The OSVVM Simulator Script Library provides a simple way to create and activate libraries, compile designs, and run simulations.
The intent of this scripting approach is to:
- Run the same scripts on any simulator
- Be as easy to read as a compile order list.
- Know the directory the script is in, the script only manages relative paths to itself. No Awkward path management in the scripts.
- Simplify integration of other libraries
This is an evolving approach. So it may change in the future. Input is welcome.
OSVVM is available as either a git repository OSVVM Libraries or a zip file from osvvm.org Downloads Page.
On GitHub, all OSVVM libraries are a submodule of the repository OsvvmLibraries. Download all OSVVM libraries using git clone with the “–recursive” flag:
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/osvvm/OsvvmLibraries
Create a simulation directory. Generally I name this "sim" or "sim_vendor-name". Creating a simulation directory means that cleanup before running regressions is just a matter of deleting the sim directory and recreating a new one.
The following assumes you have created a directory named "sim" in the OsvvmLibraries directory.
Alternately, you can run simulations out of the Scripts, but cleanup is a mess as a simulator tends to create numerous temporaries.
Do the actions appropriate for your simulator.
Initialize the OSVVM Script environment by doing:
source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartUp.tcl
Want to avoid doing this every time? In Aldec RivieraPro, set the environment variable, ALDEC_STARTUPTCL to StartUp.tcl (including the path information). Similarly in Mentor QuestaSim/ModelSim, set the environment variable, MODELSIM_TCL to StartUp.tcl (including the path information).
Initialize the OSVVM Script environment by doing:
scripterconf -tcl
do -tcl <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartUp.tcl
Want to avoid doing this every time? For ActiveHDL, edit /script/startup.do and add above to it. Similarly for VSimSA, edit /BIN/startup.do and add the above to it. Note, with 2021.02, you no longer need to set the "Start In" directory to the OSVVM Scripts directory.
Initialize the OSVVM Script environment by doing:
winpty tclsh
source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartUp.tcl
To simplify this, put source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartUp.tcl
in the .tclshrc
file.
You can also add a windows short cut that includes
C:\tools\msys64\mingw64.exe winpty tclsh
.
Initialize the OSVVM Script environment by doing:
rlwrap tclsh
source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartUp.tcl
To simplify this, put source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartUp.tcl
in the .tclshrc
file.
In bash, add alias gsim='rlwrap tclsh'
to your .bashrc
.
Initialize the OSVVM Script environment by doing:
rlwrap tclsh
source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartVCS.tcl
To simplify this, put source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartVCS.tcl
in the .tclshrc
file.
In bash, add alias ssim='rlwrap tclsh'
to your .bashrc
.
Initialize the OSVVM Script environment by doing:
rlwrap tclsh
source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartXcelium.tcl
To simplify this, add the following line to the .tclshrc
file.
source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartXcelium.tcl
In bash, add alias ssim='rlwrap tclsh'
to your .bashrc
.
Using OSVVM in Xilinx XSIM is under development. So far, Xilinx seems to be able to compile OSVVM utility library, however, we have not had any of our internal test cases pass.
To run OSVVM scripts in XSIM, start Vivado and then run the StartXSIM script shown below:
source <path-to-OsvvmLibraries>/OsvvmLibraries/Scripts/StartXSIM.tcl
If someone from XILINX is interested, the internal OSVVM utility library testbenches can be provided under an NDA.
Do the following in your simulator command line:
build ../OsvvmLibraries build ../OsvvmLibraries/RunDemoTests.pro
These will produce some reports, such as OsvvmLibraries_RunDemoTests.html. We will discuss these in the next section, OSVVM Reports.
OSVVM Scripts are an API layer that is build on top of TCL. The API layer simplifies the steps of running simulations. For most applications you will not need any TCL, however, it is there if you need more capability.
- library <library-name>
- Make this library the active library. Create it if it does not exist.
- analyze <VHDL-file>
- Compile (aka analyze) the design into the active library.
- simulate <test-name>
- Simulate (aka elaborate + run) the design using the active library.
- include <script-name>.pro
- Include another project script
- build <script-name>.pro
- Start a script from the simulator. It is include + start a new log file for this script.
Scripts are named in the form <script-name>.pro
.
The scripts are TCL that is agumented with the OSVVM script API.
