB-D$, single cycle barrel shifter, debug module, catch exceptions, static branch) ->
  Artix 7    -> 249 Mhz 1822 LUT 1362 FF 
  Cyclone V  -> 128 Mhz 1,187 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 107 Mhz 2,560 LUT 1,671 FF 
  
VexRiscv full max perf -> (RV32IM, 1.44 DMIPS/Mhz, 16KB-I$,16KB-D$, single cycle barrel shifter, debug module, catch exceptions, dynamic branch prediction in the fetch stage, branch and shift operations done in the Execute stage) ->
  Artix 7    -> 192 Mhz 1858 LUT 1392 FF 
  Cyclone V  -> 89 Mhz 1,246 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 85 Mhz 2,673 LUT 1,679 FF 

VexRiscv full with MMU (RV32IM, 1.26 DMIPS/Mhz with cache trashing, 4KB-I$, 4KB-D$, single cycle barrel shifter, debug module, catch exceptions, dynamic branch, MMU) ->
  Artix 7    -> 208 Mhz 2092 LUT 1881 FF 
  Cyclone V - > 112 Mhz 1,435 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 94 Mhz 2,980 LUT 2,169 FF 

There is a summary of the configuration which produce 1.44 DMIPS :

  • 5 stage : F -> D -> E -> M -> WB
  • single cycle ADD/SUB/Bitwise/Shift ALU
  • branch/jump done in the E stage
  • memory load values are bypassed in the WB stage (late result)
  • 33 cycle division with bypassing in the M stage (late result)
  • single cycle multiplication with bypassing in the WB stage (late result)
  • dynamic branch prediction done in the F stage with an direct mapped target buffer cache (no penalities on corrects predictions)

Dependencies

On Ubuntu 14 :

# JAVA JDK 7 or 8
sudo apt-get install openjdk-8-jdk

# SBT
echo "deb https://dl.bintray.com/sbt/debian /" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/sbt.list
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver hkp://keyserver.ubuntu.com:80 --recv 2EE0EA64E40A89B84B2DF73499E82A75642AC823
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install sbt

# Verilator (for sim only, realy need 3.9+, in general apt-get will give you 3.8)
sudo apt-get install git make autoconf g++ flex bison
git clone http://git.veripool.org/git/verilator   # Only first time
unsetenv VERILATOR_ROOT  # For csh; ignore error if on bash
unset VERILATOR_ROOT  # For bash
cd verilator
git pull        # Make sure we're up-to-date
git tag         # See what versions exist
autoconf        # Create ./configure script
./configure
make
sudo make install

The VexRiscv need the unreleased master-head of SpinalHDL :

# Compile and localy publish the latest SpinalHDL
rm -rf SpinalHDL
git clone https://github.com/SpinalHDL/SpinalHDL.git
cd SpinalHDL
sbt clean compile publish-local
cd ..

CPU generation

You can find two example of CPU instantiation in :

  • src/main/scala/vexriscv/GenFull.scala
  • src/main/scala/vexriscv/GenSmallest.scala

To generate the corresponding RTL as a VexRiscv.v file, run (it could take time the first time you run it):

NOTE : The VexRiscv could need the unreleased master-head of SpinalHDL. If it fail to compile, just get the SpinalHDL repository and do a "sbt clean compile publish-local" in it as described in the dependencies chapter.

sbt "run-main vexriscv.demo.GenFull"

# or
sbt "run-main vexriscv.demo.GenSmallest"

Regression tests

To run tests (need the verilator simulator), go in the src/test/cpp/regression folder and run :

# To test the GenFull CPU 
# (Don't worry about the CSR test not passing, basicaly the GenFull isn't the truly full version of the CPU, some CSR feature are disable in it)
make clean run

# To test the GenSmallest CPU
make clean run IBUS=SIMPLE DBUS=SIMPLE CSR=no MMU=no DEBUG_PLUGIN=no MUL=no DIV=no

Those self tested tests include :

You can enable FreeRTOS tests by adding 'FREERTOS=yes' in the command line, will take time. Also, it use THREAD_COUNT host CPU threads to run multiple regression in parallel.

Interactive debug of the simulated CPU via GDB OpenOCD and Verilator

It's as described to run tests, but you just have to add DEBUG_PLUGIN_EXTERNAL=yes in the make arguments. Work for the GenFull, but not for the GenSmallest as this configuration has no debug module.

