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Simulation Lab 3 Introduction to VHDL – Simple VHDL Project National Science Foundation Funded in part, by a grant from the National Science Foundation DUE 1003736 and 1068182 Acknowledgements Developed by Craig Kief, Alonzo Vera, and Alexandria Haddad, at the Configurable Space Microsystems Innovations & Applications Center (COSMIAC). Based on original tutorial developed by Bassam Matar, Engineering Faculty at Chandler-Gilbert Community College, Chandler, Arizona. Funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Introduction These labs will be using what is known as a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). The FPGA will be on a Digilent Nexys 3 board. FPGAs are different than traditional integrated circuits, because interconnects between the gates are programmable, which means the hardware itself is configurable. Lab Summary This lab will be an introduction to design techniques for FPGAs using a hardware descriptive language (VHDL) design. Xilinx ISE 14.x is the design tool provided by Xilinx for this purpose. Xilinx makes a free version of this tool called Webpack which would be virtually identical for this purpose. The board is a Digilent Nexys 3 board with a Xilinix Spartan 6 XC6LX16-CS324 chip. Please avoid putting your fingers on the chips, as they are extremely electrostatic discharge sensitive. Lab Goals Using the Design process discussed in Lab 1, we will: 1. Learn about logic gates, symbols, and their respective truth tables. 2. Implement a small logic circuit using VHDL Learning Objectives Understand the basics of digital logic and design. We will accomplish this through the implementation of a small circuit in an FPGA. The circuit will be designed in such a way that only specific combinations of switches will turn on a light emitting diode (LED) on the board. Grading Criteria Your grade is determined by your instructor. Time Required 4 - 5 hours Special Safety Requirements When working with electronic components, such as the Xilinx FPGA board, there is potential of Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) hazards. Static electricity can damage the FPGA devices used in this lab. Use appropriate ESD methods to protect the devices. No serious hazards are involved in this laboratory experiment, but be careful to connect the components with the proper polarity to avoid damage. Lab Preparation Review Lab 1 – Introduction to Xilinx previous lab. Print out the laboratory experiment procedure that follows. Acquire required hardware components/equipment. Equipment and Materials Students should work in teams of two or three. Each team of students will need the following supplies: Supplies Quantity 1. ISE® Design Suite (or WebPACK™ ) software from the Xilinx website, www.xilinx.com, if you don’t already have it installed. Your classroom should have a full working version of Xilinx ISE® Design Suite. 1 2. FPGA kit including download and power cable(s). 3. Free Digilent Adept software (instructions for download and installation are included at the beginning of this lab): http://www.digilentinc.com/Products/Detail.cfm?NavPath=2,66,828&Prod=ADEPT2 Additional References The FPGA reference manual, ISE Design Suite User Guide, Digilent Adept User Guide, and any other supporting documents that may be of use. Nexys 3 Reference Manuel: http://www.digilentinc.com/Data/Products/NEXYS3/Nexys3_rm.pdf ISE Design Suite User Guide : http://www.xilinx.com/support/index.htm#nav=sd-nav-link-106173&tab=tab-dt Digilent Adept User Guide: http://www.digilentinc.com/Data/Software/Adept/Adept%20Users%20Manual.pdf 2 Lab Procedure (optional): Download and install Digilent Adept Software In this lab, you download and install Digilent Adept which allows you to communicate with the Digilent FPGA boards that we use in lab. If Adept is already installed on your system, you can skip this Lab Procedure. Step 1: Navigate your browser to http://www.digilentinc.com/Products/Detail.cfm?Prod=ADEPT2. Figure 1. Digilent Adept Website Step 2: Click the Download button for Adept 2.9.4 System, 32/64-bit Windows (or latest version) and click Save file when prompted. The installation .exe file will download to your computer. Step 3: When the download is complete, run the .exe file and install Adept onto your computer. 