Upsilon Maintenance Manual. This document may be distributed under your choice of the GNU GPL v3.0 (or any later version), or under the [CC BY-SA 4.0][CC]. [CC]: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode # Introduction This document is aimed at maintainers of this software who are not experienced programmers (in either software or hardware). Its goal is to contain any pertinent information to the devlopment process of Upsilon. This manual is (hopefully) modular enough that you can just skip to the section you need without having to read the entire thing. ## Organization of the Project Upsilon uses LiteX and Linux for it's FPGA code. LiteX generates HDL and glues it together. It also forms the build system of the hardware portion of Upsilon. Linux is the kernel portion, which deals with communication between the computer that receives scan data and the hardware that is executing the scan. LiteX further uses F4PGA to compile the HDL code. F4PGA is primarily made up of Yosys (synthesis) and nextpnr (place and route). ## Required Knowledge This document is written under the assumption that you are using Linux. You can make this work on other platforms but I don't know how to. Verilog is critical for writing hardware. You should hopefully not have to write much of it. The kernel is written in C. This C is different than C you have written before because it is running "freestanding." You do not need to know about Linux kernel development. You will need to know the basics of ssh, vi, and how to use Unix as a user. Tests are written in C++ and verilog. You will not have to write C++ unless you modify the Verilog files. The macro processing language GNU m4 is used occasionally. You will need to know how to use m4 if you modify the main `base.v.m4` file (e.g. adding more software-accessable ports). Python is used the SoC generator. The SoC generator uses a library called LiteX, which in turn uses migen. You do not need to know a lot about migen, but LiteX's documentation is poor so you will need to know some migen in order to read the code and understand how some modules work. # Compile Process Although each component uses a different build system, you can run everything with 1. `make` (compile everything in this folder) 2. `make clean` (clean up all compiled files) ## Setting up the Toolchain The toolchain is primarily designed around modern Linux. It may not work properly on Windows or MacOS. If you have access to a computational cluster (if you are at FSU physics, ask the Physics department) then you should set up the toolchain on their servers. You will be able to compile things on any computer with an internet connection. ### F4PGA 1. Clone [F4PGA](https://github.com/chipsalliance/f4pga) (if you want, checkout commit `b6c5fff`, but you should try checking out master first) 2. Run `scripts/prepare_environment.sh`. Note that you will need to change the environment variable `$F4PGA_INSTALL_DIR` if you do not have access to the default directory (which is root access). 3. Run `scripts/activate.sh`. If you run into problems, open the file and copy the `source` and `conda` commands manually into your terminal. 4. Install meson and ninja through pip. All commands should be done in the conda environment. ### LiteX 1. Download `litex_setup.py` from the [LiteX repository][litex_repo], Upsilon uses 2022.08 to some directory (don't put it in your home directory because there will be a bunch of downloaded repositories. 2. Run `litex_setup.py --init --install --user --tag 2022.08` 3. Download a GCC RISC-V cross compiler. If you have root access to the build machine, then you can probably install this with your package manager. Users of Ubuntu 14 can download the [sifive][sifive_gcc] GCC. Otherwise you will have to compile a cross compiler (`x86_64` host to RV32I target) manually. 4. Put the GCC RISC-V cross compiler in your `$PATH` variable. [litex_repo]: https://github.com/enjoy-digital/litex [sifive_gcc]: https://github.com/sifive/freedom-tools/releases ### Buildroot Buildroot builds a Linux system for the FPGA. To build the Images, download a stable version of Buildroot that the config files support and run make BR2_EXTERNAL=/upsilon_directory/buildroot litex_vexriscv_defconfig ### OpenSBI OpenSBI is a platform independent interface between the hardware and the kernel. Download the latest version of OpenSBI that the config files support. Copy the files in the `opensbi` directory to the `targets` directory and run make CROSS_COMPILE=riscv64-linux-gnu- PLATFORM=litex/vexriscv ## FPGA Build System Make sure F4PGA and a RISC-V GCC compiler are in your path. Then just go into the `firmware` folder and run `make`. This should generate everything you need and compile the software. The synthesis suite is single threaded. This will take about 15-20 minutes on a good computer. The FPGA firmware (aka gateware) build system is designed