The script API is created using TCL procedures.
For more details, see Command Summary later in this document.
At the heart of running a simulation is setting the library, compiling files, and starting the simulation. To do this, we use library, analyze, and simulate.
The following is an excerpt from the scripts used to run OSVVM verification component library regressions.
library osvvm_TbAxi4_MultipleMemory
analyze TestCtrl_e.vhd
analyze TbAxi4_MultipleMemory.vhd
analyze TbAxi4_Shared1.vhd
TestCase TbAxi4_Shared1
simulate TbAxi4_Shared1
In OSVVM scripting, calling library activates the library. An analyze or simulate that follows library uses the specified library. This is consistent with VHDL’s sense of the "working library".
Note that there are no paths to the files. For OSVVM commands that use paths, the path is always relative to the directory the script is located in unless an absolute path is specified.
The above script is in the file, testbench_MultipleMemory.pro. It can be run by specifying:
build ../OsvvmLibraries/AXI4/Axi4/testbench_MultipleMemory/testbench_MultipleMemory.pro
If you were to open testbench_MultipleMemory.pro, you would find that RunTest is used instead as it is an abbreviation for the analyze, TestCase and simulate when the names are the same.
Every simulator has their own format for specifying generics. OSVVM makes this simulator independent by calling the TCL function generic that provides the proper format for your simulator.
library default
simulate Tb [generic WIDTH 8]
simulate Tb [generic G1 5] [generic G2 7]
Release 2022.09 removed the necessity to put quotes around the options specified with simulate.
Often with simulations, we want to add a custom waveform file. This may be for all designs or just one particular design. We may also need specific actions to be done when running on a particular simulator.
When simulate (or RunTest) is called, it will source the following files in order, if they exist:
- <ToolVendor>.tcl
- <ToolName>.tcl
- wave.do
- <LibraryUnit>.tcl
- <LibraryUnit>_<ToolName>.tcl
- <TestCaseName>.tcl
- <TestCaseName>_<ToolName>.tcl
ToolVendor is either {Aldec, Siemens, Cadence, Synopsys}. ToolName is one of {QuestaSim, ModelSim, RivieraPRO, ActiveHDL, VCS, Xcelium}. LibraryUnit is the name specified to simulate. TestCaseName is the name specified to TestCase.
It will search for these files in the following directories - OsvvmLibraries/Scripts - CurrentSimulationDirectory - CurrentWorkingDirectory
CurrentSimulationDirectory is the directory in which the simulator is running. CurrentWorkingDirectory is the directory of the script that calls either RunTest or simulate.
Currently GHDL does not run any extra scripts since it is a batch simulator.
We build our designs hierarchically.
Therefore our scripts need to be build hierarchically.
When one script calls another script, such as OsvvmLibraries.pro does, we use include.
The code for OsvvmLibraries.pro is as follows.
The if
is TCL and is only building the UART, AXI4, and DpRam if
their corresponding directories exist.
include ./osvvm/osvvm.pro
include ./Common/Common.pro
if {[DirectoryExists UART]} {
include ./UART/UART.pro
}
if {[DirectoryExists AXI4]} {
include ./AXI4/AXI4.pro
}
if {[DirectoryExists DpRam]} {
include ./DpRam/DpRam.pro
}
Note the paths specified to include are relative to OsvvmLibriaries directory since that is where OsvvmLibraries.pro is located.
Build is a layer on top of include (it calls include) that creates a logging point. In general, build is called from the simulator API (when we run something) and include is called from scripts.
By default, OSVVM creates collects all tool output for a build into an html based log file in ./logs/<tool_name>-<version>/<script-name>.html.
To compile all of the OSVVM libraries, use build as shown below.
build ../OsvvmLibraries/OsvvmLibraries.pro
All OSVVM verification components are delivered with their regression test suite. There is also a script, named RunAllTests.pro, that runs all of the tests for that specific VC.
To run the AXI4 Full verification component regression suite, use the build shown below.
build ../OsvvmLibraries/AXI4/Axi4/RunAllTests.pro
Everything in OSVVM is composed hierarchically. If you want to run all AXI4 (Axi4 Full, Axi4Lite, and AxiStream), use the build shown below.
build ../OsvvmLibraries/AXI4/RunAllTests.pro
Similarly to run the tests for all VC in OsvvmLibraries use the build shown below.
build ../OsvvmLibraries/RunAllTests.pro
For most VC and OsvvmLibraries, there is a RunDemoTests.pro that runs a small selection of the VC test cases.