3 Lab Procedure 1: FPGA Overview from Lab 1 and 2 Lab 1 Review: Xilinx Design Process overview: Step 1: Design Entry Two design methods: 1. HDL (Verilog or VHDL) or 2. Schematic drawings. For the simulation part of our class, we will use the schematic method and VHDL. Step 2: Design Synthesis Translate VHDL and schematic files into an industry standard format EDIF file. Figure 2. VHDL Design Process Lab 2 Review: Nexys 3 overview: Step 3: Design Implementation Translate Map, Place and Route. This process will generate a configuration file (.BIT) for FPGA programming. Step 4: Xilinx Device Programming Download JED file into FPGA NOTE: We used the Digilent Nexys-3 Xilinx® Spartan 6 XC6LX16-CS324 board. Your board may be a different version or from a different vendor. However, most of the components are similar. If you have a different board, review your board’s documentation. The Nexys-3 is a powerful digital system design platform built around a Xilinx Spartan 6 FPGA. The advantage of this board is that it is programmed and powered through a USB port. A list of the key features and their location on the board are shown in Figure 3. Figure 3. Nexys 3, Spartan 6 FPGA 4 User I/O The Nexys-3 board includes several input and output devices, and data ports allowing many implementation designs without the need for any other components. We will focus on the following inputs [slide switches, push buttons, and reset button] and outputs [LEDs, and 7-segment display]. The five pushbuttons and eight slide switches are provided for circuit inputs. There is also a reset button. Pushbuttons normally generate a low output when at rest, driven high when the pushbutton is pressed. Slide switches generate constant high or low inputs depending on their position. Pushbutton and slide switch inputs use a series resistor for protection against short circuits (a short circuit would occur if an FPGA pin assigned to a pushbutton or slide switch was inadvertently defined as an output). Figure 4 shows the pin assignments for each of the aforementioned inputs/outputs. Please refer the reference manual for any additional information. Figure 4. FPGA Button, Switch, Anode and Cathode Schematic Original image from the Nexys3™ Board Reference Manual 5 Lab Procedure 2: Logic Gates There are two design sections for this lab. The first is the VHDL program design, which involves writing the code telling the hardware what we want it to do. We are implementing the circuit. The second step is the testbench simulation. As its name implies, this is the testing of our code using a simulation program provided with ISE Design Suite. We will driving the inputs and observe the outputs to verify the design works as expected. We are using ISE Design Suite 14.x. ISE has the capability of implementing a variety of different design methodologies including: Schematic Capture, Finite State Machines, and Hardware Descriptive Language (VHDL or Verilog). ISE also provides its own simulation tool to test your designs before programming them on the FPGA. Step 1: Basic Logic Gate Overview In everyday activities, people use a number system with the digits zero through nine, for a total of ten digits, thus, base ten. In the digital world a number system called binary (base two) is used. There are only two digits, Zero (0) and One (1). In hardware, Zero is represented as a low voltage, and one as a high voltage. In digital logic design, logic gates are used extensively. There are three fundamental logic gates, consisting of the following: AND, OR, NOT (also known as invert). They all work in similar but unique ways. Figure 5 shows the truth table for each type of gate and what the output will be with various inputs. Figure 5. Basic Logic Gates: Truth Tables and Symbols The AND gate is used to find if both input values are high (one). If the statement is true the gate will output a one and if false (one input being low) it will output a low (zero). An OR gate is used to see if either of the inputs are high and then will output a high if true and a low if false. The NOT gate is used to directly invert the input. If the input is high then the output will be low and vice versa. In normal digital logic, a high is a positive voltage and the low is ground. 