244 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
244 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
Copyright 2023 (C) Peter McGoron.
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This file is a part of Upsilon, a free and open source software project.
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For license terms, refer to the files in `doc/copying` in the Upsilon
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source distribution.
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__________________________________________________________________________
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This document is from when there was a substantial amount of hand-written
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Verilog in this project, and hence is out of date. It is kept here because
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it is a good introduction to FPGAs. For more recent information, see
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/doc/gateware.rst .
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The Hardware Maintenance Manual is an overview of the hardware (non-software)
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parts of Upsilon.
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# Crash Course in FPGAs
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Upsilon runs on a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). FPGAs are sets
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of logic gates and other peripherals that can be changed by a computer.
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FPGAs can implement CPUs, digital filters, and control code at a much
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higher speed than a computer. The downside is that FPGAs are much more
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difficult to program for.
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A large part of Upsilon is written in Verilog. Verilog is a Hardware
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Description Language (HDL), which is similar to a programming language
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(such as C++ or Python).
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The difference is, is that Verilog compiles to a *piece of hardware* that
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deals with individual bits executing operations in sync with a clock. This
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differs from a *piece of software*, which is a set of instructions that a
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computer follows. Verilog is usually much less abstract than regular code.
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Regular code is tested on the system in which it is run. Hardware,
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on the other hand, is very difficult to test on the device that it
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is actually running on. Hardware is usually *simulated*. This project
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primarily simulates Verilog code using the program Verilator, where the
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code that runs the simulation is written in C++.
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Instead of strings, integers, and classes, the basic components of all
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Verilog code is the wire and the register, which store bits (1 and 0).
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Wires connect components together, and registers store data, in a similar
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way to variables in software. Unlike usual programming languages, where
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code executes one step at a time, most FPGA code runs at the tick of
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a clock. Each block of code exceutes in parallel.
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To compile Verilog to a format suitable for execution on an FPGA, you
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*synthesize* the Verilog into a low-level format that uses the specific
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resources of the FPGA you are using, and then you run a *place and route*
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program to allocate resources on the FPGA to fit your design. Running
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synthesis on its own can help you understand how much resources a module
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uses. Place-and-route gives you *timing reports*, which tell you about
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major design problems that outstrip the capabilities of the FPGA (or the
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programs you are using). You should look up what "timing" on an FPGA is
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and learn as much as you can about it, because it is an issue that does
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not happen in standard software and can be very difficult to fix when
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you run into it.
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Once a bitstream is synthesized, it is loaded onto a FPGA through a cable
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(for this project, openFPGALoader).
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## Recommendations for Learners
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Kishore Mishra. Advanced Chip Design.
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[Gisselquist Technology][GT] is the best free online resource for FPGA
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programming out there. These articles will help you understand how to
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write *good* FPGA code, not just valid code.
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[GT]: https://zipcpu.com/
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Here are some exercises for you to ease yourself into FPGA programming.
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* Write an FPGA program that implements addition without using the `+`
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operator. This program should add each number bit by bit, handling
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carried digits properly. This is called a *full adder*.
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* Write an FPGA program that multiplies two signed integers together,
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without using the `*` operator. The width of these integers should
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not be hard-coded: it should be easy to change. What you write in
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this is something that is actually a part of this project: see
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`boothmul.v`. You do not (and should not!) write it just like Upsilon
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has written it.
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* Write an FPGA program that communicates over SPI. For simplicity,
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you only need to write it for a single SPI mode: look up on the internet
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for details. There is an SPI slave device in this repository that you
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can use to simulate an end for the SPI master you write, but you should
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write the SPI slave yourself. For bonus points, connect your SPI master
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to a real SPI device and confirm that your communication works.
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For each of these exercises, follow the complete "Design Testing Process"
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below. At the very least, write simulations and test your programs on
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real hardware.
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# Verilog Programming Guidelines
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See also [Dan Gisselquist][1]'s rules for FPGA development.
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[1]: https://zipcpu.com/blog/2017/08/21/rules-for-newbies.html
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* Use free and open source IP only. IP must be compatible with *both* the
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GPL v3.0 and the CERN OHL-v2-S.
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* Stick to Verilog 2005. F4PGA will accept SystemVerilog but yosys sometimes
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synthesizes it incorrectly.
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* Do not use parameters that are calculated from other parameters (yosys
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will not parse them correctly). Use m4 macros instead.
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* Do not use Verilog macros. Use m4.
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* Do all code and test generation in Makefiles.
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* Simulate *every* module, even the trivial ones using Verilator.
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Simulation must be simulatable with open-source software (Verilator is
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preferred, but Icarus Verilog and similar are fine). Put test code in the same
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directory as the Verilog module, unless the Verilog module is external.
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* Synthesize and verify large modules independently on hardware using
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the LiteX SoC generator. Put the generator source code (along with
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the hardware test driver) in the repository.
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* Write *only* synthesizable verilog (except for direct test-bench code), even
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for modules that will not be synthesized.