OSVVM uses include since it helps manage the path of where the
script files are located.
Include uses TCL's source
internally.
However, if you use TCL's source
(or EDA tool's do
) instead,
you will not get include's directory management features and
your scripts will need to manage the directory paths themselves.
Simulators create files containing library mappings and
other information in the simulation directory.
As a result, when running scripts, you do not want to use cd
as simulator will be lost as the information it needs is
spread across several directories.
Good reports simplify debug and help find problems quickly. This is important as according to the 2020 Wilson Verification Survey FPGA verification engineers spend 46% of their time debugging.
OSVVM produces the following reports:
- HTML Build Summary Report for human inspection that provides test completion status.
- JUnit XML Build Summary Report for use with continuous integration (CI/CD) tools.
- HTML Test Case Detailed report for each test case with Alert, Functional Coverage, and Scoreboard reports.
- HTML based simulator transcript/log files (simulator output)
- Text based test case transcript file (from TranscriptOpen)
The best way to see the reports is to look at the ones from the demo.
If you have not already done build OsvvmLibraries/RunDemoTests.pro
,
then do so now.
The Build Summary Report allows us to quickly confirm if a build passed or quickly identify which test cases did not PASS.
The Build Summary Report has three distinct pieces:
- Build Status
- Test Suite Summary
- Test Case Summary
For each Test Suite and Test Case, there is additional information, such as Functional Coverage and Disabled Alert Count.
In the sim directory, the Build Summary Report is in the file OsvvmLibraries_RunDemoTests.html.
Note that any place in the report there is a triangle preceding text, pressing on the triangle will rotate it and either hide or reveal additional information.
The Build Status, shown below, is in a table at the top of the Build Summary Report. If code coverage is run, there will be a link to the results at the bottom of the Build Summary Report.
When running tests, test cases are grouped into test suites. A build can include multiple test suites. The next table we see in the Build Summary Report is the Test Suite Summary. The figure below shows that this build includes the test suites Axi4Full, AxiStream, and UART.
The remainder of the Build Summary Report is Test Case Summary, see below. There is a seprate Test Case Summary for each test suite in the build.
The JUnit XML Build Summary Report works with continuous integration (CI/CD). The CI/CD tools use this to understand if the test is passing or not. They also have facilities for displaying the report - however, the OSVVM HTML format provides a superset of information.
OSVVM runs regressions on GitHub.
For each test case that is run (simulated), a Test Case Detailed Report is produced that contains consists of the following information:
- Test Information Link Table
- Alert Report
- Functional Coverage Report(s)
- Scoreboard Report(s)
- Link to Test Case Transcript (opened with Transcript Open)
- Link to this test case in HTML based simulator transcript
After running one of the regressions, open one of the HTML files in the directory ./reports/<test-suite-name>. An example one is shown below.
Note that any place in the report there is a triangle preceding text, pressing on the triangle will rotate it and either hide or reveal additional information.
The Test Information Link Table is in a table at the top of the Test Case Detailed Report. The figure below has links to the Alert Report (in this file), Functional Coverage Report (in this file), Scoreboard Reports (in this file), a link to simulation results (if the simulation report is in HTML), and a link to any transcript files opened by OSVVM.
The Alert Report, shown below, provides detailed information for each AlertLogID that is used in a test case. Note that in the case of expected errors, the errors still show up as FAILED in the Alert Report and are rectified in the total error count.
The Test Case Detailed Report contains a Functional Coverage Report, shown below, for each functional coverage model used in the test case. Note this report is not from the demo.
The Test Case Detailed Report contains a Scoreboard Report, shown below. There is a row in the table for each scoreboard model used in the test case.
OSVVM's transcript utility facilitates collecting all test output to into a single file, as shown below.
Simulator transcript files can be long. The basic OSVVM regression test (OsvvmLibraries/RunAllTests.pro), produces a log file that is 84K lines long. As a plain text file, this is not browsable, however, when converted to an html file it is. OSVVM gives you the option to create either html (default), shown below, or plain text. In the html report, any place there is a triangle preceding text, pressing on the triangle will rotate it and either hide or reveal additional information.