Then you can use the https://github.com/SpinalHDL/openocd_riscv tool to create a GDB server connected to the target (the simulated CPU)

#in the VexRiscv repository, to run the simulation on which one OpenOCD can connect itself =>
sbt "run-main vexriscv.demo.GenFull"
cd src/test/cpp/regression
make run DEBUG_PLUGIN_EXTERNAL=yes

#In the openocd git, after building it =>
src/openocd -c "set VEXRISCV_YAML PATH_TO_THE_GENERATED_CPU0_YAML_FILE" -f tcl/target/vexriscv_sim.cfg

#Run a GDB session with an elf RISCV executable (GenFull CPU)
YourRiscvToolsPath/bin/riscv32-unknown-elf-gdb VexRiscvRepo/src/test/resources/elf/uart.elf
target remote localhost:3333
monitor reset halt
load
continue

# Now it should print messages in the Verilator simulation of the CPU

Using eclipse to run the software and debug it

By using Zylin plugin

You can use the eclipse + Zylin embedded CDT plugin to do it (http://opensource.zylin.com/embeddedcdt.html). Tested with Helios Service Release 2 (http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/download.php?file=/technology/epp/downloads/release/helios/SR2/eclipse-cpp-helios-SR2-linux-gtk-x86_64.tar.gz) and the corresponding zylin plugin.

To following commands will download eclipse and install the plugin.

wget http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/download.php?file=/technology/epp/downloads/release/helios/SR2/eclipse-cpp-helios-SR2-linux-gtk-x86_64.tar.gz
tar -xvzf download.php?file=%2Ftechnology%2Fepp%2Fdownloads%2Frelease%2Fhelios%2FSR2%2Feclipse-cpp-helios-SR2-linux-gtk-x86_64.tar.gz
cd eclipse
./eclipse -application org.eclipse.equinox.p2.director -repository http://opensource.zylin.com/zylincdt -installIU com.zylin.cdt.feature.feature.group/

See https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1NseNHH05B6lmIXqQFVwK8xRjWE4ydeG-?usp=sharing to import a makefile project and create a debug configuration.

Note that sometime this eclipse need to be restarted in order to be able to place new breakpoints.

By using FreedomStudio

You can get FreedomStudio (which is package with eclipse and some plugins) there https://www.sifive.com/products/tools/

See https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1a7FyMOYgFc9UDhfsWUSCjyqDCvOrts2J?usp=sharing to import a makefile project and create a debug configuration.

Briey SoC

As a demonstrator, a SoC named Briey is implemented in src/main/scala/vexriscv/demo/Briey.scala. This SoC is very similar to the Pinsec one :

Alt text

To generate the Briey SoC Hardware :

sbt "run-main vexriscv.demo.Briey"

To run the verilator simulation of the Briey SoC which can be then connected to OpenOCD/GDB, first get those dependencies :

sudo apt-get install build-essential xorg-dev libudev-dev libts-dev libgl1-mesa-dev libglu1-mesa-dev libasound2-dev libpulse-dev libopenal-dev libogg-dev libvorbis-dev libaudiofile-dev libpng12-dev libfreetype6-dev libusb-dev libdbus-1-dev zlib1g-dev libdirectfb-dev libsdl2-dev

Then go in src/test/cpp/briey and run the simulation with (UART TX is printed in the terminal, VGA is displayed in a GUI):

make clean run

To connect OpenOCD (https://github.com/SpinalHDL/openocd_riscv) to the simulation :

src/openocd -f tcl/interface/jtag_tcp.cfg -c "set BRIEY_CPU0_YAML /home/spinalvm/Spinal/VexRiscv/cpu0.yaml" -f tcl/target/briey.cfg

You can find multiples software examples and demo there : https://github.com/SpinalHDL/VexRiscvSocSoftware/tree/master/projects/briey

You can find some FPGA project which instantiate the Briey SoC there (DE1-SoC, DE0-Nano): https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0B-CqLXDTaMbKZGdJZlZ5THAxRTQ?usp=sharing

There is some measurements of Briey SoC timings and area :

  Artix 7    -> 239 Mhz 3227 LUT 3410 FF 
  Cyclone V  -> 125 Mhz 2,207 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 112 Mhz 4,594 LUT 3,620

Murax SoC

Murax is a very light SoC (fit in ICE40 FPGA) which could work without any external component.

