% should be used if it is desired that the figures are to be displayed in
% draft mode.
%
+
\documentclass[conference,pdf,a4paper,10pt,final,twoside,twocolumn]{IEEEtran}
+\IEEEoverridecommandlockouts
% Add the compsoc option for Computer Society conferences.
%
% If IEEEtran.cls has not been installed into the LaTeX system files,
-
-
-
% *** CITATION PACKAGES ***
%
\usepackage{cite}
% Macro for certain acronyms in small caps. Doesn't work with the
% default font, though (it contains no smallcaps it seems).
\def\acro#1{{\small{#1}}}
+\def\acrop#1{\acro{#1}s}
+\def\acrotiny#1{{\scriptsize{#1}}}
\def\VHDL{\acro{VHDL}}
\def\GHC{\acro{GHC}}
\def\CLaSH{{\small{C}}$\lambda$a{\small{SH}}}
+\def\CLaSHtiny{{\scriptsize{C}}$\lambda$a{\scriptsize{SH}}}
% Macro for pretty printing haskell snippets. Just monospaced for now, perhaps
% we'll get something more complex later on.
\newenvironment{xlist}[1][\rule{0em}{0em}]{%
\begin{list}{}{%
\settowidth{\labelwidth}{#1:}
- \setlength{\labelsep}{0.5cm}
+ \setlength{\labelsep}{0.5em}
\setlength{\leftmargin}{\labelwidth}
\addtolength{\leftmargin}{\labelsep}
+ \addtolength{\leftmargin}{\parindent}
\setlength{\rightmargin}{0pt}
\setlength{\listparindent}{\parindent}
\setlength{\itemsep}{0 ex plus 0.2ex}
\usepackage{xcolor}
\def\comment#1{{\color[rgb]{1.0,0.0,0.0}{#1}}}
+\usepackage{cleveref}
+\crefname{figure}{figure}{figures}
+\newcommand{\fref}[1]{\cref{#1}}
+\newcommand{\Fref}[1]{\Cref{#1}}
+
+\usepackage{epstopdf}
+
+\epstopdfDeclareGraphicsRule{.svg}{pdf}{.pdf}{rsvg-convert --format=pdf < #1 > \noexpand\OutputFile}
+
%include polycode.fmt
%include clash.fmt
+\newcounter{Codecount}
+\setcounter{Codecount}{0}
+
+\newenvironment{example}
+ {
+ \refstepcounter{equation}
+ }
+ {
+ \begin{flushright}
+ (\arabic{equation})
+ \end{flushright}
+ }
+
\begin{document}
%
% paper title
% author names and affiliations
% use a multiple column layout for up to three different
% affiliations
-\author{\IEEEauthorblockN{Christiaan P.R. Baaij, Matthijs Kooijman, Jan Kuper, Marco E.T. Gerards, Bert Molenkamp, Sabih H. Gerez}
-\IEEEauthorblockA{University of Twente, Department of EEMCS\\
+\author{\IEEEauthorblockN{Christiaan P.R. Baaij, Matthijs Kooijman, Jan Kuper, Marco E.T. Gerards}%, Bert Molenkamp, Sabih H. Gerez}
+\IEEEauthorblockA{%Computer Architecture for Embedded Systems (CAES)\\
+Department of EEMCS, University of Twente\\
P.O. Box 217, 7500 AE, Enschede, The Netherlands\\
-c.p.r.baaij@@utwente.nl, matthijs@@stdin.nl}}
+c.p.r.baaij@@utwente.nl, matthijs@@stdin.nl, j.kuper@@utwente.nl}
+% \thanks{Supported through the FP7 project: S(o)OS (248465)}
+}
% \and
% \IEEEauthorblockN{Homer Simpson}
% \IEEEauthorblockA{Twentieth Century Fox\\
% make the title area
\maketitle
-
\begin{abstract}
%\boldmath
-The abstract goes here.
+\CLaSH\ is a functional hardware description language that borrows both its
+syntax and semantics from the functional programming language Haskell.
+Polymorphism and higher-order functions provide a level of abstraction and
+generality that allow a circuit designer to describe circuits in a more
+natural way than possible in a traditional hardware description language.
+
+Circuit descriptions can be translated to synthesizable VHDL using the
+prototype \CLaSH\ compiler. As the circuit descriptions, simulation code, and
+test input are also valid Haskell, complete simulations can be compiled as an
+executable binary by a Haskell compiler allowing high-speed simulation and
+analysis.
+
+% \CLaSH\ supports stateful descriptions by explicitly making the current
+% state an argument of the function, and the updated state part of the result.
+% This makes \CLaSH\ descriptions in essence the combinational parts of a
+% mealy machine.
\end{abstract}
% IEEEtran.cls defaults to using nonbold math in the Abstract.
% This preserves the distinction between vectors and scalars. However,
% creates the second title. It will be ignored for other modes.
\IEEEpeerreviewmaketitle
-
\section{Introduction}
-Hardware description languages has allowed the productivity of hardware
-engineers to keep pace with the development of chip technology. Standard
-Hardware description languages, like \VHDL~\cite{VHDL2008} and
+Hardware description languages (\acrop{HDL}) have allowed the productivity of
+hardware engineers to keep pace with the development of chip technology.
+Traditional \acrop{HDL}, like \VHDL~\cite{VHDL2008} and
Verilog~\cite{Verilog}, allowed an engineer to describe circuits using a
-programming language. These standard languages are very good at describing
+`programming' language. These standard languages are very good at describing
detailed hardware properties such as timing behavior, but are generally
cumbersome in expressing higher-level abstractions. In an attempt to raise the
abstraction level of the descriptions, a great number of approaches based on
-functional languages has been proposed \cite{T-Ruby,Hydra,HML2,Hawk1,Lava,
-ForSyDe1,Wired,reFLect}. The idea of using functional languages for hardware
-descriptions started in the early 1980s \cite{Cardelli1981, muFP,DAISY,FHDL},
-a time which also saw the birth of the currently popular hardware description
-languages such as \VHDL. The merit of using a functional language to describe
-hardware comes from the fact that basic combinatorial circuits are equivalent
-to mathematical functions and that functional languages are very good at
-describing and composing mathematical functions.
-
-In an attempt to decrease the amount of work involved with creating all the
-required tooling, such as parsers and type-checkers, many functional hardware
-description languages are embedded as a domain specific language inside the
-functional language Haskell \cite{Hydra,Hawk1,Lava,ForSyDe1,Wired}. This
-means that a developer is given a library of Haskell~\cite{Haskell} functions
-and types that together form the language primitives of the domain specific
-language. As a result of how the signals are modeled and abstracted, the
-functions used to describe a circuit also build a large domain-specific
-datatype (hidden from the designer) which can be further processed by an
-embedded compiler. This compiler actually runs in the same environment as the
-description; as a result compile-time and run-time become hard to define, as
-the embedded compiler is usually compiled by the same Haskell compiler as the
-circuit description itself.
-
-The approach taken in this research is not to make another domain specific
-language embedded in Haskell, but to use (a subset of) the Haskell language
-itself for the purpose of describing hardware. By taking this approach, we can
-capture certain language constructs, such as Haskell's choice elements
-(if-constructs, case-constructs, pattern matching, etc.), which are not
-available in the functional hardware description languages that are embedded
-in Haskell as a domain specific languages. As far as the authors know, such
-extensive support for choice-elements is new in the domain of functional
-hardware description language. As the hardware descriptions are plain Haskell
-functions, these descriptions can be compiled for simulation using using the
-optimizing Haskell compiler \GHC.