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* Dump traces using `.fst` format.
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* Use only one clock.
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* Only transition on the *positive edge* of the *system clock*.
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* Do not use asynchronous resets.
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* Don't write Wishbone bus code in Verilog modules. LiteX automatically
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takes care of connecting modules together and assigning each register
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a memory location.
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* Keep all Verilog as generic as possible.
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* Always initialize registers.
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* Rerun tests after every change to the module.
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## Conventions
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### Wires
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* When specfying widths, include the total bit width and subtract 1 from it,
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even in cases where the bit width is constant. For example, to declare an
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8-bit register, write `reg [8-1:0] r1`.
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* If a wire is active low, append `_L` to the end of the name.
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### Parameters
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* Parameters are always in all caps.
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* Parameters ending in `_WID` are bit widths that do not have an associated
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number (eg DAC widths, input register sizes).
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* Parameters ending in `_SIZ` are the amount of bits required to store a
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certain number. These parameters can be calculated using `floor(log2(number) + 1)`.
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For example,
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* `255` has a `SIZ` of 8 (8 bits are required to store 255).
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* `256` has a `SIZ` of 9
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* `254`, `253`, etc. have a `SIZ` of 8
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* `127` has a `SIZ` of 7
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## Design Testing Process
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### Simulation
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When you write or modify a verilog module, the first thing you should do
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is write/run a simulation of that module. A simulation of that module
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should at the minimum compare the execution of the module with known
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results (called "Ground truth testing"). A simulation should also consider
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edge cases that you might overlook when writing Verilog.
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For example, a module that multiplies two signed integers together should
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have a simulation that sends the module many pairs of integers, taking
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care to ensure that all possible permutations of sign are tested (i.e.
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positive times positive, negative times positive, etc.) and also that
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special-cases are handled (i.e. largest 32-bit integer multiplied by
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largest negative 32-bit integer, multiplication by 0 and 1, etc.).
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Writing simulation code is a very boring task, but you *must* do it.
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Otherwise there is no way for you to check that
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1. Your code does what you want it to do
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2. Any changes you make to your code don't break it
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If you find a bug that isn't covered by your simulation, make sure you
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add that case to the simulation.
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The file `firmware/rtl/testbench.hpp` contains a class that you should
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use to organize individual tests. Make a derived class of `TB` and
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use the `posedge()` function to encode what default actions your test
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should take at every positive edge of the clock. Remember, in C++ each
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action is blocking: there is no equivalent to the non-blocking `<=`.
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If you have to do a lot of non-blocking code for your test, you
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should write a Verilog wrapper for your test that implements
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the non-blocking code. **Verilator only supports a subset of
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non-synthesizable Verilog. Unless you really need to, use synthesizable
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Verilog only.** See `firmware/rtl/waveform/waveform_sim.v` and
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`firmware/rtl/waveform/dma_sim.v` for an example of Verilog files only
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used for tests.
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### Test Synthesis
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**Yosys only accepts a subset of Verilog. You might write a bunch of
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code that Verilator will happily simulate but that will fail to go
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through Yosys.**
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Once you have simulated your design, you should use yosys to synthesize it.
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This will allow you to understand how much and what resources the module
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is taking up. To do this, you can put the follwing in a script file:
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read_verilog module_1.v
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read_verilog module_2.v
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...
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read_verilog top_module.v
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synth_xilinx -flatten -nosrl -noclkbuf -nodsp -iopad -nowidelut
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write_verilog yosys_synth_output.v
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and run `yosys -s scriptfile`. The options to `synth_xilinx` reflect
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the current limitations that F4PGA has. The file `xc7.f4pga.tcl` that
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F4PGA downloads is the complete synthesis script, read it to understand
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the internals of what F4PGA does to compile your verilog.
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### Test Compilation
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I haven't been able to do this for most of this project. The basic idea
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is to use `firmware/rtl/soc.py` to load only the module to test, and
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to use LiteScope to write and read values from the module. For more
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information, you can look at
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[the boothmul test](https://software.mcgoron.com/peter/boothmul/src/branch/master/arty_test).
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### Formal Verification
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This isn't used for this project but it really should.
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# LiteX and F4PGA
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LiteX is a System on a Chip builder written in Python. It easily integrates
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Verilog modules and large system components (CPU, RAM, Ethernet) into
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a design using a Python script.
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All code written for LiteX is in `gateware/soc.py`. Run this script to build
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the gateware. If you need to add new modules, you can add them to the design
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by modifying the `Base` and the `UpsilonSoC` class.
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All the code that you need to understand in `soc.py` is heavily documented.
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(If it's not, that means I don't understand it.)
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F4PGA is an open source synthesis suite. LiteX handles F4PGA for you (most of
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the time).
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You should use the Dockerfiles included with upsilon. They are simple and are
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pinned to the latest known stable version that can build Upsilon. If you really
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want to install LiteX and F4PGA to your system, just follow the commands in
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the docker files.
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