  • VexRiscv RV32I[M]
  • JTAG debugger (eclipse/GDB/openocd ready)
  • 8 kB of on-chip ram
  • Interrupt support
  • APB bus for peripherals
  • 32 GPIO pin
  • one 16 bits prescaler, two 16 bits timers
  • one UART with tx/rx fifo

Depending the CPU configuration, on the ICE40-hx8k FPGA with icestorm for synthesis, the full SoC will get following area/performance :

  • RV32I interlocked stages => 51 Mhz, 2387 LC 0.45 DMIPS/Mhz
  • RV32I bypassed stages => 45 Mhz, 2718 LC 0.65 DMIPS/Mhz

You can find its implementation there : src/main/scala/vexriscv/demo/Murax.scala

To generate the Murax SoC Hardware :

# To generate the SoC without any content in the ram
sbt "run-main vexriscv.demo.Murax"

# To generate the SoC with a demo program in the SoC
# Will blink led and echo UART RX to UART TX   (in the verilator sim, type some text and press enter to send UART frames to the Murax RX pin)
sbt "run-main vexriscv.demo.MuraxWithRamInit"

Then go in src/test/cpp/murax and run the simulation with :

make clean run

To connect OpenOCD (https://github.com/SpinalHDL/openocd_riscv) to the simulation :

src/openocd -f tcl/interface/jtag_tcp.cfg -c "set MURAX_CPU0_YAML /home/spinalvm/Spinal/VexRiscv/cpu0.yaml" -f tcl/target/murax.cfg

You can find multiples software examples and demo there : https://github.com/SpinalHDL/VexRiscvSocSoftware/tree/master/projects/murax

There is some measurements of Murax SoC timings and area :

Murax interlocked stages (0.45 DMIPS/Mhz) ->
  Artix 7    -> 304 Mhz 1016 LUT 1296 FF
  Cyclone V  -> 165 Mhz 736 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 151 Mhz 1,463 LUT 1,254 FF
  ICE40-HX   ->  51 Mhz 2387 LC (icestorm)

MuraxFast bypassed stages (0.65 DMIPS/Mhz) ->
  Artix 7    -> 301 Mhz 1248 LUT 1393 FF
  Cyclone V  -> 163 Mhz 872 ALMs
  Cyclone IV -> 145 Mhz 1,712 LUT 1,288 FF
  ICE40-HX   ->  45 Mhz, 2718 LC  (icestorm)

There is some scripts to generate the SoC and call the icestorm toolchain there : scripts/Murax/

Note that now a toplevel simulation testbench with the same feature + a GUI is implemented with SpinalSim. You can find it in src/test/scala/vexriscv/MuraxSim.scala.

To run it :

#This will generate the Murax RTL + run its testbench. You need Verilator 3.9xx installated.
sbt "test:runMain vexriscv.MuraxSim"

Build the RISC-V GCC

In fact, now you can find some prebuild GCC :

wget https://static.dev.sifive.com/dev-tools/riscv64-unknown-elf-gcc-20171231-x86_64-linux-centos6.tar.gz
tar -xzvf riscv64-unknown-elf-gcc-20171231-x86_64-linux-centos6.tar.gz
sudo mv riscv64-unknown-elf-gcc-20171231-x86_64-linux-centos6 /opt/riscv64-unknown-elf-gcc-20171231-x86_64-linux-centos6
sudo mv /opt/riscv64-unknown-elf-gcc-20171231-x86_64-linux-centos6 /opt/riscv
echo 'export PATH=/opt/riscv/bin:$PATH' >> ~/.bashrc 

But if you want to compile from sources in /opt/ the rv32i and rv32im gcc, do the following (will take one hour):

# Be carefull, sometime the git clone has issue to successfully clone riscv-gnu-toolchain.
sudo apt-get install autoconf automake autotools-dev curl libmpc-dev libmpfr-dev libgmp-dev gawk build-essential bison flex texinfo gperf libtool patchutils bc zlib1g-dev -y

git clone --recursive https://github.com/riscv/riscv-gnu-toolchain riscv-gnu-toolchain
cd riscv-gnu-toolchain

echo "Starting RISC-V Toolchain build process"

ARCH=rv32im
rmdir -rf $ARCH
mkdir $ARCH; cd $ARCH
../configure  --prefix=/opt/$ARCH --with-arch=$ARCH --with-abi=ilp32
sudo make -j4
cd ..


ARCH=rv32i
rmdir -rf $ARCH
mkdir $ARCH; cd $ARCH
../configure  --prefix=/opt/$ARCH --with-arch=$ARCH --with-abi=ilp32
sudo make -j4
cd ..

echo -e "\\nRISC-V Toolchain installation completed!"