-
-Where descriptions in a conventional hardware description language have an
-explicit clock for the purpose state and synchronicity, the clock is implied
-in this research. The functions describe the behavior of the hardware between
-clock cycles, as such, only synchronous systems can be described. Many
-functional hardware description models signals as a stream of all values over
-time; state is then modeled as a delay on this stream of values. The approach
-taken in this research is to make the current state of a circuit part of the
-input of the function and the updated state part of the output.
-
-Like the standard hardware description languages, descriptions made in a
-functional hardware description language must eventually be converted into a
-netlist. This research also features a prototype translator called \CLaSH\
-(pronounced: clash), which converts the Haskell code to equivalently behaving
-synthesizable \VHDL\ code, ready to be converted to an actual netlist format
-by an optimizing \VHDL\ synthesis tools.
+functional languages has been proposed \cite{Cardelli1981,muFP,DAISY,
+T-Ruby,HML2,Hydra,Hawk1,Lava,Wired,ForSyDe1,reFLect}. The idea of using
+functional languages for hardware descriptions started in the early 1980s
+\cite{Cardelli1981,muFP,DAISY}, a time which also saw the birth of the
+currently popular \acrop{HDL}, such as \VHDL. Functional
+languages are especially well suited to describe hardware because
+combinational circuits can be directly modeled as mathematical functions and
+functional languages are very good at describing and composing these
+functions.
+
+In an attempt to ease the prototyping process of the language, such as
+creating all the required tooling, like parsers and type-checkers, many
+functional \acrop{HDL} \cite{Hydra,Hawk1,Lava,Wired} are embedded as a domain
+specific language (\acro{DSL}) within the functional language Haskell
+\cite{Haskell}. This means that a developer is given a library of Haskell
+functions and types that together form the language primitives of the
+\acro{DSL}. The primitive functions used to describe a circuit do not actually
+process any signals, they instead compose a large domain-specific graph
+(which is usually hidden from the designer). This graph is then further
+processed by an embedded circuit compiler which can perform for example
+simulation or synthesis. As Haskell's choice elements (\hs{case}-expressions,
+pattern-matching etc.) are evaluated at the time the domain-specific graph is
+being build, they are no longer visible to the embedded compiler that
+processes the datatype. Consequently, it is impossible to capture Haskell's
+choice elements within a circuit description when taking the embedded language
+approach. This does not mean that circuits specified in an embedded language
+can not contain choice, just that choice elements only exists as functions,
+e.g. a multiplexer function, and not as language elements.
+
+The approach taken in this research is to use (a subset of) the Haskell
+language \emph{itself} for the purpose of describing hardware. By taking this
+approach, this research \emph{can} capture certain language constructs, like
+all of Haskell's choice elements, within circuit descriptions. The more
+advanced features of Haskel, such as polymorphic typing and higher-order
+function, are also supported.
+
+% supporting polymorphism, higher-order functions and such an extensive array
+% of choice-elements, combined with a very concise way of specifying circuits
+% is new in the domain of (functional) \acrop{HDL}.
+% As the hardware descriptions are plain Haskell
+% functions, these descriptions can be compiled to an executable binary
+% for simulation using an optimizing Haskell compiler such as the Glasgow
+% Haskell Compiler (\GHC)~\cite{ghc}.
+
+Where descriptions in a conventional \acro{HDL} have an explicit clock for the
+purposes state and synchronicity, the clock is implicit for the descriptions and research presented in this paper. A circuit designer describes the behavior of the hardware between clock cycles. Many functional \acrop{HDL} model signals as a stream of all values over time; state is then modeled as a delay on this stream of values. Descriptions presented in this research make the current state an additional input and the updated state a part of their output. This abstraction of state and time limits the descriptions to synchronous hardware, there is however room within the language to eventually add a different abstraction mechanism that will allow for the modeling of asynchronous systems.
+
+Like the traditional \acrop{HDL}, descriptions made in a functional \acro{HDL}
+must eventually be converted into a netlist. This research also features a
+prototype translator, which has the same name as the language:
+\CLaSH\footnote{\CLaSHtiny: \acrotiny{CAES} Language for Synchronous Hardware}
+(pronounced: clash). This compiler converts the Haskell code to equivalently
+behaving synthesizable \VHDL\ code, ready to be converted to an actual netlist
+format by an (optimizing) \VHDL\ synthesis tool.
+
+Besides simple circuits such as variants of both the \acro{FIR} filter and
+the higher-order \acro{CPU} shown in \Cref{sec:usecases}, the \CLaSH\ compiler
+has also been able to translate non-trivial functional descriptions such as a
+streaming reduction circuit~\cite{reductioncircuit} for floating point
+numbers.
+
+To the best knowledge of the authors, \CLaSH\ is the only (functional)
+\acro{HDL} that allows circuit specification to be written in a very concise
+way and at the same time support such advanced features as polymorphic typing,
+higher order functions and pattern matching.
\section{Hardware description in Haskell}
+The following section describes the basic language elements of \CLaSH\ and the
+extensiveness of the support of these elements within the \CLaSH\ compiler. In
+various subsections, the relation between the language elements and their
+eventual netlist representation is also highlighted.
\subsection{Function application}
- The basic syntactic elements of a functional program are functions
- and function application. These have a single obvious \VHDL\
- translation: each top level function becomes a hardware component,
- where each argument is an input port and the result value is the
- (single) output port. This output port can have a complex type (such
- as a tuple), so having just a single output port does not create a
- limitation.
-
- Each function application in turn becomes a component instantiation.
- Here, the result of each argument expression is assigned to a
- signal, which is mapped to the corresponding input port. The output
- port of the function is also mapped to a signal, which is used as
- the result of the application itself.
-
- Since every top level function generates its own component, the
- hierarchy of function calls is reflected in the final \VHDL\
- output as well, creating a hierarchical \VHDL\ description of the
- hardware. This separation in different components makes the
- resulting \VHDL\ output easier to read and debug.
-
- Example that defines the \texttt{mac} function by applying the
- \texttt{add} and \texttt{mul} functions to calculate $a * b + c$:
-
-\begin{code}
-mac a b c = add (mul a b) c
-\end{code}
-
-\begin{figure}
-\centerline{\includegraphics{mac}}
-\caption{Combinatorial Multiply-Accumulate (curried)}
-\label{img:mac-comb}
-\end{figure}
-
-\begin{figure}
-\centerline{\includegraphics{mac-nocurry}}
-\caption{Combinatorial Multiply-Accumulate (uncurried)}
-\label{img:mac-comb-nocurry}
-\end{figure}
-
- \subsection{Choices}
- Although describing components and connections allows describing a
- lot of hardware designs already, there is an obvious thing missing:
- choice. We need some way to be able to choose between values based
- on another value. In Haskell, choice is achieved by \hs{case}
- expressions, \hs{if} expressions, pattern matching and guards.
-
- The easiest of these are of course case expressions (and \hs{if}
- expressions, which can be very directly translated to \hs{case}
- expressions). A \hs{case} expression can in turn simply be
- translated to a conditional assignment in \VHDL, where the
- conditions use equality comparisons against the constructors in the
- \hs{case} expressions.
-
- A slightly more complex (but very powerful) form of choice is
- pattern matching. A function can be defined in multiple clauses,
- where each clause specifies a pattern. When the arguments match the
- pattern, the corresponding clause will be used.
-
- A pattern match (with optional guards) can also be implemented using
- conditional assignments in \VHDL, where the condition is the logical
- and of comparison results of each part of the pattern as well as the
- guard.
-
- Contrived example that sums two values when they are equal or
- non-equal (depending on the predicate given) and returns 0
- otherwise. This shows three implementations, one using and if
- expression, one using only case expressions and one using pattern
- matching and guards.