in a recursive manner. That means that each directory has a Makefile that processes all the files in the directory. There is a `common.makefile` in the `rtl/` directory that is used when a rule (such as preprocessing a Verilog source file) is used in multiple Makefiles. For the Arty A7, the bitstream is `firmware/build/digilent_arty/gateware/digilent_arty.bit`. ## Software Build System It is recommended to use the [docker files][docker]. [docker]: https://software.mcgoron.com/peter/upsilon-docker # Loading the Software and Firmware ## Network Setup You will need the FPGA and the controlling computer on the same wired network. **DO NOT CONNECT THE FPGA TO A WIDE NETWORK. USE A PRIVATE LAN THAT ONLY CONTAINS THE CONTROLLING COMPUTER AND THE FPGA. DO NOT ATTEMPT TO CONNECT THE FPGA TO THE INTERNET.** The controlling computer can still connect to the internet, but through another LAN port. The best thing to do is to buy a USB to Ethernet adapter. The default TFTP client connects to 192.168.1.100. ## Connecting to the FPGA Over USB Connect to the FPGA over USB and run `litex_term /dev/ttyUSB1` (or whatever connection it should be) and you should see the LiteX BIOS come up. ## Loading the Firmware Connect the FPGA to a computer using a Micro-USB to USB cable. Run `openFPGALoader -c digilent digilent_arty.bit` to upload the firmware (gateware) to the controller. You can load the software using serial boot but this is very slow. The better thing to do is to use TFTP boot, which goes over Ethernet. **WHEN YOU RUN TFTP, DO NOT EXPOSE YOUR INTERFACE TO THE INTERNET CONNECTED NETWORK INTERFACE. THIS IS A BIG SECURITY RISK. ONLY RUN TFTP FOR THE AMOUNT OF TIME REQUIRED TO BOOT THE CONTROL SOFTWARE.** You can read about how to setup a TFTP server on the [OpenWRT wiki][owrt_wiki]. Using DNSMasq on linux, run dnsmasq -d --port=0 --enable-tftp --tftp-root=/path/to/firmware/directory --user=root --group=root --interface=$INTERFACE Do not use `--tftp-no-blocksize`. The controller will only read the first 512 bytes of the kernel. In the root of the TFTP server, have `boot.bin` be the kernel binary (`zephyr.bin`). [owrt_wiki]: https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/troubleshooting/tftpserver # FPGA Upsilon runs on a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). FPGAs are sets of logic gates and other peripherals that can be changed by a computer. FPGAs can implement CPUs, digital filters, and control code at a much higher speed than a computer. The downside is that FPGAs are much more difficult to program for. A large part of Upsilon is written in Verilog. Verilog is a Hardware Description Language (HDL), which is similar to a programming language (such as C++ or Python). The difference is, is that Verilog compiles to a *piece of hardware* that deals with individual bits executing operations in sync with a clock. This differs from a *piece of software*, which is a set of instructions that a computer follows. Verilog is usually much less abstract than regular code. Regular code is tested on the system in which it is run. Hardware, on the other hand, is very difficult to test on the device that it is actually running on. Hardware is usually *simulated*. This project primarily simulates Verilog code using the program Verilator, where the code that runs the simulation is written in C++. Instead of strings, integers, and classes, the basic components of all Verilog code is the wire and the register, which store bits (1 and 0). Wires connect components together, and registers store data, in a similar way to variables in software. Unlike usual programming languages, where code executes one step at a time, most FPGA code runs at the tick of the system clock in parallel. To compile Verilog to a format suitable for execution on an FPGA, you *synthesize* the Verilog into a low-level format that uses the specific resources of the FPGA you are using, and then you run a *place and route* program to allocate resources on the FPGA to fit your design. Running synthesis on its own can help you understand how much resources a module uses. Place-and-route gives you *timing reports*, which tell you about major design problems that outstrip the capabilities of the FPGA (or the programs you are using). You should look up what "timing" on an FPGA is and learn as much as you can about it, because it is an issue that does not happen in standard software and can be very difficult to fix when you run into it. Once a bitstream is synthesized, it is loaded onto a FPGA through a cable (for this project, openFPGALoader). ## Recommendations to Learners [Gisselquist Technology][GT] is the best free online resource for FPGA programming out there. These articles will help you understand how to write *good* FPGA code, not just valid code. [GT]: https://zipcpu.com/ Here are some exercises for you to ease yourself into FPGA programming. * Write