CPU parametrization and instantiation example

You can find many example of different config in the https://github.com/SpinalHDL/VexRiscv/tree/master/src/main/scala/vexriscv/demo folder. There is one :

import vexriscv._
import vexriscv.plugin._

//Instanciate one VexRiscv
val cpu = new VexRiscv(
  //Provide a configuration instance
  config = VexRiscvConfig(
    //Provide a list of plugins which will futher add their logic into the CPU
    plugins = List(
      new PcManagerSimplePlugin(
        resetVector = 0x00000000l,
        relaxedPcCalculation = true
      ),
      new IBusSimplePlugin(
        interfaceKeepData = false,
        catchAccessFault = false
      ),
      new DBusSimplePlugin(
        catchAddressMisaligned = false,
        catchAccessFault = false
      ),
      new DecoderSimplePlugin(
        catchIllegalInstruction = false
      ),
      new RegFilePlugin(
        regFileReadyKind = Plugin.SYNC,
        zeroBoot = true
      ),
      new IntAluPlugin,
      new SrcPlugin(
        separatedAddSub = false,
        executeInsertion = false
      ),
      new LightShifterPlugin,
      new HazardSimplePlugin(
        bypassExecute           = false,
        bypassMemory            = false,
        bypassWriteBack         = false,
        bypassWriteBackBuffer   = false
      ),
      new BranchPlugin(
        earlyBranch = false,
        catchAddressMisaligned = false,
        prediction = NONE
      ),
      new YamlPlugin("cpu0.yaml")
    )
  )
)

Add a custom instruction to the CPU via the plugin system

There is an example of an simple plugin which add an simple SIMD_ADD instruction :

import spinal.core._
import vexriscv.plugin.Plugin
import vexriscv.{Stageable, DecoderService, VexRiscv}

//This plugin example will add a new instruction named SIMD_ADD which do the following :
//
//RD : Regfile Destination, RS : Regfile Source
//RD( 7 downto  0) = RS1( 7 downto  0) + RS2( 7 downto  0)
//RD(16 downto  8) = RS1(16 downto  8) + RS2(16 downto  8)
//RD(23 downto 16) = RS1(23 downto 16) + RS2(23 downto 16)
//RD(31 downto 24) = RS1(31 downto 24) + RS2(31 downto 24)
//
//Instruction encoding :
//0000011----------000-----0110011
//       |RS2||RS1|   |RD |
//
//Note :  RS1, RS2, RD positions follow the RISC-V spec and are common for all instruction of the ISA

class SimdAddPlugin extends Plugin[VexRiscv]{
  //Define the concept of IS_SIMD_ADD signals, which specify if the current instruction is destined for ths plugin
  object IS_SIMD_ADD extends Stageable(Bool)

  //Callback to setup the plugin and ask for different services
  override def setup(pipeline: VexRiscv): Unit = {
    import pipeline.config._

    //Retrieve the DecoderService instance
    val decoderService = pipeline.service(classOf[DecoderService])

    //Specify the IS_SIMD_ADD default value when instruction are decoded
    decoderService.addDefault(IS_SIMD_ADD, False)

    //Specify the instruction decoding which should be applied when the instruction match the 'key' parttern
    decoderService.add(
      //Bit pattern of the new SIMD_ADD instruction
      key = M"0000011----------000-----0110011",

      //Decoding specification when the 'key' pattern is recognized in the instruction
      List(
        IS_SIMD_ADD              -> True,
        REGFILE_WRITE_VALID      -> True, //Enable the register file write
        BYPASSABLE_EXECUTE_STAGE -> True, //Notify the hazard management unit that the instruction result is already accessible in the EXECUTE stage (Bypass ready)
        BYPASSABLE_MEMORY_STAGE  -> True, //Same as above but for the memory stage
        RS1_USE                  -> True, //Notify the hazard management unit that this instruction use the RS1 value
        RS2_USE                  -> True  //Same than above but for RS2.
      )
    )
  }

  override def build(pipeline: VexRiscv): Unit = {
    import pipeline._
    import pipeline.config._

    //Add a new scope on the execute stage (used to give a name to signals)
    execute plug new Area {
      //Define some signals used internally to the plugin
      val rs1 = execute.input(RS1).asUInt
      //32 bits UInt value of the regfile[RS1]
      val rs2 = execute.input(RS2).asUInt
      val rd = UInt(32 bits)

      //Do some computation
      rd(7 downto 0) := rs1(7 downto 0) + rs2(7 downto 0)
      rd(16 downto 8) := rs1(16 downto 8) + rs2(16 downto 8)
      rd(23 downto 16) := rs1(23 downto 16) + rs2(23 downto 16)
      rd(31 downto 24) := rs1(31 downto 24) + rs2(31 downto 24)

      //When the instruction is a SIMD_ADD one, then write the result into the register file data path.
      when(execute.input(IS_SIMD_ADD)) {
        execute.output(REGFILE_WRITE_DATA) := rd.asBits
      }
    }
  }
}

Then if you want to add this plugin to a given CPU, you just need to add it in its parameterized plugin list.