To generate reports, you need to have the following in your VHDL testbench:
- Name your test case with
SetAlertLogName("TestName")
. - Do some self-checking with
AffirmIf
,AffirmIfEqual
, orAffirmIfNotDiff
. - End the test case with
EndOfTestReports
.
These following code snippet shows these in use. More details of this are in OSVVM Test Writers User Guide in the documentation repository.
-- Reference to OSVVM Utility Library
library OSVVM ;
context OSVVM.OsvvmContext ;
. . .
TestProc : process
begin
-- Name the Test
SetAlertLogName("TbDut") ;
. . .
-- Do some Checks
AffirmIfEqual(Data, X"A025", "Check Data") ;
. . .
-- Generate Reports (replaces call to ReportAlerts)
EndOfTestReports ;
std.env.stop(GetAlertCount) ;
end process TestProc ;
If we have a simple test, where the design name is Dut.vhd and the testbench is TbDut.vhd, then we can run it with the following script
# File name: Dut.pro
analyze Dut.vhd
analyze TbDut.vhd
simulate TbDut
If we run this test with using build Dut.pro
,
Dut and TbDut will be compiled into the library named default.
The simulation TbDut will run and
a build summary report will be created with only one test case in it.
The test suite will be named Default.
The test case will be named TbDut.
Be sure to name the test internally to TbDut using SetAlertLogName
as otherwise, a NAME_MISMATCH failure will be generated.
In OSVVM, we use the testbench framework shown in the OSVVM Test Writers User Guide (see documentation repository). The test harness in the following example is named TbUart. The test sequencer entity is in file TestCtrl_e.vhd. Tests are in architectures of TestCtrl in the files, TestCtrl_SendGet1.vhd, TestCtrl_SendGet2.vhd, and TbtCtrl_Scoreboard1.vhd. The tests are run by calling "simulate TbUart". TestCase is used to specify the test name that is running. This is needed here as otherwise the name TbUart would be used. The test case that is run is the latest one that was analyzed.
TestSuite Uart
library osvvm_TbUart
analyze TestCtrl_e.vhd
analyze TbUart.vhd
TestCase TbUart_SendGet1
analyze TestCtrl_SendGet1.vhd
simulate TbUart
TestCase TbUart_SendGet2
analyze TestCtrl_SendGet2.vhd
simulate TbUart
TestCase TbUart_Scoreboard1
analyze TestCtrl_Scoreboard1.vhd
simulate TbUart
The above call to TestCase puts the TestCase name into the build test summary YAML file. If the simulation for any reason fails to run, there will be no test status information in the YAML file. As a result, when the build summary report is being created, it will detect this as a test failure.
Another possibility in the above test scenario is that a particular test case fails to analyze. In this case, if the script continues and calls simulate, the previously successfully compiled test will run. In this case, if each test is given a unique name in VHDL using SetAlertLogName (which is also recorded in the YAML file), then the VHDL test name will not match the test case name and a NAME_MISMATCH failure will be generated by the scripts.
The OSVVM verification component regression suite uses configurations to specify an exact architecture to run in a given test. We give the configuration, the test case, and the file the same name. We also put the configuration declaration at the end of the file containing the test case (try it, you will understand why). When we run a test that uses a configuration, simulate specifies the configuration's design unit name. Hence, we revise the sequence of running one test to be as follows.
TestCase TbUart_SendGet1
analyze TbUart_SendGet1.vhd
simulate TbUart_SendGet1
When running a large test suite, this gets tedious, so we added a shortcut named RunTest that encapsulates the above three steps into the single step. This changes our original script to the following. If the name in RunTest has a path, the path is only used with analyze.
TestSuite Uart
library osvvm_TbUart
analyze TestCtrl_e.vhd
analyze TbUart.vhd
RunTest TbUart_SendGet1.vhd
RunTest TbUart_SendGet2.vhd
RunTest TbUart_Scoreboard1.vhd
One advantage of using configurations is that on a clean build (library deleted before starting it), if a test case fails to analyze, then the corresponding configuration will fail to analyze, and the simulation will fail to run. If this happens, it will be detected and recorded as a test failure in the build summary report.