an FPGA program that implements addition without using the `+` operator. This program should add each number bit by bit, handling carried digits properly. This is called a *full adder*. * Write an FPGA program that multiplies two signed integers together, without using the `*` operator. The width of these integers should not be hard-coded: it should be easy to change. What you write in this is something that is actually a part of this project: see `boothmul.v`. You do not (and should not!) write it just like Upsilon has written it. * Write an FPGA program that communicates over SPI. For simplicity, you only need to write it for a single SPI mode: look up on the internet for details. There is an SPI slave device in this repository that you can use to simulate an end for the SPI master you write, but you should write the SPI slave yourself. For bonus points, connect your SPI master to a real SPI device and confirm that your communication works. For each of these exercises, follow the complete "Design Testing Process" below. At the very least, write simulations and test your programs on real hardware. ## Control and Status Registers in Hardware LiteX uses "Control and Status Registers" (CSRs) to communicate between the CPU and any Verilog modules. (RISC-V CPUs have something with the same name, but Upsilon does not use that.) ## Design Testing Process ### Simulation When you write or modify a verilog module, the first thing you should do is write/run a simulation of that module. A simulation of that module should at the minimum compare the execution of the module with known results (called "Ground truth testing"). A simulation should also consider edge cases that you might overlook when writing Verilog. For example, a module that multiplies two signed integers together should have a simulation that sends the module many pairs of integers, taking care to ensure that all possible permutations of sign are tested (i.e. positive times positive, negative times positive, etc.) and also that special-cases are handled (i.e. largest 32-bit integer multiplied by largest negative 32-bit integer, multiplication by 0 and 1, etc.). Writing simulation code is a very boring task, but you *must* do it. Otherwise there is no way for you to check that 1. Your code does what you want it to do 2. Any changes you make to your code don't break it If you find a bug that isn't covered by your simulation, make sure you add that case to the simulation. The file `firmware/rtl/testbench.hpp` contains a class that you should use to organize individual tests. Make a derived class of `TB` and use the `posedge()` function to encode what default actions your test should take at every positive edge of the clock. Remember, in C++ each action is blocking: there is no equivalent to the non-blocking `<=`. If you have to do a lot of non-blocking code for your test, you should write a Verilog wrapper for your test that implements the non-blocking code. **Verilator only supports a subset of non-synthesizable Verilog. Unless you really need to, use synthesizable Verilog only.** See `firmware/rtl/waveform/waveform_sim.v` and `firmware/rtl/waveform/dma_sim.v` for an example of Verilog files only used for tests. ### Test Synthesis **Yosys only accepts a subset of Verilog. You might write a bunch of code that Verilator will happily simulate but that will fail to go through Yosys.** Once you have simulated your design, you should use yosys to synthesize it. This will allow you to understand how much and what resources the module is taking up. To do this, you can put the follwing in a script file: read_verilog module_1.v read_verilog module_2.v ... read_verilog top_module.v synth_xilinx -flatten -nosrl -noclkbuf -nodsp -iopad -nowidelut write_verilog yosys_synth_output.v and run `yosys -s scriptfile`. The options to `synth_xilinx` reflect the current limitations that F4PGA has. The file `xc7.f4pga.tcl` that F4PGA downloads is the complete synthesis script, read it to understand the internals of what F4PGA does to compile your verilog. ### Test Compilation I haven't been able to do this for most of this project. The basic idea is to use `firmware/rtl/soc.py` to load only the module to test, and to use LiteScope to write and read values from the module. For more information, you can look at [the boothmul test](https://software.mcgoron.com/peter/boothmul/src/branch/master/arty_test). # Software Programming The "software" is the code written in C that runs on the FPGA. This handles access to hardware components, running scripts sent by the controlling computer, and sending information between the hardware and the controlling computer. ## Crash Course in Multithreaded Programming Each script (up to 32 by default, change by redefining a macro) runs in a separate thread. This allows for multiple scripts to execute without having to explicitly hand control from one component to