This example is a very simple one, but each plugin can really have access to the whole CPU

  • Halt a given stage of the CPU
  • Unschedule instructions
  • Emit an exception
  • Introduce new instruction decoding specification
  • Ask to jump the PC somewhere
  • Read signals published by other plugins
  • override published signals values
  • Provide an alternative implementation
  • ...

As a demonstrator, this SimdAddPlugin was integrated in the src/main/scala/vexriscv/demo/GenCustomSimdAdd.scala CPU configuration and is self tested by the src/test/cpp/custom/simd_add application by running the following commands :

# Generate the CPU
sbt "run-main vexriscv.demo.GenCustomSimdAdd"

cd src/test/cpp/regression/

# Optionally add TRACE=yes if you want to get the VCD waveform from the simulation.
# Also you have to know that by default, the testbench introduce instruction/data bus stall.
# Note the CUSTOM_SIMD_ADD flag is set to yes.
make clean run IBUS=SIMPLE DBUS=SIMPLE CSR=no MMU=no DEBUG_PLUGIN=no MUL=no DIV=no DHRYSTONE=no REDO=2 CUSTOM_SIMD_ADD=yes

To retrieve the plugin related signals in the wave, just filter with simd.

Adding a new CSR via the plugin system

You can find two example about how to add custom CSR into the CPU via the plugin system there : https://github.com/SpinalHDL/VexRiscv/blob/master/src/main/scala/vexriscv/demo/CustomCsrDemoPlugin.scala

The first one (CustomCsrDemoPlugin) is adding an instruction counter and an clock cycle counter into the CSR mapping (and also do tricky stuff as a demonstration).
While the second one (CustomCsrDemoGpioPlugin) is creating an GPIO peripheral directly mapped into the CSR.

CPU clock and resets

Without the debug plugin, the CPU will have clk input and a reset input, which is very standard. But with the debug plugin the situation is the following :

  • clk : As before, the clock which drive the whole CPU design, including the debug logic
  • reset : Reset all the CPU states excepted the debug logics
  • debugReset : Reset the debug logic of the CPU
  • debug_resetOut : It is a CPU output signal which allow the JTAG to reset the CPU + the memory interconnect + the peripherals

So there is the reset interconnect in case you use the debug plugin :

                                VexRiscv
                            +------------------+
                            |                  |
toplevelReset >----+--------> debugReset       |
                   |        |                  |
                   |  +-----< debug_resetOut   |
                   |  |     |                  |
                   +--or>-+-> reset            |
                          | |                  |
                          | +------------------+
                          |
                          +-> Interconnect / Peripherals

VexRiscv Architecture

VexRiscv is implemented via an 5 stages in order pipeline on which many optional and complementary plugins will add functionalities to provide a functional RISC-V CPU. This approach is completely unconventional and only possible on meta hardware description languages (SpinalHDL in the current case) but had proved its advantages via the VexRiscv implementation :

  • You can swap/turn on/turn off parts of the CPU directly via the plugin system
  • You can add new functionalities/instruction without having to modify any sources code of the CPU
  • It allow the CPU configuration to cover a very large spectrum of implementation without cooking spagetti code
  • To resume it allow your code base to truly produce a parametrized CPU design

So again, if you generate the CPU without any plugin, it will only contain the 5 stages definition and their basic arbitration, but nothing else, as everything else, including the program counter is added into the CPU via plugins.

Plugins

This chapter (WIP) will describe plugins currently implemented

PcManagerSimplePlugin

This plugin implement the programme counter and over an jump service to all plugins.

Parameters type description
resetVector BigInt Address of the program counter after the reset
relaxedPcCalculation Boolean By default jump have an asynchronous immediate effect on the program counter, which allow to reduce the branch penalties by one cycle but could reduce the FMax as it will combinatorialy drive the instruction bus address signal. To avoid this you can set this parameter to true, which will make the jump affecting the programm counter in a sequancial way, which will cut the combinatorial path but add one additional cycle of penalty when a jump occur.

The jump interface implemented by this plugin allow all other plugin to request jumps. The stage argument specify from which stage the jump is asked, which will allow the PcManagerSimplePlugin plugin to manage priorities between jump requests.

trait JumpService{
  def createJumpInterface(stage : Stage) : Flow[UInt]
}

This plugin operate into the prefetch stage.

IBusSimplePlugin

This plugin fetch instruction via a very simple and neutral memory interface going outside the CPU.