Code coverage is a metric that tells us if certain parts of our design have been exercised or not. Turning on code coverage with OSVVM is simple. In the following example, we enable coverage options during analysis and simulation separately.
# File name: Dut.pro
SetCoverageAnalyzeEnable true
analyze Dut.vhd
SetCoverageAnalyzeEnable false
SetCoverageSimulateEnable true
analyze TbDut.vhd
simulate TbDut
SetCoverageSimulateEnable false
Note that CoverageAnalyzeEnable is specifically turned off before compiling the testbench so that the testbench is not included in the coverage metrics.
You can also set specific options by using SetCoverageAnalyzeOptions and SetCoverageSimulateOptions. By default, OSVVM sets these options so that statement, branch, and statemachine coverage is collected.
When coverage is turned on for a build, coverage is collected for each test. If there are multiple test suites in the build, when a test suite completes execution, the coverage for each test in the test suite is merged. When a build completes the coverage from each test suite is merged and an html coverage report is produced.
Commands are case sensitive. Single word names are all lower case. Multiple word names are CamelCase.
The following are general commands.
- library <library> [<path>]
- Make this library the active library. Create it if it does not exist.
- If path is specified, libraries are created there.
- If path is not specified, libraries are created in the path specified by SetLibraryDirectory and library variable settings
- To find an OSVVM created library use:
library <library> [OsvvmLibraryPath <path>]
- LinkLibrary <library> [<path>]
- Create a mapping to a library that was already created.
- LinkLibraryDirectory [LibraryDirectory]
- Map all of the libraries in the specified
LibraryDirectory
. IfLibraryDirectory
is not specified, the current directory is used.
- Map all of the libraries in the specified
- LinkCurrentLibraries
- If you use
cd
, then use LinkCurrentLibraries immediately after to map all libraries in the current directory
- If you use
- SetLibraryDirectory [LibraryDirectory]
- Set the directory in which the libraries will be created.
If
LibraryDirectory
is not specified, the current directory is used. By default, libraries are created in<LibraryDirectory>/VHDL_LIBS/<tool version>/
.
- Set the directory in which the libraries will be created.
If
- GetLibraryDirectory
- Get the Library Directory.
- RemoveLibrary LibraryName [<path>]
- Remove the named library. Path is only used to find and delete libraries that have not been mapped in OSVVM.
- RemoveLibraryDirectory [<path>]
- Remove the Library specified in path. If path is not specified, use the current LibraryDirectory as defined by SetLibraryDirectory
- RemoveAllLibraries
- Call RemoveLibraryDirectory on all library directories known to OSVVM.
- simulate <TestName> [options]
- Simulate (aka elaborate + run) the design using the active library.
- TestName is a library unit (entity or configuration)
- options may be one or more options to the simulator or see generic.
- generic <name> <value>
- called in the options part of simulate as
simulate tb1 [generic width 5]
- called in the options part of simulate as
- SetSecondSimulationTopLevel <library>.<TestName>
- Sets the name of a second library unit to use during simulation.
- Called before simulate.
- TestCase <test-name>
- Identify the TestCase that is active. Must match name in the testbench call to SetAlertLogName.
- RunTest [<path>/]<name> [<test-name>]
- Combines analyze, TestCase, and simulate into one step.
If
test-name
is not specified, use the base name offile
.
- Combines analyze, TestCase, and simulate into one step.
If
- SkipTest <test-name> Reason
- Add Skip test to the Build Summary Reports with
Reason
as part of the report.
- Add Skip test to the Build Summary Reports with
- TestSuite <test-suite-name>
- Identify the current TestSuite. If not specified the name is default.
- include [<path>/]<name>
- Include another project script.
If
name
is a file and its extension is .pro, .tcl, or .do, it will be sourced. Ifname
is a directory then any file whose name isname
and extension is .pro, .tcl, or .do will be sourced.
- Include another project script.
If
- build [<path>/]<name>
- Start a script from the simulator. It is include + start a new log file for this script.
- SetTranscriptType [html|log]
- Select the Transcript file to be either html or log. The default is html.
- GetTranscriptType
- Get the Transcript file type (either html or log).
In all commands that accept a path, relative paths (including no path) is
relative to the directory in which the current script is running.