-
+ Two basic elements of a functional program are functions and function
+ application. These have a single obvious translation to a netlist format:
+ \begin{inparaenum}
+ \item every function is translated to a component,
+ \item every function argument is translated to an input port,
+ \item the result value of a function is translated to an output port,
+ and
+ \item function applications are translated to component instantiations.
+ \end{inparaenum}
+ The result value can have a composite type (such as a tuple), so having
+ just a single result value does not pose any limitation. The actual
+ arguments of a function application are assigned to signals, which are
+ then mapped to the corresponding input ports of the component. The output
+ port of the function is also mapped to a signal, which is used as the
+ result of the application itself. Since every top level function generates
+ its own component, the hierarchy of function calls is reflected in the
+ final netlist. %, creating a hierarchical description of the hardware.
+ % The separation in different components makes it easier for a developer
+ % to understand and possibly hand-optimize the resulting \VHDL\ output of
+ % the \CLaSH\ compiler.
+
+ The short example (\ref{lst:code1}) demonstrated below gives an indication
+ of the level of conciseness that can be achieved with functional hardware
+ description languages when compared with the more traditional hardware
+ description languages. The example is a combinational multiply-accumulate
+ circuit that works for \emph{any} word length (this type of polymorphism
+ will be further elaborated in \Cref{sec:polymorhpism}). The corresponding
+ netlist is depicted in \Cref{img:mac-comb}.
+
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+ \begin{code}
+ mac a b c = add (mul a b) c
+ \end{code}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code1}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ \begin{figure}
+ \centerline{\includegraphics{mac.svg}}
+ \caption{Combinational Multiply-Accumulate}
+ \label{img:mac-comb}
+ \vspace{-1.5em}
+ \end{figure}
+
+ The use of a composite result value is demonstrated in the next example
+ (\ref{lst:code2}), where the multiply-accumulate circuit not only returns
+ the accumulation result, but also the intermediate multiplication result.
+ Its corresponding netlist can be seen in \Cref{img:mac-comb-composite}.
+
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
\begin{code}
- sumif pred a b = if pred == Eq && a == b ||
- pred == Neq && a != b
- then a + b
- else 0
-
- sumif pred a b = case pred of
- Eq -> case a == b of
- True -> a + b
- False -> 0
- Neq -> case a != b of
- True -> a + b
- False -> 0
-
- sumif Eq a b | a == b = a + b
- sumif Neq a b | a != b = a + b
- sumif _ _ _ = 0
+ mac a b c = (z, add z c)
+ where
+ z = mul a b
+ \end{code}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code2}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ \begin{figure}
+ \centerline{\includegraphics{mac-nocurry.svg}}
+ \caption{Combinational Multiply-Accumulate (composite output)}
+ \label{img:mac-comb-composite}
+ \vspace{-1.5em}
+ \end{figure}
+
+ \subsection{Choice}
+ In Haskell, choice can be achieved by a large set of syntactic elements,
+ consisting of: \hs{case} expressions, \hs{if-then-else} expressions,
+ pattern matching, and guards. The most general of these are the \hs{case}
+ expressions (\hs{if} expressions can be directly translated to
+ \hs{case} expressions). When transforming a \CLaSH\ description to a
+ netlist, a \hs{case} expression is translated to a multiplexer. The
+ control value of the \hs{case} expression is fed into a number of
+ comparators and their combined output forms the selection port of the
+ multiplexer. The result of each alternative in the \hs{case} expression is
+ linked to the corresponding input port of the multiplexer.
+ % A \hs{case} expression can in turn simply be translated to a conditional
+ % assignment in \VHDL, where the conditions use equality comparisons
+ % against the constructors in the \hs{case} expressions.
+
+ % Two versions of a contrived example are displayed below, the first
+ % (\ref{lst:code3}) using a \hs{case} expression and the second
+ % (\ref{lst:code4}) using an \hs{if-then-else} expression. Both examples
+ % sum two values when they are equal or non-equal (depending on the given
+ % predicate, the \hs{pred} variable) and return 0 otherwise.
+
+ An code example (\ref{lst:code3}) that uses a \hs{case} expression and
+ \hs{if-then-else} expressions is shown below. The function counts up or
+ down depending on the \hs{direction} variable, and has a \hs{wrap}
+ variable that determines both the upper bound and wrap-around point of the
+ counter. The \hs{direction} variable is of the following, user-defined,
+ enumeration datatype:
+
+ \begin{code}
+ data Direction = Up | Down
\end{code}
- \comment{TODO: Pretty picture}
+ The naive netlist corresponding to this example is depicted in
+ \Cref{img:counter}. Note that the \hs{direction} variable is only
+ compared to \hs{Up}, as an inequality immediately implies that
+ \hs{direction} is \hs{Down}.
+
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+ \begin{code}
+ counter direction wrap x = case direction of
+ Up -> if x < wrap then
+ x + 1 else
+ 0
+ Down -> if x > 0 then
+ x - 1 else
+ wrap
+ \end{code}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code3}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ % \hspace{-1.7em}
+ % \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+ % \begin{code}
+ % sumif pred a b =
+ % if pred == Equal then
+ % if a == b then a + b else 0
+ % else
+ % if a != b then a + b else 0
+ % \end{code}
+ % \end{minipage}
+ % \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ % \begin{example}
+ % \label{lst:code4}
+ % \end{example}
+ % \end{minipage}
+
+ % \begin{figure}
+ % \vspace{1em}
+ % \centerline{\includegraphics{choice-case.svg}}
+ % \caption{Choice - sumif}
+ % \label{img:choice}
+ % \vspace{-1.5em}
+ % \end{figure}
+
+ \begin{figure}
+ \vspace{1em}
+ \centerline{\includegraphics{counter.svg}}
+ \caption{Counter netlist}
+ \label{img:counter}
+ \vspace{-1.5em}
+ \end{figure}
+
+ A user-friendly and also very powerful form of choice that is not found in
+ the traditional hardware description languages is pattern matching. A
+ function can be defined in multiple clauses, where each clause corresponds
+ to a pattern. When an argument matches a pattern, the corresponding clause
+ will be used. Expressions can also contain guards, where the expression is
+ only executed if the guard evaluates to true, and continues with the next
+ clause if the guard evaluates to false. Like \hs{if-then-else}
+ expressions, pattern matching and guards have a (straightforward)
+ translation to \hs{case} expressions and can as such be mapped to
+ multiplexers. A second version (\ref{lst:code5}) of the earlier example,
+ now using both pattern matching and guards, can be seen below. The guard
+ is the expression that follows the vertical bar (\hs{|}) and precedes the
+ assignment operator (\hs{=}). The \hs{otherwise} guards always evaluate to
+ \hs{true}.
+
+ The version using pattern matching and guards corresponds to the same
+ naive netlist representation (\Cref{img:counter}) as the earlier example.
+
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+ \begin{code}
+ counter Up wrap x | x < wrap = x + 1
+ | otherwise = 0
+ counter Down wrap x | x > 0 = x - 1
+ | otherwise = wrap
+ \end{code}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code5}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ % \begin{figure}
+ % \centerline{\includegraphics{choice-ifthenelse}}
+ % \caption{Choice - \emph{if-then-else}}
+ % \label{img:choice}
+ % \end{figure}
\subsection{Types}
- Translation of two most basic functional concepts has been
- discussed: function application and choice. Before looking further
- into less obvious concepts like higher-order expressions and
- polymorphism, the possible types that can be used in hardware
- descriptions will be discussed.
-
- Some way is needed to translate every value used to its hardware
- equivalents. In particular, this means a hardware equivalent for
- every \emph{type} used in a hardware description is needed.