another, but since there is no defined execution path (one thread may execute before or after another thread), the program must handle scripts attempting to access the same component. Upsilon handles multiple threads using 1. Mutexes 2. Thread Local Storage Mutexes ("mutual exclusion") are objects that only allow for one thread to access them at a time. When one thread locks a mutex, other threads attempting to lock the mutex sleep until the thread unlocks the mutex. After the thread that locked the mutex unlocks it, some other thread gets the mutex. Mutex management is important because if multiple threads attempt to read or write to a converter at the same time, the scripts could deadlock, requiring a hard reset of the system. (You could add manual deadlock aborting by adding new commands that call `k_thread_abort`, as long as all threads are not deadlocked. This is a hack but may be necessary.) Each thread can lock the mutex as many times as it wants, but it must unlock the mutex the same number of times. Thread local storage (the `__thread` modifier) is used to count the number of times that each mutex is locked by a thread. Since (as the name implies) TLS is thread-local, there is no need to control access to it by mutexes: each thread gets its own local version of the thread local variables. The software has to count the number of recursive locks because when the thread finally releases control of the mutex, another thread must be able to access the hardware in a well defined state: it should not attempt to write to hardware while the hardware is running (certain specific exceptions apply). When the unlock routines (see for example `waveform_release()`) reach the final unlock (e.g. `waveform_locked[i] == 1`), the software waits for the hardware to finish what its doing before unlocking. The kernel implements "time-slicing", which means that each running program executes in chunks. After each chunk is finished, another program can execute. The amount of time for each thread is controlled by `CONFIG_TIMESLICE_SIZE` in `prj.conf`. When executing critical code, use `k_sched_lock` and `k_sched_unlock`. TODO: Use `k_thread_time_slice_set` to implement an abort check for threads. ## Crash Course in Network Programming The kernel communicates with the controlling computer using a TCP/IP connection. You should connect the controller and the computer to a router and assign the kernel a static IP. Each script that runs on the kernel is a separate connection. Each connection runs on a separate thread, because each thread runs a Creole interpreter. TCP can usually detect when a connection breaks, but you should gracefully shutdown all connections. Otherwise dead connections can hang around for minutes at a time. ### Static IPs The client and controller IPs are baked into the software *and firmware* at build time. The software configuration is in `software/prj.conf`. The firmware configuration is in `firmware/soc.py` (see `local_ip` and `remote_ip` settings in `SoCCore`). The controlling computer must have it's static IP on the interface connected to the controller to be the same as `remote_ip`. By default this is `91.168.1.100`. ## Logging TODO: Do logging via UDP? Logging is done via UART. Connect the micro-USB slot to the controlling computer to get debug output. All you need to know is * Use `LOG_WRN` for errors that you can recover from (i.e. closing a connection * Use `LOG_ERR` for errors that are fatal and halt the firmware, requiring a reset * Use `LOG_INF` for misc information (i.e. initialization completed, accepted connection, closing connection) * Use `LOG_DBG` for debugging output If you need debugging output, add a line of the form set_source_file_properties(src_file PROPERTIES COMPILE_FLAGS -DFILE_LOG_LEVEL=4 This will enable debugging output for this file only. Do not enable debugging output for the entire system! This will make the debugging output unusuable. When you are done, set `4` to `3` in that line. TODO: Ethernet debugging output. ## Control and Status Registers in Software CSR read and write functions are generated by `/firmware/generate_csr_locations.py`. You should not need to directly call `write` and `read` on raw addresses. If you add a new CSR, add it to the generator script. ### Implementation Information CSRs can be used in software by using `litex_write8`, `litex_read16`, etc. In the Zephyr source, look at `soc/riscv/litex-vexriscv/soc.h` for the complete implementation. Also look at `include/zephyr/arch/common/sys_io.h` to see how these functions are implemented. Do not directly write to CSR ports without using `litex_writeN` and `litex_readN`, and do not directly use `sys_io.h` functions. If you are not careful you will not access the registers correctly and you will crash the software. # Controlling Computer ## Creole Creole is the bytecode that the kernel runs. It is written using a python