Parameters type description
interfaceKeepData Boolean Specify if the read response interface keep the data until the next one, or if it's only present a single cycle.
catchAccessFault Boolean If an the read response specify an read error and this parameter is true, it will generate an CPU exception trap

There is the SimpleBus interface definition

case class IBusSimpleCmd() extends Bundle{
  val pc = UInt(32 bits)
}

case class IBusSimpleRsp() extends Bundle with IMasterSlave{
  val ready = Bool 
  val error = Bool
  val inst  = Bits(32 bits)

  override def asMaster(): Unit = {
    out(ready,error,inst)
  }
}

case class IBusSimpleBus(interfaceKeepData : Boolean) extends Bundle with IMasterSlave{
  var cmd = Stream(IBusSimpleCmd())
  var rsp = IBusSimpleRsp()

  override def asMaster(): Unit = {
    master(cmd)
    slave(rsp)
  }
}

There is at least one cycle latency between que cmd and the rsp. the rsp.ready flag should be false after a cmd until the rsp is present.

Note that bridges are implemented to convert this interface into AXI4 and Avalon

This plugin fit in the fetch stage

IBusCachedPlugin

Simple and light multi way instruction cache.

Parameters type description
cacheSize Int Total storage capacity of the cache
bytePerLine Int Number of byte per cache line
wayCount Int Number of cache way
twoCycleRam Boolean Check the tags values in the decode stage instead of the fetch stage to relax timings
asyncTagMemory Boolean Read the cache tags in a asyncronus manner instead of syncronous one
addressWidth Int Address width, should be 32
cpuDataWidth Int Cpu data width, should be 32
memDataWidth Int Memory data width, could potentialy be something else than 32, but only 32 is currently tested
catchIllegalAccess Boolean Catch when an memory access is done on non valid memory address (MMU)
catchAccessFault Boolean Catch when the memeory bus is responding with an error
catchMemoryTranslationMiss Boolean Catch when the MMU miss a TLB

Note : If you enable the twoCycleRam and and the wayCount is bigger than one, then the register file plugin should be configured to read the regFile in a asyncronus manner.

DecoderSimplePlugin

This plugin will provide instruction decoding capabilities to others plugins.
As instance, the pipeline hazard plugin will need to know, for a given instruction, if it is using the register file source 1/2 in order stall the pipeline until the hazard is gone. So to provide this kind of information, each plugin which implement an instruction will document to the DecoderSimplePlugin plugin this kind of informations.

Parameters type description
catchIllegalInstruction Boolean If set to true, instruction which have no decoding specification will generate an trap exception

There is an usage example :

    //Specify the instruction decoding which should be applied when the instruction match the 'key' pattern
    decoderService.add(
      //Bit pattern of the new instruction
      key = M"0000011----------000-----0110011",

      //Decoding specification when the 'key' pattern is recognized in the instruction
      List(
        IS_SIMD_ADD              -> True,
        REGFILE_WRITE_VALID      -> True, //Enable the register file write
        BYPASSABLE_EXECUTE_STAGE -> True, //Notify the hazard management unit that the instruction result is already accessible in the EXECUTE stage (Bypass ready)
        BYPASSABLE_MEMORY_STAGE  -> True, //Same as above but for the memory stage
        RS1_USE                  -> True, //Notify the hazard management unit that this instruction use the RS1 value
        RS2_USE                  -> True  //Same than above but for RS2.
      )
    )
  }

This plugin operate in the Decode stage

RegFilePlugin

This plugin implement the register file.

Parameters type description
regFileReadyKind RegFileReadKind Can bet set to ASYNC or SYNC. Specify the kind of memory read used to implement the register file. ASYNC mean zero cycle latency memory read, while SYNC mean one cycle latency memory read which can be mapped into standard FPGA memory blocks
zeroBoot Boolean Load all registers with zeroes at the beginning of simulations to keep everything deterministic in logs/traces

This register file use an don't care read during write policy, so the bypassing/hazard plugin should take care of this.

HazardSimplePlugin

This plugin check the pipeline instruction dependencies and depending them, it will stop the instruction in the decoding stage or bypass the instruction results from the following stages to the decode stage.

As the register file is implemented with a don't care read during write policy, this plugin also have to manage hazard comming from this.

Parameters type description
bypassExecute Boolean Enable the bypassing of instruction results comming from the Execute stage
bypassMemory Boolean Enable the bypassing of instruction results comming from the Memory stage
bypassWriteBack Boolean Enable the bypassing of instruction results comming from the WriteBack stage
bypassWriteBackBuffer Boolean Enable the bypassing of the previous cycle register file written value

SrcPlugin

This plugin muxes different inputs values to produce SRC1/SRC2/SRC_ADD/SRC_SUB/SRC_LESS values which are common values used by many plugins in the exectue stage (ALU / Branch / Load / Store).