-
- The following types are \emph{built-in}, meaning that their hardware
- translation is fixed into the \CLaSH\ compiler. A designer can also
- define his own types, which will be translated into hardware types
- using translation rules that are discussed later on.
-
- \subsection{Built-in types}
+ Haskell is a statically-typed language, meaning that the type of a
+ variable or function is determined at compile-time. Not all of Haskell's
+ typing constructs have a clear translation to hardware, this section will
+ therefore only deal with the types that do have a clear correspondence
+ to hardware. The translatable types are divided into two categories:
+ \emph{built-in} types and \emph{user-defined} types. Built-in types are
+ those types for which a fixed translation is defined within the \CLaSH\
+ compiler. The \CLaSH\ compiler has generic translation rules to
+ translate the user-defined types, which are described later on.
+
+ The \CLaSH\ compiler is able to infer unspecified (polymorphic) types,
+ meaning that a developer does not have to annotate every function with a
+ type signature. % (even if it is good practice to do so).
+ Given that the top-level entity of a circuit design is annotated with
+ concrete/monomorphic types, the \CLaSH\ compiler can specialize
+ polymorphic functions to functions with concrete types.
+
+ % Translation of two most basic functional concepts has been
+ % discussed: function application and choice. Before looking further
+ % into less obvious concepts like higher-order expressions and
+ % polymorphism, the possible types that can be used in hardware
+ % descriptions will be discussed.
+ %
+ % Some way is needed to translate every value used to its hardware
+ % equivalents. In particular, this means a hardware equivalent for
+ % every \emph{type} used in a hardware description is needed.
+ %
+ % The following types are \emph{built-in}, meaning that their hardware
+ % translation is fixed into the \CLaSH\ compiler. A designer can also
+ % define his own types, which will be translated into hardware types
+ % using translation rules that are discussed later on.
+
+ \subsubsection{Built-in types}
+ The following types have fixed translations defined within the \CLaSH\
+ compiler:
\begin{xlist}
- \item[\hs{Bit}]
- This is the most basic type available. It can have two values:
- \hs{Low} and \hs{High}. It is mapped directly onto the
- \texttt{std\_logic} \VHDL\ type.
- \item[\hs{Bool}]
- This is a basic logic type. It can have two values: \hs{True}
- and \hs{False}. It is translated to \texttt{std\_logic} exactly
- like the \hs{Bit} type (where a value of \hs{True} corresponds
- to a value of \hs{High}). Supporting the Bool type is
- particularly useful to support \hs{if ... then ... else ...}
- expressions, which always have a \hs{Bool} value for the
- condition.
- \item[\hs{SizedWord}, \hs{SizedInt}]
- These are types to represent integers. A \hs{SizedWord} is unsigned,
- while a \hs{SizedInt} is signed. These types are parametrized by a
- length type, so you can define an unsigned word of 32 bits wide as
- follows:
-
- \begin{code}
- type Word32 = SizedWord D32
- \end{code}
-
- Here, a type synonym \hs{Word32} is defined that is equal to the
- \hs{SizedWord} type constructor applied to the type \hs{D32}. \hs{D32}
- is the \emph{type level representation} of the decimal number 32,
- making the \hs{Word32} type a 32-bit unsigned word. These types are
- translated to the \VHDL\ \texttt{unsigned} and \texttt{signed}
- respectively.
- \item[\hs{Vector}]
- This is a vector type, that can contain elements of any other type and
- has a fixed length. The \hs{Vector} type constructor takes two type
+ \item[\bf{Bit}]
+ the most basic type available. It can have two values:
+ \hs{Low} or \hs{High}.
+ % It is mapped directly onto the \texttt{std\_logic} \VHDL\ type.
+ \item[\bf{Bool}]
+ this is a basic logic type. It can have two values: \hs{True}
+ or \hs{False}.
+ % It is translated to \texttt{std\_logic} exactly like the \hs{Bit}
+ % type (where a value of \hs{True} corresponds to a value of
+ % \hs{High}).
+ Supporting the Bool type is required in order to support the
+ \hs{if-then-else} expression, which requires a \hs{Bool} value for
+ the condition.
+ \item[\bf{Signed}, \bf{Unsigned}]
+ these are types to represent integers and both are parametrizable in
+ their size. The overflow behavior of the numeric operators defined for
+ these types is \emph{wrap-around}.
+ % , so you can define an unsigned word of 32 bits wide as follows:
+
+ % \begin{code}
+ % type Word32 = SizedWord D32
+ % \end{code}
+
+ % Here, a type synonym \hs{Word32} is defined that is equal to the
+ % \hs{SizedWord} type constructor applied to the type \hs{D32}.
+ % \hs{D32} is the \emph{type level representation} of the decimal
+ % number 32, making the \hs{Word32} type a 32-bit unsigned word. These
+ % types are translated to the \VHDL\ \texttt{unsigned} and
+ % \texttt{signed} respectively.
+ \item[\bf{Vector}]
+ this is a vector type that can contain elements of any other type and
+ has a static length. The \hs{Vector} type constructor takes two type
arguments: the length of the vector and the type of the elements
- contained in it. The state type of an 8 element register bank would
- then for example be:
-
- \begin{code}
- type RegisterState = Vector D8 Word32
- \end{code}
-
- Here, a type synonym \hs{RegisterState} is defined that is equal to
- the \hs{Vector} type constructor applied to the types \hs{D8} (The
- type level representation of the decimal number 8) and \hs{Word32}
- (The 32 bit word type as defined above). In other words, the
- \hs{RegisterState} type is a vector of 8 32-bit words. A fixed size
- vector is translated to a \VHDL\ array type.
- \item[\hs{RangedWord}]
- This is another type to describe integers, but unlike the previous
- two it has no specific bit-width, but an upper bound. This means that
- its range is not limited to powers of two, but can be any number.
- A \hs{RangedWord} only has an upper bound, its lower bound is
- implicitly zero. The main purpose of the \hs{RangedWord} type is to be
- used as an index to a \hs{Vector}.
-
- \comment{TODO: Perhaps remove this example?} To define an index for
- the 8 element vector above, we would do:
-
- \begin{code}
- type RegisterIndex = RangedWord D7
- \end{code}
-
- Here, a type synonym \hs{RegisterIndex} is defined that is equal to
- the \hs{RangedWord} type constructor applied to the type \hs{D7}. In
- other words, this defines an unsigned word with values from
- 0 to 7 (inclusive). This word can be be used to index the
- 8 element vector \hs{RegisterState} above. This type is translated to
- the \texttt{unsigned} \VHDL type.
+ contained in it. The short-hand notation used for the vector type in
+ the rest of paper is: \hs{[a|n]}, where \hs{a} is the element
+ type, and \hs{n} is the length of the vector. Note that this is
+ a notation used in this paper only, vectors are slightly more
+ verbose in real \CLaSH\ descriptions.
+ % The state type of an 8 element register bank would then for example
+ % be:
+
+ % \begin{code}
+ % type RegisterState = Vector D8 Word32
+ % \end{code}
+
+ % Here, a type synonym \hs{RegisterState} is defined that is equal to
+ % the \hs{Vector} type constructor applied to the types \hs{D8} (The
+ % type level representation of the decimal number 8) and \hs{Word32}
+ % (The 32 bit word type as defined above). In other words, the
+ % \hs{RegisterState} type is a vector of 8 32-bit words. A fixed size
+ % vector is translated to a \VHDL\ array type.
+ \item[\bf{Index}]
+ the main purpose of the \hs{Index} type is to be used as an index into
+ a \hs{Vector}, and has no specified bit-size, but a specified upper
+ bound. This means that its range is not limited to powers of two, but
+ can be any number. An \hs{Index} only has an upper bound, its lower
+ bound is implicitly zero. If a value of this type exceeds either
+ bounds, an error will be thrown at simulation-time.