With the command name, "[]" indicates a parameter is optional.
If shown in a highlighted code example [generic G1 5]
then the code must contain the "[]".
The following commands set options for analyze and simulate.
- SetVHDLVersion [2008 | 2019 | 1993 | 2002]
- Set VHDL analyze version. OSVVM libraries require 2008 or newer.
- GetVHDLVersion
- Return the current VHDL Version.
- SetSimulatorResolution <value>
- Set Simulator Resolution. Any value supported by the simulator is ok.
- GetSimulatorResolution
- Return the current Simulator Resolution.
- SetCoverageAnalyzeEnable [true|false]
- To collect coverage for a design, SetCoverageEnable and SetCoverageAnalyzeEnable must be enabled when it is analyzed.
- If true, enable coverage during analyze,
- If false, disable coverage during analyze.
- If not specified, true is the default.
- Initialized to false (so simulations run faster)
- GetCoverageAnalyzeEnable
- Returns the setting for coverage during analyze.
- SetCoverageAnalyzeOptions <options>
- Use the string specified in
options
as the coverage options during analyze.
- Use the string specified in
- GetCoverageAnalyzeOptions
- Return the coverage options for analyze.
- SetCoverageSimulateEnable [true|false]
- To collect coverage during a simulation, SetCoverageEnable and SetCoverageSimulateEnable must be enabled the simulation is started.
- If true, enable coverage during simulate,
- If false, disable coverage during simulate.
- If not specified, true is the default.
- Initialized to false (so simulations run faster)
- GetCoverageSimulateEnable
- Returns the setting for coverage during simulate.
- SetCoverageSimulateOptions <options>
- Use the string specified in
options
as the coverage options during simulate.
- Use the string specified in
- GetCoverageSimulateOptions
- Return the coverage options for simulate.
- SetCoverageEnable [true|false]
- If true, set coverage enable to true.
- If false, set coverage enable to false.
- If not specified, true is the default.
- Initialized to true.
- GetCoverageEnable
- Get the CoverageEnable value.
- SetVhdlAnalyzeOptions <options>
- Set the VHDL options for analyze to
options
.
- Set the VHDL options for analyze to
- GetVhdlAnalyzeOptions
- Get the VHDL options for analyze.
- SetVerilogAnalyzeOptions <options>
- Set the Verilog options for analyze to
options
.
- Set the Verilog options for analyze to
- GetVerilogAnalyzeOptions
- Get the Verilog options for analyze.
- SetExtendedAnalyzeOptions <options>
- Set extended (additional) options for analyze to
options
.
- Set extended (additional) options for analyze to
- GetExtendedAnalyzeOptions
- Get extended (additional) options for analyze.
- SetExtendedSimulateOptions <options>
- Set extended (additional) options for simulate to
options
.
- Set extended (additional) options for simulate to
- GetExtendedSimulateOptions
- Get extended (additional) options for simulate.
- SetDebugMode [true|false]
- If true, add debugging options during analyze and simulate.
- If false, do not add debugging options during analyze and simulate.
- If not specified, true is the default.
- Initialized to false (so simulations run faster)
- GetDebugMode
- Returns the state of DebugMode.
- SetLogSignals [true|false]
- If true, log signals during simulate.
- If false, do not log signals during simulate.
- If not specified, true is the default.
- Initialized to false (so simulations run faster)
- GetLogSignals
- Returns the state of LogSignals.
- SetInteractiveMode [true|false]
- If DebugMode was not set with SetDebugMode, then set it using this value
- If LogSignals was not set with SetLogSignals, then set it using this value.
- If true, sets variables AnalyzeErrorStopCount and SimulateErrorStopCount to 1
- If false, sets variables AnalyzeErrorStopCount and SimulateErrorStopCount to previous value
- If not specified, true is the default.
- Initialized to false (so simulations run faster)
- GetInteractiveMode
- Returns the state of InteractiveMode.
The values for a commands options
value are typically simulator dependent.
To keep a set of scripts simulator independent, be sure to call these
at a high level, such as in LocalScriptDefaults.tcl
.
The following are options currently only for GHDL.
- SetExtendedElaborateOptions <options>
- Set extended (additional) options for simulate to
options
.