Parameters type description
separatedAddSub RegFileReadKind By default SRC_ADD/SRC_SUB are generated from a single controllable adder/substractor, but if this is set to true, it use separated adder/substractors
executeInsertion Boolean By default SRC1/SRC2 are generated in the Decode stage, but if this parameter is true, it is done in the Execute stage (It will relax the bypassing network)

Excepted SRC1/SRC2, this plugin do everything at the begining of Execute stage.

IntAluPlugin

This plugin implement all ADD/SUB/SLT/SLTU/XOR/OR/AND/LUI/AUIPC instructions in the execute stage by using the SrcPlugin outputs. It is a realy simple plugin.

The result is injected into the pipeline directly at the end of the execute stage.

LightShifterPlugin

Implement SLL/SRL/SRA instructions by using an iterative shifter register, whill use one cycle per bit shift.

The result is injected into the pipeline directly at the end of the execute stage.

FullBarrielShifterPlugin

Implement SLL/SRL/SRA instructions by using an full barriel shifter, so it execute all shifts in a single cycle.

Parameters type description
earlyInjection Boolean By default the result of the shift is injected into the pipeline in the Memory stage to relax timings, but if this option is true it will be done in the Execute stage

BranchPlugin

This plugin implement all branch/jump instructions (JAL/JALR/BEQ/BNE/BLT/BGE/BLTU/BGEU) with some optional branch prediction. Each of those branch prediction could have been implemented into separated plugins.

Parameters type description
earlyBranch Boolean By default the branch is done in the Memory stage to relax timings, but if this option is set it's done in the Execute stage
catchAddressMisaligned Boolean If a jump/branch is done in an unaligned PC address, it will fire an trap exception
prediction BranchPrediction Can be set to NONE/STATIC/DYNAMIC/DYNAMIC_TARGET to specify the branch predictor implementation, see bellow for more descriptions
historyRamSizeLog2 Int Specify the number of entries in the direct mapped prediction cache of DYNAMIC/DYNAMIC_TARGET implementation. 2 pow historyRamSizeLog2 entries

Each miss predicted jumps will produce between 2 and 4 cycles penalty depending the earlyBranch and the PcManagerSimplePlugin.relaxedPcCalculation configurations

Prediction NONE

No prediction, each PC changes due to a jump/branch will produce a penalty.

Prediction STATIC

In the decode stage, if the instruction is an conditional branch pointing backward or an JAL, it branch it speculatively. If the speculation is right it the branch penality is reduced to a single cycle, else the standard penalty is applied.

Prediction DYNAMIC

It is the same than the STATIC prediction, excepted that to do the prediction, it use a direct mapped 2 bit history cache (BHT) which remember if the branch is more likely to be taken or not.

Prediction DYNAMIC_TARGET

This predictor is using a direct mapped branch target buffer (BTB) in the Fetch stage which store the PC of the instruction, the target PC of the instruction and a 2 bit history to remember if the branch is more likely to be taken or not. This is the most efficient branch predictor actualy implemented on VexRiscv as when the branch prediction is right, is produce no branch penalty. The down side is that this predictor has a long combinatorial path comming from the prediction cache read port to the programm counter by passing through the jump interface.

DBusSimplePlugin

This plugin implement the load and store instructions (LB/LH/LW/LBU/LHU/LWU/SB/SH/SW) via a simple and neutral memory bus going out of the CPU.

Parameters type description
catchAddressMisaligned Boolean If a memory access is done in an unaligned memory address, it will fire an trap exception
catchAccessFault Boolean If a memory read return an error, it will fire an trap exception
earlyInjection Boolean By default, the memory read values are injected into the pipeline in the WriteBack stage to relax the timings, if this parameter is true it's done in the Memory stage

There is the DBusSimpleBus

case class DBusSimpleCmd() extends Bundle{
  val wr = Bool
  val address = UInt(32 bits)
  val data = Bits(32 bit)
  val size = UInt(2 bit)
}

case class DBusSimpleRsp() extends Bundle with IMasterSlave{
  val ready = Bool
  val error = Bool
  val data = Bits(32 bit)

  override def asMaster(): Unit = {
    out(ready,error,data)
  }
}


case class DBusSimpleBus() extends Bundle with IMasterSlave{
  val cmd = Stream(DBusSimpleCmd())
  val rsp = DBusSimpleRsp()

  override def asMaster(): Unit = {
    master(cmd)
    slave(rsp)
  }
}

Note that bridges are implemented to convert this interface into AXI4 and Avalon

There is at least one cycle latency between que cmd and the rsp. the rsp.ready flag should be false after a read cmd until the rsp is present.