+
+ % \comment{TODO: Perhaps remove this example?} To define an index for
+ % the 8 element vector above, we would do:
+
+ % \begin{code}
+ % type RegisterIndex = RangedWord D7
+ % \end{code}
+
+ % Here, a type synonym \hs{RegisterIndex} is defined that is equal to
+ % the \hs{RangedWord} type constructor applied to the type \hs{D7}. In
+ % other words, this defines an unsigned word with values from
+ % 0 to 7 (inclusive). This word can be be used to index the
+ % 8 element vector \hs{RegisterState} above. This type is translated
+ % to the \texttt{unsigned} \VHDL type.
\end{xlist}
- \subsection{User-defined types}
- There are three ways to define new types in Haskell: algebraic
- data-types with the \hs{data} keyword, type synonyms with the \hs{type}
- keyword and type renamings with the \hs{newtype} keyword. \GHC\
- offers a few more advanced ways to introduce types (type families,
- existential typing, {\small{GADT}}s, etc.) which are not standard
- Haskell. These are not currently supported.
-
- Only an algebraic datatype declaration actually introduces a
- completely new type, for which we provide the \VHDL\ translation
- below. Type synonyms and renamings only define new names for
- existing types (where synonyms are completely interchangeable and
- renamings need explicit conversion). Therefore, these do not need
- any particular \VHDL\ translation, a synonym or renamed type will
- just use the same representation as the original type. The
- distinction between a renaming and a synonym does no longer matter
- in hardware and can be disregarded in the generated \VHDL.
-
- For algebraic types, we can make the following distinction:
-
+ \subsubsection{User-defined types}
+ % There are three ways to define new types in Haskell: algebraic
+ % data-types with the \hs{data} keyword, type synonyms with the \hs{type}
+ % keyword and datatype renaming constructs with the \hs{newtype} keyword.
+ % \GHC\ offers a few more advanced ways to introduce types (type families,
+ % existential typing, {\acro{GADT}}s, etc.) which are not standard
+ % Haskell. As it is currently unclear how these advanced type constructs
+ % correspond to hardware, they are for now unsupported by the \CLaSH\
+ % compiler.
+ A completely new type is introduced by an algebraic datatype declaration
+ which is defined using the \hs{data} keyword. Type synonyms can be
+ introduced using the \hs{type} keyword.
+ % Only an algebraic datatype declaration actually introduces a
+ % completely new type. Type synonyms and type renaming only define new
+ % names for existing types, where synonyms are completely interchangeable
+ % and a type renaming requires an explicit conversion.
+ Type synonyms do not need any particular translation, as a synonym will
+ just use the same representation as the original type.
+
+ For algebraic types, we can make the following distinctions:
\begin{xlist}
\item[\bf{Single constructor}]
Algebraic datatypes with a single constructor with one or more
fields, are essentially a way to pack a few values together in a
- record-like structure. An example of such a type is the following pair
- of integers:
-
-\begin{code}
-data IntPair = IntPair Int Int
-\end{code}
-
- Haskell's builtin tuple types are also defined as single
- constructor algebraic types and are translated according to this
- rule by the \CLaSH\ compiler. These types are translated to \VHDL\
- record types, with one field for every field in the constructor.
+ record-like structure. Haskell's built-in tuple types are also defined
+ as single constructor algebraic types (but with a bit of
+ syntactic sugar). An example of a single constructor type with
+ multiple fields is the following pair of integers:
+ \begin{code}
+ data IntPair = IntPair Int Int
+ \end{code}
+ % These types are translated to \VHDL\ record types, with one field
+ % for every field in the constructor.
\item[\bf{No fields}]
Algebraic datatypes with multiple constructors, but without any
fields are essentially a way to get an enumeration-like type
containing alternatives. Note that Haskell's \hs{Bool} type is also
- defined as an enumeration type, but we have a fixed translation for
- that. These types are translated to \VHDL\ enumerations, with one
- value for each constructor. This allows references to these
- constructors to be translated to the corresponding enumeration value.
+ defined as an enumeration type, but that there is a fixed translation
+ for that type within the \CLaSH\ compiler. An example of such an
+ enumeration type is the type that represents the colors in a traffic
+ light:
+ \begin{code}
+ data TrafficLight = Red | Orange | Green
+ \end{code}
+ % These types are translated to \VHDL\ enumerations, with one
+ % value for each constructor. This allows references to these
+ % constructors to be translated to the corresponding enumeration
+ % value.
\item[\bf{Multiple constructors with fields}]
Algebraic datatypes with multiple constructors, where at least
- one of these constructors has one or more fields are not
- currently supported.
+ one of these constructors has one or more fields are currently not
+ supported.
\end{xlist}
- \subsection{Polymorphic functions}
- A powerful construct in most functional language is polymorphism.
- This means the arguments of a function (and consequentially, values
- within the function as well) do not need to have a fixed type.
- Haskell supports \emph{parametric polymorphism}, meaning a
- function's type can be parameterized with another type.
-
- As an example of a polymorphic function, consider the following
- \hs{append} function's type:
+ \subsection{Polymorphism}\label{sec:polymorhpism}
+ A powerful feature of most (functional) programming languages is
+ polymorphism, it allows a function to handle values of different data
+ types in a uniform way. Haskell supports \emph{parametric
+ polymorphism}~\cite{polymorphism}, meaning functions can be written
+ without mention of any specific type and can be used transparently with
+ any number of new types.
+
+ As an example of a parametric polymorphic function, consider the type of
+ the following \hs{append} function, which appends an element to a
+ vector:\footnote{The \hs{::} operator is used to annotate a function
+ with its type.}
- TODO: Use vectors instead of lists?
-
\begin{code}
- append :: [a] -> a -> [a]
+ append :: [a|n] -> a -> [a|n+1]
\end{code}
This type is parameterized by \hs{a}, which can contain any type at
- all. This means that append can append an element to a list,
- regardless of the type of the elements in the list (but the element
- added must match the elements in the list, since there is only one
- \hs{a}).
-
- This kind of polymorphism is extremely useful in hardware designs to
- make operations work on a vector without knowing exactly what elements
- are inside, routing signals without knowing exactly what kinds of
- signals these are, or working with a vector without knowing exactly
- how long it is. Polymorphism also plays an important role in most
- higher order functions, as we will see in the next section.
-
- The previous example showed unconstrained polymorphism (TODO: How is
- this really called?): \hs{a} can have \emph{any} type. Furthermore,
- Haskell supports limiting the types of a type parameter to specific
- class of types. An example of such a type class is the \hs{Num}
- class, which contains all of Haskell's numerical types.
-
- Now, take the addition operator, which has the following type:
-
+ all. This means that \hs{append} can append an element to a vector,
+ regardless of the type of the elements in the list (as long as the type of
+ the value to be added is of the same type as the values in the vector).
+ This kind of polymorphism is extremely useful in hardware designs to make
+ operations work on a vector without knowing exactly what elements are
+ inside, routing signals without knowing exactly what kinds of signals
+ these are, or working with a vector without knowing exactly how long it
+ is. Polymorphism also plays an important role in most higher order
+ functions, as we will see in the next section.
+
+ Another type of polymorphism is \emph{ad-hoc
+ polymorphism}~\cite{polymorphism}, which refers to polymorphic
+ functions which can be applied to arguments of different types, but which
+ behave differently depending on the type of the argument to which they are
+ applied. In Haskell, ad-hoc polymorphism is achieved through the use of
+ type classes, where a class definition provides the general interface of a
+ function, and class instances define the functionality for the specific
+ types. An example of such a type class is the \hs{Num} class, which
+ contains all of Haskell's numerical operations. A designer can make use
+ of this ad-hoc polymorphism by adding a constraint to a parametrically
+ polymorphic type variable. Such a constraint indicates that the type
+ variable can only be instantiated to a type whose members supports the
+ overloaded functions associated with the type class.