6 Step 2: Implement a Basic Gate in VHDL We will implement the circuit shown in Figure 6. The Boolean expression for this circuit is Y=(NOT(A) AND B) OR (C AND D).We will use the following process: 1. Analyze the VHDL, 2. Verify inputs and outputs with test bench waveform, and 3. Program FPGA with circuit design. Figure 6. Y=(NOT(A) AND B) OR (C AND D) 1. Open Xilinx ISE Design Tool Project Navigator. Your system might have slightly different Start Menu options. 7 2. The ISE Project Navigator window opens, with the Tip of the Day displayed. Click OK to close the Tip of the Day. 3. Start a new project by selecting File New Project from the menu. The New Project Wizard starts. a. Type LAB3 in the Name text box. b. Select a location on your computer to save your project files by clicking the ellipsis (…) button to the right of the Location text box. c. Under Top-level source type, select HDL. d. Click Next. The Project Settings dialog box opens. NOTE: File names must start with a letter. Use underscores ( _ ) for readability. Do not use hyphens (-); although the file name will work, the entity name will not. More on this later. 8 4. Select Spartan-6 SP601 Evaluation Platform from the Evaluation Development Board drop down menu. The Product Category, Family, Device, Package, and Speed should all automatically populate (top half of the screen). You will need to set some options in the lower half of the dialog box. Select VHDL from the Preferred Language drop down menu. The Project Settings should resemble the figure to the right. 5. Click Next. NOTE: The options specified are for the Spartan 6 LX FPGA. Your board might be different than the board used for these instructions. Chip specifications are printed on the FPGA chip in the middle of the board. The board information is also listed on the box it came in. 6. Verify the file type and name are correct in the Project Summary then click Finish to complete the New Project creation process. 9 NOTE: You will add them to the project. Copy the source files into the LAB3 project folder that ISE created. There are three files for this project: Tut1Source.vhd (the source file, tut1_tb.vhd (the testbench) and tut1.ucf (the pin assignments). When naming testbenches, it is common practice to add the “_tb” to the file name. NOTE: For this project, we have already created the source files for you. There are three main files associated with this tutorial. The project files are in the lab3.zip file. If you don’t have the zip file you can download it from the COSMIAC website (http://cosmiac.org/Projects_FPGA.html ). We will be adding the files from the lab3.zip file to our new project. 7. Using Windows Explorer, extract or move these three files to your project folder. 8. Select Project Add Source from the menu or Right-click in the Hierarchy pane and select Add Source from the shortcut menu. The Add Source dialog box opens. 9. Select the three files that were extracted to the project directory earlier. Click the Open button. The Adding Source Files… dialog box opens. 10 10. Click the OK button to complete the add files process. NOTE: All three project files display with a green checkmark to the left of the file name. This lets us know that ISE understands the design association of each of the files. 11. The files are added to the LAB3 project. Clicking the Implementation or Simulation options displays the files that were just added. NOTE: It is important to understand the file Hierarchy pane. The files display in a tree structure similar to the file and directory structure on a computer. When Implementation is selected the UCF file should be below the design file it is associated with. This image shows that at the top level is the project, then the chip type. Under the chip is the VHDL file and the associated UCF file. Similarly, when Simulation is selected, the UUT should be under the associated testbench file. 11 Step 2: VHDL Overview One key to successful VHDL design is file naming. In the beginning, most of your projects will only consist of one design file. That quickly changes. It is very common to see large VHDL FPGA projects with tens or hundreds of design and test files. To organize this well, use intelligent naming conventions. For example, if you have an adder module it makes sense to name your VHDL file something similar, such as adder.vhd. Let’s review the VHDL code. This will