DBusCachedPlugin

Single way cache implementation with a victime buffer, documentation WIP

MulPlugin

Implement the multiplication instruction from the RISC-V M extension. Its implementation was done in a FPGA friendly way by using 4 multiplication of 17*17 bits. The processing is fully pipelined between the Execute/Memory/Writeback stage. The results of the instructions is always inserted in the WriteBack stage.

DivPlugin

Implement the division/modulo instruction from the RISC-V M extension. It is done by a simple iterative manner which always take 34 cycles. The result is inserted into the Memory stage.

CsrPlugin

Implement most of the Machine mode and a very little bit of the User mode specified in the RISC-V previlegied spec. The access mode of most of the CSR is parameterizable (NONE/READ_ONLY/WRITE_ONLY/READ_WRITE) to reduce the area usage of useless features.

(CsrAccess can be NONE/READ_ONLY/WRITE_ONLY/READ_WRITE)

Parameters type description
catchIllegalAccess Boolean
mvendorid BigInt
marchid BigInt
mimpid BigInt
mhartid BigInt
misaExtensionsInit Int
misaAccess CsrAccess
mtvecAccess CsrAccess
mtvecInit BigInt
mepcAccess CsrAccess
mscratchGen Boolean
mcauseAccess CsrAccess
mbadaddrAccess CsrAccess
mcycleAccess CsrAccess
minstretAccess CsrAccess
ucycleAccess CsrAccess
wfiGen Boolean
ecallGen Boolean

If an interrupt occur, before jumping to mtvec, the plugin will stop the Prefetch stage and wait that all the instructions in the following stages end their execution.

If an exception occur, the plugin will kill the corresponding instruction, flush all previous instruction, and wait until the previously killed instruction reach the WriteBack stage before jumping to mtvec.

StaticMemoryTranslatorPlugin

Static memory translator plugin which allow to specify which range of the memory addresses is IO mapped and shouldn't be cached

MemoryTranslatorPlugin

Simple software refilled MMU implementation. Allow others plugins as DBusCachedPlugin/IBusCachedPlugin to instanciate memory address translation ports. Each port has a small dedicated fully associative TLB cache which is refilled from a larger software filled TLB cache via an query which will look up one entry per cycle.

DebugPlugin

This plugin implement enough CPU debug feature to allow a comfortable GDB/eclipse debugging. To access those debug feature it provide a simple memory bus interface, the JTAG interface is provided by another bridge, which allow to efficiently connect multiple CPU to the same JTAG.

Parameters type description
debugClockDomain ClockDomain As the debug unit is able to reset the CPU itself, it should use another clock domain to avoid killing itself (only the reset wire should differ)

The internals of the debug plugin are done in a manner which reduce the area usage and the FMax impact of this plugin.

There is the simple bus to access it, the rsp come one cycle after the request :

case class DebugExtensionCmd() extends Bundle{
  val wr = Bool
  val address = UInt(8 bit)
  val data = Bits(32 bit)
}
case class DebugExtensionRsp() extends Bundle{
  val data = Bits(32 bit)
}

case class DebugExtensionBus() extends Bundle with IMasterSlave{
  val cmd = Stream(DebugExtensionCmd())
  val rsp = DebugExtensionRsp() 

  override def asMaster(): Unit = {
    master(cmd)
    in(rsp)
  }
}

There is the register mapping :

Read address 0x00 ->
  bit 0  : resetIt
  bit 1  : haltIt
  bit 2  : isPipBusy
  bit 3  : haltedByBreak
  bit 4  : stepIt
Write address 0x00 ->
  bit 4  : stepIt
  bit 16 : set resetIt
  bit 17 : set haltIt
  bit 24 : clear resetIt
  bit 25 : clear haltIt and haltedByBreak
  
Read Address 0x04 ->
  bits (31 downto 0) : Last value written into the register file
Write Address 0x04 ->
  bits (31 downto 0) : Instruction that should be pushed into the CPU pipeline for debug purposes

The OpenOCD port is there : https://github.com/SpinalHDL/openocd_riscv

YamlPlugin

This plugin offer a service to others plugin to generate an usefull Yaml file about the CPU configuration, it will contain, for instance, the sequence of instruction required to flush the data cache (information used by openocd)