+
+ An example of a type signature that includes such a constraint if the
+ signature of the \hs{sum} function, which sums the values in a vector:
\begin{code}
- (+) :: Num a => a -> a -> a
+ sum :: Num a => [a|n] -> a
\end{code}
This type is again parameterized by \hs{a}, but it can only contain
- types that are \emph{instances} of the \emph{type class} \hs{Num}.
- Our numerical built-in types are also instances of the \hs{Num}
- class, so we can use the addition operator on \hs{SizedWords} as
- well as on {SizedInts}.
-
- In \CLaSH, unconstrained polymorphism is completely supported. Any
- function defined can have any number of unconstrained type
- parameters. The \CLaSH compiler will infer the type of every such
- argument depending on how the function is applied. There is one
- exception to this: The top level function that is translated, can
- not have any polymorphic arguments (since it is never applied, so
- there is no way to find out the actual types for the type
- parameters).
-
- \CLaSH does not support user-defined type classes, but does use some
- of the builtin ones for its builtin functions (like \hs{Num} and
- \hs{Eq}).
+ types that are \emph{instances} of the \emph{type class} \hs{Num}, so that
+ the compiler knows that the addition (+) operator is defined for that
+ type.
+ % \CLaSH's built-in numerical types are also instances of the \hs{Num}
+ % class.
+ % so we can use the addition operator (and thus the \hs{sum}
+ % function) with \hs{Signed} as well as with \hs{Unsigned}.
+
+ \CLaSH\ supports both parametric polymorphism and ad-hoc polymorphism. Any
+ function defined can have any number of unconstrained type parameters. A
+ developer can also specify his own type classes and corresponding
+ instances. The \CLaSH\ compiler will infer the type of every polymorphic
+ argument depending on how the function is applied. There is however one
+ constraint: the top level function that is being translated can not have
+ any polymorphic arguments. The arguments of the top-level can not be
+ polymorphic as the function is never applied and consequently there is no
+ way to determine the actual types for the type parameters.
+
+ With regard to the built-in types, it should be noted that members of
+ some of the standard Haskell type classes are supported as built-in
+ functions. These include: the numerial operators of \hs{Num}, the equality
+ operators of \hs{Eq}, and the comparison/order operators of \hs{Ord}.
+
+ \subsection{Higher-order functions \& values}
+ Another powerful abstraction mechanism in functional languages, is
+ the concept of \emph{functions as a first class value}, also called
+ \emph{higher-order functions}. This allows a function to be treated as a
+ value and be passed around, even as the argument of another
+ function. The following example should clarify this concept:
+
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+ %format not = "\mathit{not}"
+ \begin{code}
+ negateVector xs = map not xs
+ \end{code}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code6}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ The code above defines the \hs{negateVector} function, which takes a
+ vector of booleans, \hs{xs}, and returns a vector where all the values are
+ negated. It achieves this by calling the \hs{map} function, and passing it
+ \emph{another function}, boolean negation, and the vector of booleans,
+ \hs{xs}. The \hs{map} function applies the negation function to all the
+ elements in the vector.
+
+ The \hs{map} function is called a higher-order function, since it takes
+ another function as an argument. Also note that \hs{map} is again a
+ parametric polymorphic function: it does not pose any constraints on the
+ type of the input vector, other than that its elements must have the same
+ type as the first argument of the function passed to \hs{map}. The element
+ type of the resulting vector is equal to the return type of the function
+ passed, which need not necessarily be the same as the element type of the
+ input vector. All of these characteristics can readily be inferred from
+ the type signature belonging to \hs{map}:
+
+ \begin{code}
+ map :: (a -> b) -> [a|n] -> [b|n]
+ \end{code}
+
+ So far, only functions have been used as higher-order values. In
+ Haskell, there are two more ways to obtain a function-typed value:
+ partial application and lambda abstraction. Partial application
+ means that a function that takes multiple arguments can be applied
+ to a single argument, and the result will again be a function (but
+ that takes one argument less). As an example, consider the following
+ expression, that adds one to every element of a vector:
+
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+ \begin{code}
+ map (add 1) xs
+ \end{code}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code7}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ Here, the expression \hs{(add 1)} is the partial application of the
+ addition function to the value \hs{1}, which is again a function that
+ adds one to its (next) argument. A lambda expression allows one to
+ introduce an anonymous function in any expression. Consider the following
+ expression, which again adds one to every element of a vector:
+
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+ \begin{code}
+ map (\x -> x + 1) xs
+ \end{code}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code8}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ Finally, not only built-in functions can have higher order arguments (such
+ as the \hs{map} function), but any function defined in \CLaSH\ may have
+ functions as arguments. This allows the circuit designer to use a
+ powerful amount of code reuse. The only exception is again the top-level
+ function: if a function-typed argument is not applied with an actual
+ function, no hardware can be generated.
+
+ % \comment{TODO: Describe ALU example (no code)}
\subsection{State}
- A very important concept in hardware it the concept of state. In a
+ A very important concept in hardware is the concept of state. In a
stateful design, the outputs depend on the history of the inputs, or the
state. State is usually stored in registers, which retain their value
during a clock cycle. As we want to describe more than simple
- combinatorial designs, \CLaSH\ needs an abstraction mechanism for state.
+ combinational designs, \CLaSH\ needs an abstraction mechanism for state.
An important property in Haskell, and in most other functional languages,
is \emph{purity}. A function is said to be \emph{pure} if it satisfies two
\begin{inparaenum}
\item given the same arguments twice, it should return the same value in
both cases, and
- \item when the function is called, it should not have observable
- side-effects.
+ \item that the function has no observable side-effects.
\end{inparaenum}
- This purity property is important for functional languages, since it
- enables all kinds of mathematical reasoning that could not be guaranteed
- correct for impure functions. Pure functions are as such a perfect match
- for a combinatorial circuit, where the output solely depends on the
- inputs. When a circuit has state however, it can no longer be simply
- described by a pure function. Simply removing the purity property is not a
- valid option, as the language would then lose many of it mathematical
- properties. In an effort to include the concept of state in pure
- functions, the current value of the state is made an argument of the
- function; the updated state becomes part of the result.
+ % This purity property is important for functional languages, since it
+ % enables all kinds of mathematical reasoning that could not be guaranteed
+ % correct for impure functions.
+ Pure functions are as such a perfect match for combinational circuits,
+ where the output solely depends on the inputs. When a circuit has state
+ however, it can no longer be simply described by a pure function.
+ % Simply removing the purity property is not a valid option, as the
+ % language would then lose many of it mathematical properties.
+ In \CLaSH\ we deal with the concept of state in pure functions by making
+ the current state an additional argument of the function, and the
+ updated state part of result. In this sense the descriptions made in
+ \CLaSH\ are the combinational parts of a mealy machine.
