On Jun 20,
2016, at 4:17 PM, Paul Koning <paulkoning at comcast.net> wrote:
On Jun 20, 2016, at 3:35 PM, Swift Griggs
<swiftgriggs at gmail.com> wrote:
In my recent studies of electronics (I'm a noob for all practical
purposes) I keep seeing folks refer to Verilog almost as a verb. I read
about it in Wikipedia and it sounds pretty interesting. It's basically
described as a coding scheme for electronics, similar to programming but
with extras like signal strength and propagation included. Hey, cool!
Verilog and
VHDL are two "hardware description languages". You can think of them as
programming languages to describe hardware behavior. Another way to look at them is as
languages designed to let you talk easily about lots of things that happen at the same
time -- which is what happens in hardware.
I forgot to mention: at least for VHDL,
there's an open source simulator. In other words, a program that accepts VHDL input
and lets you "run" the simulated hardware. You can feed it inputs in various
ways, and observe its behavior -- for example as waveform traces on a waveform display,
like an oscilloscope. Look for GHDL. It's a GCC front end; it takes your VHDL code
and compiles it, then it's linked with a support library to make an executable
program. Since it's GCC based you can do neat things, like run it on various hardware
platforms. Or link in C functions to do stuff, like simulate external peripherals
connected to your hardware model.
I haven't looked for open source Verilog simulators.
Pretty much any FPGA design package will have a simulator
that will take FPGA-synthesizable VHDL or Verilog and build
a simulation environment that produces the functions
specified in the HDL. Note that there are LOTS of things
you can write in VHDL and Verilog that do not synthesize
into logic, and thus the simulators won't express what those
statements ask for.
Jon