- Set extended (additional) options for simulate to
- GetExtendedElaborateOptions
- Get extended (additional) options for simulate.
- SetExtendedRunOptions <options>
- Set extended (additional) options for simulate to
options
.
- Set extended (additional) options for simulate to
- GetExtendedRunOptions
- Get extended (additional) options for simulate.
- SetSaveWaves [true|false]
- If true, save waveforms during simulate. If not specified, true is the default. Initialized to false (so simulations run faster)
- GetSaveWaves
- Returns the state of LogSignals.
Helper functions - used to minimize the amount of TCL used in PRO scripts - FileExists <name>
- if file name exists, return true otherwise false.
- DirectoryExists <name>
- if directory name exists, return true otherwise false.
Caution any undocumented commands are experimental and may change or be removed in a future revision.
All osvvm VendorScripts_xxx.tcl set the variables ToolVendor, ToolName, ToolType, and ToolNameVersion. These are useful for personalizing scripts. For example,
if {$ToolName eq "GHDL"} {
# ... do something based on GHDL
}
ToolVendor is the name of the vendor. ToolName is the name of the tool. ToolType can be either "simulator" or "synthesis". ToolNameVersion is formatted "<ToolName-version>", where version is specific to a tool and revision.
Note that ToolName was formerly named simulator. The variable simulator is deprecated. Use ToolName instead.
The settings for ToolVendor and ToolName is as defined in the table below.
ToolVendor | ToolName | ToolType | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Aldec | ActiveHDL | simulator | |
Aldec | RivieraPRO | simulator | |
Aldec | VSimSA | simulator | ActiveHDL command line |
Cadence | Xcelium | simulator | |
GHDL | GHDL | simulator | |
Siemens | ModelSim | simulator | |
Siemens | QuestaSim | simulator | |
Synopsys | VCS | simulator | |
Xilinx | XSIM | simulator | Still in Debug |
Xilinx | Vivado | synthesis | Currently supports analyze |
These variables can be used to do tool specific actions in scripts. I use the following in my LocalScriptDefaults.tcl (see next section) file.
if {$::osvvm::ToolVendor eq "Siemens"} {
SetExtendedAnalyzeOptions "-quiet"
SetExtendedSimulateOptions "-quiet"
}
OSVVM sets variables in the file OsvvmDefaultSettings.tcl. Do not change this file. Instead, create a LocalScriptsDefaults.tcl. An easy way to do this is to copy Example_LocalScriptDefaults.tcl to LocalScriptDefaults.tcl. LocalScriptDefaults.tcl is not in the OSVVM release - which allows you to modify it and not have it overwritten when you update your release.
Complete documentation for each variable is in the Example_LocalScriptDefaults.tcl file.
- Using LocalSdriptDefaults, you can change things such as
- OSVVM created directories with reports, results, and libraries.
- TCL Error signaling
- Generate html transcript
- Generate a single tcl script for everything run
Note that some of the OSVVM commands are can also be set using variables.
- StartUp.tcl
- StartUp script for running ActiveHDL, GHDL, Mentor, RivieraPro, and VSimSA (ActiveHDL)
- Detects the simulator running and calls the VendorScript_vendor-name.tcl. Also calls OsvvmProjectScripts.tcl and OsvvmScriptDefaults.tcl
- StartVCS.tcl
- StartUp script for Synopsys VCS. Does what StartUp.tcl does except is specific to VCS
- StartXcelium.tcl
- StartUp script for Cadence Xcelium. Does what StartUp.tcl does except is specific to Xcelium
- StartXSIM.tcl
- StartUp script for Xilinx XSIM. Does what StartUp.tcl does except is specific to Xsim
- Note, XSIM is currently a alpha level, experimental release.
- OsvvmProjectScripts.tcl
- TCL procedures that do common simulator and project build tasks.
- Called by StartUpShared.tcl
- VendorScript_tool-name.tcl
- TCL procedures that do simulator specific actions.
- "tool-name" = one of (ActiveHDL, GHDL, Mentor, RivieraPro, VSimSA, VCS, Xcelium, Xsim)
- VSimSA is the one associated with ActiveHDL.
- Called by StartUpShared.tcl
- OsvvmDefaultSettings.tcl
- Default variable settings for the OSVVM Script environment.