+
+ A simple example is adding an accumulator register to the earlier
+ multiply-accumulate circuit, of which the resulting netlist can be seen in
+ \Cref{img:mac-state}:
+
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+ \begin{code}
+ macS (State c) a b = (State c', c')
+ where
+ c' = mac a b c
+ \end{code}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code9}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ \begin{figure}
+ \centerline{\includegraphics{mac-state.svg}}
+ \caption{Stateful Multiply-Accumulate}
+ \label{img:mac-state}
+ \vspace{-1.5em}
+ \end{figure}
+
+ Note that the \hs{macS} function returns both the new state and the value
+ of the output port. The \hs{State} keyword indicates which arguments are
+ part of the current state, and what part of the output is part of the
+ updated state. This aspect will also be reflected in the type signature of
+ the function. Abstracting the state of a circuit in this way makes it very
+ explicit: which variables are part of the state is completely determined
+ by the type signature. This approach to state is well suited to be used in
+ combination with the existing code and language features, such as all the
+ choice elements, as state values are just normal values. We can simulate
+ stateful descriptions using the recursive \hs{run} function:
- A simple example is the description of an accumulator circuit:
+ \hspace{-1.7em}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
\begin{code}
- acc :: Word -> State Word -> (State Word, Word)
- acc inp (State s) = (State s', outp)
+ run f s (i : inps) = o : (run f s' inps)
where
- outp = s + inp
- s' = outp
+ (s', o) = f s i
\end{code}
- This approach makes the state of a function very explicit: which variables
- are part of the state is completely determined by the type signature. This
- approach to state is well suited to be used in combination with the
- existing code and language features, such as all the choice constructs, as
- state values are just normal values.
-\section{\CLaSH\ prototype}
+ \end{minipage}
+ \begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code10}
+ \end{example}
+ \end{minipage}
+
+ The \hs{(:)} operator is the list concatenation operator, where the
+ left-hand side is the head of a list and the right-hand side is the
+ remainder of the list. The \hs{run} function applies the function the
+ developer wants to simulate, \hs{f}, to the current state, \hs{s}, and the
+ first input value, \hs{i}. The result is the first output value, \hs{o},
+ and the updated state \hs{s'}. The next iteration of the \hs{run} function
+ is then called with the updated state, \hs{s'}, and the rest of the
+ inputs, \hs{inps}. For the time being, and in the context of this paper,
+ it is assumed that there is one input per clock cycle. Also note how the
+ order of the input, output, and state in the \hs{run} function corresponds
+ with the order of the input, output and state of the \hs{macS} function
+ described earlier.
+
+ As the \hs{run} function, the hardware description, and the test
+ inputs are also valid Haskell, the complete simulation can be compiled to
+ an executable binary by an optimizing Haskell compiler, or executed in an
+ Haskell interpreter. Both simulation paths are much faster than first
+ translating the description to \VHDL\ and then running a \VHDL\
+ simulation.
+
+\section{The \CLaSH\ compiler}
+An important aspect in this research is the creation of the prototype
+compiler, which allows us to translate descriptions made in the \CLaSH\
+language as described in the previous section to synthesizable \VHDL.
+% , allowing a designer to actually run a \CLaSH\ design on an \acro{FPGA}.
+
+The Glasgow Haskell Compiler (\GHC)~\cite{ghc} is an open-source Haskell
+compiler that also provides a high level API to most of its internals. The
+availability of this high-level API obviated the need to design many of the
+tedious parts of the prototype compiler, such as the parser, semantics
+checker, and especially the type-checker. These parts together form the
+front-end of the prototype compiler pipeline, as seen in
+\Cref{img:compilerpipeline}.
+
+\begin{figure}
+\centerline{\includegraphics{compilerpipeline.svg}}
+\caption{\CLaSHtiny\ compiler pipeline}
+\label{img:compilerpipeline}
+\vspace{-1.5em}
+\end{figure}
+
+The output of the \GHC\ front-end consists of the translation of the original
+Haskell description in \emph{Core}~\cite{Sulzmann2007}, which is a smaller,
+typed, functional language. This \emph{Core} language is relatively easy to
+process compared to the larger Haskell language. A description in \emph{Core}
+can still contain elements which have no direct translation to hardware, such
+as polymorphic types and function-valued arguments. Such a description needs
+to be transformed to a \emph{normal form}, which only contains elements that
+have a direct translation. The second stage of the compiler, the
+\emph{normalization} phase, exhaustively applies a set of
+\emph{meaning-preserving} transformations on the \emph{Core} description until
+this description is in a \emph{normal form}. This set of transformations
+includes transformations typically found in reduction systems and lambda
+calculus~\cite{lambdacalculus}, such as $\beta$-reduction and
+$\eta$-expansion. It also includes self-defined transformations that are
+responsible for the reduction of higher-order functions to `regular'
+first-order functions, and specializing polymorphic types to concrete types.
+
+The final step in the compiler pipeline is the translation to a \VHDL\
+\emph{netlist}, which is a straightforward process due to resemblance of a
+normalized description and a set of concurrent signal assignments. We call the
+end-product of the \CLaSH\ compiler a \VHDL\ \emph{netlist} as the resulting
+\VHDL\ resembles an actual netlist description and not idiomatic \VHDL.
+
+\section{Use cases}
+\label{sec:usecases}
+\subsection{FIR Filter}
+As an example of a common hardware design where the use of higher-order
+functions leads to a very natural description is a \acro{FIR} filter, which is
+basically the dot-product of two vectors:
+
+\begin{equation}
+y_t = \sum\nolimits_{i = 0}^{n - 1} {x_{t - i} \cdot h_i }
+\end{equation}
+
+A \acro{FIR} filter multiplies fixed constants ($h$) with the current
+and a few previous input samples ($x$). Each of these multiplications
+are summed, to produce the result at time $t$. The equation of a \acro{FIR}
+filter is indeed equivalent to the equation of the dot-product, which is
+shown below:
+
+\begin{equation}
+\mathbf{a}\bullet\mathbf{b} = \sum\nolimits_{i = 0}^{n - 1} {a_i \cdot b_i }
+\end{equation}
+
+We can easily and directly implement the equation for the dot-product
+using higher-order functions:
+
+\hspace{-1.7em}
+\begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+\begin{code}
+as *+* bs = foldl1 (+) (zipWith (*) as bs)
+\end{code}
+\end{minipage}
+\begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code13}
+ \end{example}
+\end{minipage}
+
+The \hs{zipWith} function is very similar to the \hs{map} function seen
+earlier: It takes a function, two vectors, and then applies the function to
+each of the elements in the two vectors pairwise (\emph{e.g.}, \hs{zipWith (*)
+[1, 2] [3, 4]} becomes \hs{[1 * 3, 2 * 4]}).
+
+The \hs{foldl1} function takes a binary function, a single vector, and applies
+the function to the first two elements of the vector. It then applies the
+function to the result of the first application and the next element in the
+vector. This continues until the end of the vector is reached. The result of
+the \hs{foldl1} function is the result of the last application. It is obvious
+that the \hs{zipWith (*)} function is pairwise multiplication and that the
+\hs{foldl1 (+)} function is summation.
+% Returning to the actual \acro{FIR} filter, we will slightly change the
+% equation describing it, so as to make the translation to code more obvious and
+% concise. What we do is change the definition of the vector of input samples
+% and delay the computation by one sample. Instead of having the input sample
+% received at time $t$ stored in $x_t$, $x_0$ now always stores the newest
+% sample, and $x_i$ stores the $ith$ previous sample. This changes the equation
+% to the following (note that this is completely equivalent to the original
+% equation, just with a different definition of $x$ that will better suit the
+% transformation to code):
+%
+% \begin{equation}
+% y_t = \sum\nolimits_{i = 0}^{n - 1} {x_i \cdot h_i }
+% \end{equation}
+The complete definition of the \acro{FIR} filter in code then becomes:
+
+\hspace{-1.7em}
+\begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+\begin{code}
+fir (State (xs,hs)) x =
+ (State (x >> xs,hs), (x +> xs) *+* hs)
+\end{code}
+\end{minipage}
+\begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code14}
+ \end{example}
+\end{minipage}
+
+Where the vector \hs{xs} contains the previous input samples, the vector
+\hs{hs} contains the \acro{FIR} coefficients, and \hs{x} is the current input
+sample. The concatenate operator (\hs{+>}) creates a new vector by placing the
+current sample (\hs{x}) in front of the previous samples vector (\hs{xs}). The
+code for the shift (\hs{>>}) operator, that adds the new input sample (\hs{x})
+to the list of previous input samples (\hs{xs}) and removes the oldest sample,
+is shown below:
+
+\hspace{-1.7em}
+\begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+\begin{code}
+x >> xs = x +> init xs
+\end{code}
+\end{minipage}
+\begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code15}
+ \end{example}
+\end{minipage}
+
+Where the \hs{init} function returns all but the last element of a vector.