library. It looks very similar to assembly, but is custom built to make it easier to write direct assembly code. Creole programs are the scripts run by the kernel to communicate with hardware and send messages over Ethernet to the controlling computer. Each creole program should do one thing: i.e. monitor an ADC, run the raster scan, output waveforms, etc. Creole programs should reserve the hardware modules (DAC, ADC, CLOOP, waveforms) that they use explicitly. This makes your program faster and less error prone. Since the Creole assembler is a python library, you can use things like Python format strings to automate production of Creole code. You can also add virtual instructions (by directly modifying the library) easily. Creole has a concept of data blocks, assigned using the `DB` command. These blocks are used for waveforms and for printing sets of data out to the datastream. Creole uses a [self-synchronizing code][ssc] to detect encoding and transmission errors. This makes programs bigger, but you should not write big Creole programs. [ssc]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-synchronizing_code The controlling computer sends a 16 bit little endian unsigned integer (the size of the Creole program in bytes) followed by Creole bytecode. # Hacks and Pitfalls The open source software stack that Upsilon uses is novel and unstable. ## LiteX Set `compile_software` to `False` in `soc.py` when checking for Verilog compile errors. Set it back when you do an actual compile run, or your program will not boot. If LiteX complains about not having a RiscV compiler, that is because your system does not have compatible RISC-V compiler in your `$PATH`. Refer to the LiteX install instructions above to see how to set up the SiFive GCC, which will work. ## F4PGA This is really a Yosys (and really, an abc bug). F4PGA defaults to using the ABC flow, which can break, especially for block RAM. To fix, edit out `-abc` in the tcl script (find it before you install it...) ## Yosys Yosys fails to calculate computed parameter values correctly. For instance, parameter CTRLVAL = 5; localparam VALUE = CTRLVAL + 1; Yosys will *silently* fail to compile this, setting `VALUE` to be equal to 0. The solution is to use macros. ## Reset Pins On the Arty A7 there is a Reset button. This is connected to the CPU and only resets the CPU. Possibly due to timing issues modules get screwed up if they share a reset pin with the CPU. The code currently connects button 0 to reset the modules seperately from the CPU. ## Clock Speeds The output pins on the FPGA (except for the high speed PMOD outputs) cannot switch fast enough to ## Macros Verilog's preprocessor is awful. F4PGA (through yosys) barely supports it. You should only use Verilog macros as a replacement for `localparam`. When you need to do so, you must preprocess the file with Verilator. For example, if you have a file called `mod.v` in the folder `firmware/rtl/mod/`, then in the file `firmware/rtl/mod/Makefile` add codegen: [...] mod_preprocessed.v (putting it after all other generated files). The file `firmware/rtl/common.makefile` should automatically generate the preprocessed file for you. ## If The Controlling Computer Cannot Connect to the Internet When you connect your computer to the controller over Ethernet, your computer may attempt to route all traffic over the controller network (since it is wired) instead of another network (like a wireless network). This means that your computer can't connect to the internet (or your connection is really slow). If this happens to you on a Linux machine, you can change the routing table. Run `route -n` (or `ip route` if this does not work) to print the routing table. Find the entry named `default via [...] dev eth-interface`. This is the default route for the ethernet device. Remove it using `ip route del default via [...] dev eth-interface`. If the route keeps on reappearing, delete it and quickly enter `ip route del default via [...] dev eth0 metric 65534`. This will make the route the last priority. ## Getting The Correct IP for the Controlling Computer Some routers can automatically assign IPs based on MAC address. If your computer can do that, great. Otherwise you will need to configure your computer with a static ip. 1. Remove your computer from the DHCP list that the router has. 2. Run `ip link set eth-interface up`. 3. Then run `ip addr` and run `ip addr del [ip] dev eth-interface` on each ip on the ethernet interface that is connected to the controller. 3. Run `ip addr add 192.168.1.100/24 dev eth-interface` (or whatever ip + subnet mask you need) 4. If `ip route` does not give a routing entry for `192.168.1.0/24`, run `ip route add 192.168.1.0/24 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link` (again, change depending on different situations) This will use the static ip `192.168.1.100`, which is the default TFTP boot IP.