Preserve the original user-provided shape, while still checking
its validity. This allows Enum decoders to work when specifying
record fields with Enums.
Fixes#393.
The `ports` argument to the `convert` functions is a frequent hotspot of
beginner issues. Check to make sure it is either a list or a tuple, and
give an appropriately helpful error message if not.
Fixes#362.
The default __repr__() from typing.NamedTuple does not include
the module name, so the replacement (which uses the preferred syntax
for specifying these shapes) doesn't either.
This commit improves handling of resets in AsyncFIFO in two ways:
* First, resets no longer violate Gray counter CDC invariants.
* Second, write domain reset now empties the entire FIFO.
In some cases, it is necessary to synchronize a reset-like signal but
a new clock domain is not desirable. To address these cases, extract
the implementation of ResetSynchronizer into AsyncFFSynchronizer,
and replace ResetSynchronizer with a thin wrapper around it.
Before this commit, there was no way to do so besides creating and
assigning an intermediate signal, which could not be extracted into
a helper function due to Module statefulness.
Fixes#292.
Before this commit, doing something like:
with m.FSM():
with m.State("FOO"):
m.next = "bAR"
with m.State("BAR"):
m.next = "FOO"
would silently create an empty state `bAR` and get stuck in it until
the module is reset. This was done intentionally (in Migen, this code
would in fact miscompile), but in retrospect was clearly a bad idea;
it turns typos into bugs, while in the rare case that branching to
a completely empty state is desired, it is trivial to define one.
Fixes#315.
These are not desirable in a HDL, and currently elaborate to broken
RTLIL (after YosysHQ/yosys#1551); prohibit them completely, like
we already do for division and modulo.
Fixes#302.
`Module` is an object with a lot of complex and sometimes fragile
behavior that overrides Python attribute accessors and so on.
To prevent user designs from breaking when it is changed, it is not
supposed to be inherited from (unlike in Migen), but rather returned
from the elaborate() method. This commit makes sure it will not be
inherited from by accident (most likely by users familiar with
Migen).
Fixes#286.
To properly represent a negation of a signed X-bit quantity we may, in
general, need a signed (X+1)-bit signal — for example, negation of
3-bit -4 is 4, which is not representable in signed 3 bits.
The redesign introduces no fundamental incompatibilities, but it does
involve minor breaking changes:
* The simulator commands were moved from hdl.ast to back.pysim
(instead of only being reexported from back.pysim).
* back.pysim.DeadlineError was removed.
Summary of changes:
* The new simulator compiles HDL to Python code and is >6x faster.
(The old one compiled HDL to lots of Python lambdas.)
* The new simulator is a straightforward, rigorous implementation
of the Synchronous Reactive Programming paradigm, instead of
a pile of ad-hoc code with no particular design driving it.
* The new simulator never raises DeadlineError, and there is no
limit on the amount of delta cycles.
* The new simulator robustly handles multiclock designs.
* The new simulator can be reset, such that the compiled design
can be reused, which can save significant runtime with large
designs.
* Generators can no longer be added as processes, since that would
break reset(); only generator functions may be. If necessary,
they may be added by wrapping them into a generator function;
a deprecated fallback does just that. This workaround will raise
an exception if the simulator is reset and restarted.
* The new simulator does not depend on Python extensions.
(The old one required bitarray, which did not provide wheels.)
Fixes#28.
Fixes#34.
Fixes#160.
Fixes#161.
Fixes#215.
Fixes#242.
Fixes#262.
Otherwise, two subfragments with the same local clock domain would
not be able to drive its clock or reset signals. This can be easily
hit if using two ResetSynchronizers in one module.
Fixes#265.
We don't have any other convenient shortcut for x[off*w:(off+1)*w],
but using word_select to extract a single static range would result
in severe bloat of emitted code through expansion to dead branches.
Recognize and simplify this pattern.