- Do not modify this file, instead modify LocalScriptDefaults.tcl
- Called by StartUpShared.tcl
- LocalScriptDefaults.tcl
- User default settings for the OSVVM Script environment.
- See previous section for directions on creating this file.
- If it exists, called by StartUpShared.tcl
- OsvvmRequiredSettings.tcl
- Private settings for OSVVM.
- Called by StartUpShared.tcl
- CallbackDefaults.tcl
- Callbacks for modifying OSVVM commands and error handling
- Do not modify this file, instead modify LocalCallbacks.tcl
- Called by StartUpShared.tcl
- LocalCallbacks.tcl
- User overloading of OSVVM CallbackDefaults.tcl
- If it exists, called by StartUpShared.tcl
- LocalCallbacks_tool-name.tcl
- Simulator specific user overloading of OSVVM CallbackDefaults.tcl
- If it exists, called by StartUpShared.tcl
If a simulation crashed and there are no test case reports, they can be created by calling Simulate2Html as follows.
Simulate2Html <TestCaseName> <TestSuiteName> <TestCaseFileName>
If no generics are set, then TestCaseFileName is the same as TestCaseName. If generics are set, TestCaseFileName is TestCaseName_GenericName_Value.
If the build failed, use Report2Html to create the build summary report from the YAML file and use Log2Osvvm to create the HTML log file from the text base log file.
Report2Html <YamlFileName>
Log2Osvvm <LogFileName>
During simulation OSVVM suppresses QuestaSim/ModelSim messages 8683 and 8684. These are warnings about potential issues with port drivers due to QuestaSim/ModelSim using non-VHDL compliant optimizations. The potential issues these warn about do not occur with OSVVM interfaces. As a result, these warnings are suppressed because they consume significant time at the startup of simulations.
You can learn more about these messages by doing “verror 8683” or “verror 8684” from within the tool GUI.
An output port has no default expression in its declaration and has no drivers. The VHDL LRM-compliant value it propagates to higher-level connected signals may not be what is desired. In particular, this behavior might not correspond to the synthesis view of initialization. The vsim switch "-defaultstdlogicinittoz" or "-forcestdlogicinittoz"may be useful in this situation.
OSVVM interfaces that is used to connect VC to the test sequencer (TestCtrl) use minimum as a resolution function. Driving the default value (type'left) on a signal has no negative impact. Hence, OSVVM disables this warning since it does not apply.
An output port having no drivers has been combined with a higher-level connected signal. The port will get its initial value from this higher-level connected signal; this is not compliant with the behavior required by the VHDL LRM.
LRM compliant behavior would require the port's initial value come from its declaration, however, since it was combined or collapsed with the port or signal higher in the hierarchy, the initial value came from that port or signal.
LRM compliant behavior can be obtained by preventing the collapsing of these ports with the vsim switch -donotcollapsepartiallydriven. If the port is collapsed to a port or signal with the same initialization (as is often the case of default initializations being applied), there is no problem and the proper initialization is done and the simulation is LRM compliant.
Older OSVVM VC use records whose elements are std_logic_vector. These VC initialize port values to 'Z'. QuestaSim non-VHDL compliant optimizations, such as port collapsing, remove these values. If you are using older OSVVM verification components, you can avoid any impact of this non compliant behavior if you initialize the transaction interface signal in the test harness to all 'Z'.
Hence, OSVVM disables this warning since it does not apply if you use the due care recommended above.
OSVVM recommends that you migrate older interfaces to the newer that uses types and resolution functions defined in ResolutionPkg such as std_logic_max, std_logic_vector_max, or std_logic_vector_max_c rather than std_logic or std_logic_vector. ResolutionPkg supports a richer set of types, such as integer_max, real_max, ...
Include with a file extension of ".dirs" or ".files" is deprecated and is only supported for backward compatibility.
<Name>.dirs is a directory descriptor file that contains a list of directories. Each directory is handled by calling "include <directory>".
<Name>.files is a file descriptor that contains a list of names. Each name is handled by calling "analyze <name>". If the extension of the name is ".vhd" or ".vhdl" the file will be compiled as VHDL source. If the extension of the name is ".v" the file will be compiled as verilog source. If the extension of the name is ".lib", it is handled by calling "library <name>".
For the release history see, CHANGELOG.md
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