provide some understanding of syntax and flow of the code. Some things to keep in mind: e. VHDL is designed for parallel operations. As such, multiple processes can be contained in a single design file. Operations within a process are acted upon sequentially (similar to a programming language). Processes within a design file are operated upon concurrently. This provides the ability for parallel operations. f. VHDL is portable. g. VHDL allows modeling and simulation of a system before expensive hardware is created. h. VHDL is NOT case sensitive, i.e. CLK is the same as clk, which is the same as Clk. i. Semicolons are used to end VHDL statements; very much like in C or C++. j. Comments, proceeded by two hyphens (--), are good, should be used often, and will be helpful to your replacement in case you die. k. Assignment operators are different in VHDL than in other languages (Pedroni 47): <= is used to assign a value to a signal := assigns a value to a variable => assigns values to individual vector elements or OTHERS Task A: Review the VHDL Code 1. Ensure you are in the Implementation pane and Double-click the tut1 – behavioral (Tut1Source.vhd) file name. The Tut1Source.vhd file opens in the Workspace. 12 Task B: Run the Test Bench 2. Select the Simulation pane and Double-click the testbench – testbench_arch (Tut1_tb.vhd) file name. The Tut1_tb.vhd file opens in the Workspace. 3. Select the testbench file and double-click on the “Simulate Behavioral Model”. 4. The simulator will start and the Elaborating status will display. Once the simulation is complete the ISim application window will open. 5. Click the Zoom to Full View button , then click Zoom In to better view the simulation. 6. By clicking into the waveform the yellow marker will appear. By scrolling back and forth, you can see what combinations of inputs cause a high on the output. 7. Close the ISim Window and return to the ISE Design Window. 13 Task C: Review the UCF (User Constraints File) 8. In the sources pane, choose Implementation. 9. Double-click the tut1.ucf file in the Processes pane to review the UCF code. NOTE: The VHD file is used to describe the behavior of the hardware. The third file used in this project is the tut1.ucf file. The UCF stands for user constraint file. The UCF file ties the VHDL code inputs and outputs to the board’s inputs and outputs, using pin assignments. There are many more things that a UCF file can be used for but they are beyond the scope of this tutorial. The first line ties input A to pin T10 on the FPGA board, which is the Pin assignment for switch 0 on the FPGA board (see Figure 4). “NET” identifies a signal input or output. “LOC” identifies a pin number on the FPGA and the green text is comments. 14 Step 3: Program to the FPGA board As mentioned earlier, there are four distinct stages to any FPGA project: Design, Synthesis, Implementation, and Programming. The design portion of this project is now finished. Now we can move on to the Synthesize, Implementation, and Programming stages. We will use the Generate Programming file option to go through all three stages at once. Task A: Synthesize, Implement, Map, Place and Route, Generate Bitstream (.bit) 1. Insert the small end of the USB cable into the Adept USB Port on the FPGA board. Insert the USB end into your computer. 2. Turn on the FPGA board. NOTE: The display may alternately flash PASS and 128 if the board’s ROM hasn’t been overwritten from the factory. 3. In the Processes Panel, double-click Generate Programming File. As the program is going through the compile process the compiling the process status icon spins and displays the current process that is running. The Console Panel also displays textually what is happening. 4. Once the process has stopped running, and there are no errors or warnings, there will be three green checkmarks next to the Synthesize, Implement Design, and Generate Programming File processes. 15 NOTE: If you have errors or warnings you will need to find and fix the errors. You may or may not need to fix warnings. Click the Errors (and/or Warnings) Panel tab to display a list of all errors (and/or warnings) (1). Clicking the hyperlink (2) of a particular Error (or Warning) will take you to the file and line (3) of the Error (or Warning). Note in the example the semicolon is missing at the end of line 37. Clicking the hyperlink word Error (4) (or Warning) will display context sensitive information about the particular error/warning. After fixing any errors, re-generate the programming file. To re-generate the programming file, right-click on Generate Programming File and select Rerun All. Task B: Implement design to FPGA board Finally, we will start the “Digilent Adept” program. Adept is the software provided by Digilent that allows us to communicate through the JTAG chain to the programming pins on the FPGA. Because the FPGAs we 16 are working with use a single USB cable for power and PC connection we need to use Digilent Adept to transfer the .bit code to the board. 1. Open Digilent Adept by selecting Start All Programs Digilent Adept Adept. NOTE: Your system might have slightly different Start Menu options. 2. Choose Nexys3 from the Connect Product drop down menu. NOTE: If you do not see Nexys3 as an option, check the USB connection to ensure the board is connected to the computer. 3. Click the Browse button. The Open dialog box displays. 4. Navigate to the folder of the Full_Adder project and select the full_adder.bit file. 5. Click the Open button. The file is displayed in the dropdown list next to the FPGA icon. 17 6. Click the Program button. The bit file is programmed to the FPGA board. The green status bar at the bottom of the Adept screen displays the status as the chip is programmed. 7. The program gets downloaded to the FPGA board. 8. Test the FPGA by sliding the programmed switches ON (up toward the middle of the board) and OFF (down toward the edge of the board). The LED0 should light according to the truth table. SW(0) (A) T10 SW(1) (B) T9 SW(2) (C) V9 SW(3) (D) M8 LD0 (Y) U16 0 0 0 0 Off 0 0 0 1 Off 0 0 1 0 Off 0 0 1 1 On 0 1 0 0 On 0 1 0 1 On 0 1 1 0 On 0 1 1 1 On 1 0 0 0 Off 1 0 0 1 Off 1 0 1 0 Off 1 0 1 1 On 1 1 0 0 Off 1 1 0 1 Off 1 1 1 0 Off 1 1 1 1 On 18 VHDL Code -- VHDL files contain three parts: library declarations, entity and behavior. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The library describes what each function will do. library IEEE; use IEEE.STD_LOGIC_1164.ALL; use IEEE.STD_LOGIC_ARITH.ALL; use IEEE.STD_LOGIC_UNSIGNED.ALL; -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Entity describes the inputs and outputs. This is the declaration of the -- module's inputs and outputs for part 1 of tutorial 2 entity tut1 is port ( A: in std_logic; B: in std_logic; C: in std_logic; D: in std_logic; Y: out std_logic ); end tut1; -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Behavior is the working portion of the project; defines the module's behavior Architecture behavioral of tut1 is begin process (A,B,C,D) begin Y <= (NOT(A) AND B) OR (C AND D); end process; end behavioral; 19 VHDL Testbench -- This is a VHDL testbench. It is used to stimulate the inputs to -- file we are testing. A good design practice is to create a testbench -- for each component you are developing. Test each component separately -- before combining them. LIBRARY IEEE; USE IEEE.std_logic_1164.all; USE IEEE.std_logic_arith.all; USE IEEE.std_logic_unsigned.all; USE IEEE.STD_LOGIC_TEXTIO.ALL; USE STD.TEXTIO.ALL; ENTITY testbench IS END testbench; ARCHITECTURE testbench_arch OF testbench IS COMPONENT tut1 PORT ( A : in std_logic; B : in std_logic; C : in std_logic; D : in std_logic; Y : out std_logic ); END COMPONENT; -- develop signals to stimulate SIGNAL A : std_logic := '0'; SIGNAL B : std_logic := '0'; SIGNAL C : std_logic := '0'; SIGNAL D : std_logic := '0'; SIGNAL Y : std_logic := '0'; -- UUT means unit under test BEGIN UUT : tut1 -- map signals on right to entitys on the left PORT MAP ( A => A, B => B, C => C, 20 D => D, Y => Y ); signal_A: process begin A <= NOT A; wait for 1 ns; end process; signal_B: process begin B <= NOT B; wait for 2 ns; end process; signal_C: process begin C <= NOT C; wait for 4 ns; end process; signal_D: process begin D <= NOT D; wait for 8 ns; end process; END testbench_arch; User Constraints File (UCF) # The pin assignments in this file are for the # Nexys 3, Spartan 6 C6LS16-CS324. If you are # using a different board, change the LOC = pin # assignment as appropriate NET "A" LOC = "T10"; #SW0 NET "B" LOC = "T9"; #SW1 NET "C" LOC = "V9"; #SW2 NET "D" LOC = "M8"; #SW3 NET "Y" LOC = "U16"; #LED0 21