+The resulting netlist of a 4-taps \acro{FIR} filter, created by specializing
+the vectors of the \acro{FIR} code to a length of 4, is depicted in
+\Cref{img:4tapfir}.
+
+\begin{figure}
+\centerline{\includegraphics{4tapfir.svg}}
+\caption{4-taps \acrotiny{FIR} Filter}
+\label{img:4tapfir}
+\vspace{-1.5em}
+\end{figure}
+
+\subsection{Higher-order CPU}
+The following simple \acro{CPU} is an example of user-defined higher order
+functions and pattern matching. The \acro{CPU} consists of four function
+units, of which three have a fixed function and one can perform certain less
+common operations.
+
+The \acro{CPU} contains a number of data sources, represented by the
+horizontal wires in \Cref{img:highordcpu}. These data sources offer the
+previous outputs of each function units, along with the single data input the
+\acro{CPU} has and two fixed initialization values.
+
+Each of the function units has both its operands connected to all data
+sources, and can be programmed to select any data source for either
+operand. In addition, the leftmost function unit has an additional
+opcode input to select the operation it performs. The output of the rightmost
+function unit is also the output of the entire \acro{CPU}.
+
+Looking at the code, the function unit (\hs{fu}) is the most simple. It
+arranges the operand selection for the function unit. Note that it does not
+define the actual operation that takes place inside the function unit,
+but simply accepts the (higher-order) argument \hs{op} which is a function
+of two arguments that defines the operation.
+
+\hspace{-1.7em}
+\begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+\begin{code}
+fu op inputs (addr1, addr2) = regIn
+ where
+ in1 = inputs!addr1
+ in2 = inputs!addr2
+ regIn = op in1 in2
+\end{code}
+\end{minipage}
+\begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code16}
+ \end{example}
+\end{minipage}
+
+The \hs{multiop} function defines the operation that takes place in the
+leftmost function unit. It is essentially a simple three operation \acro{ALU}
+that makes good use of pattern matching and guards in its description.
+The \hs{shift} function used here shifts its first operand by the number
+of bits indicated in the second operand, the \hs{xor} function produces
+the bitwise xor of its operands.
+
+\hspace{-1.7em}
+\begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+\begin{code}
+data Opcode = Shift | Xor | Equal
+
+multiop :: Opcode -> Word -> Word -> Word
+multiop Shift a b = shift a b
+multiop Xor a b = xor a b
+multiop Equal a b | a == b = 1
+ | otherwise = 0
+\end{code}
+\end{minipage}
+\begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code17}
+ \end{example}
+\end{minipage}
+
+The \acro{CPU} function ties everything together. It applies the \hs{fu}
+function four times, to create a different function unit each time. The
+first application is interesting, because it does not just pass a
+function to \hs{fu}, but a partial application of \hs{multiop}. This
+shows how the first function unit effectively gets an extra input,
+compared to the others.
+
+The vector \hs{inputs} is the set of data sources, which is passed to
+each function unit as a set of possible operants. The \acro{CPU} also receives
+a vector of address pairs, which are used by each function unit to select
+their operand.
+% The application of the function units to the \hs{inputs} and
+% \hs{addrs} arguments seems quite repetitive and could be rewritten to use
+% a combination of the \hs{map} and \hs{zipwith} functions instead.
+% However, the prototype compiler does not currently support working with
+% lists of functions, so a more explicit version of the code is given instead.
+
+\hspace{-1.7em}
+\begin{minipage}{0.93\linewidth}
+\begin{code}
+type CpuState = State [Word | 4]
+
+cpu :: CpuState -> Word -> [(Index 6, Index 6) | 4]
+ -> Opcode -> (CpuState, Word)
+cpu (State s) input addrs opc = (State s', out)
+ where
+ s' = [ fu (multiop opc) inputs (addrs!0)
+ , fu add inputs (addrs!1)
+ , fu sub inputs (addrs!2)
+ , fu mul inputs (addrs!3)
+ ]
+ inputs = 0 +> (1 +> (input +> s))
+ out = head s'
+\end{code}
+\end{minipage}
+\begin{minipage}{0.07\linewidth}
+ \begin{example}
+ \label{lst:code18}
+ \end{example}
+\end{minipage}
-foo\par bar
+This is still a simple example, but it could form the basis
+of an actual design, in which the same techniques can be reused.
\section{Related work}
-Many functional hardware description languages have been developed over the
-years. Early work includes such languages as $\mu$\acro{FP}~\cite{muFP}, an
-extension of Backus' \acro{FP} language to synchronous streams, designed
-particularly for describing and reasoning about regular circuits. The
-Ruby~\cite{Ruby} language uses relations, instead of functions, to describe
-circuits, and has a particular focus on layout. \acro{HML}~\cite{HML2} is a
-hardware modeling language based on the strict functional language
-\acro{ML}, and has support for polymorphic types and higher-order functions.
-Published work suggests that there is no direct simulation support for
-\acro{HML}, and that the translation to \VHDL\ is only partial.
-
-Like this work, many functional hardware description languages have some sort
-of foundation in the functional programming language Haskell.
-Hawk~\cite{Hawk1} uses Haskell to describe system-level executable
-specifications used to model the behavior of superscalar microprocessors. Hawk
-specifications can be simulated, but there seems to be no support for
-automated circuit synthesis. The ForSyDe~\cite{ForSyDe2} system uses Haskell
-to specify abstract system models, which can (manually) be transformed into an
-implementation model using semantic preserving transformations. ForSyDe has
-several simulation and synthesis backends, though synthesis is restricted to
-the synchronous subset of the ForSyDe language.
-
-Lava~\cite{Lava} is a hardware description language that focuses on the
-structural representation of hardware. Besides support for simulation and
-circuit synthesis, Lava descriptions can be interfaced with formal method
-tools for formal verification. Lava descriptions are actually circuit
-generators when viewed from a synthesis viewpoint, in that the language
-elements of Haskell, such as choice, can be used to guide the circuit
-generation. If a developer wants to insert a choice element inside an actual
-circuit he will have to specify this explicitly as a component. In this
-respect \CLaSH\ differs from Lava, in that all the choice elements, such as
-case-statements and pattern matching, are synthesized to choice elements in the
-eventual circuit. As such, richer control structures can both be specified and
-synthesized in \CLaSH\ compared to any of the languages mentioned in this
-section.
-
-The merits of polymorphic typing, combined with higher-order functions, are
-now also recognized in the `main-stream' hardware description languages,
-exemplified by the new \VHDL-2008 standard~\cite{VHDL2008}. \VHDL-2008 has
-support to specify types as generics, thus allowing a developer to describe
-polymorphic components. Note that those types still require an explicit
-generic map, whereas type-inference and type-specialization are implicit in
-\CLaSH.
+This section describes the features of existing (functional) hardware
+description languages and highlights the advantages that this research has
+over existing work.
+
+% Many functional hardware description languages have been developed over the
+% years. Early work includes such languages as $\mu$\acro{FP}~\cite{muFP}, an
+% extension of Backus' \acro{FP} language to synchronous streams, designed
+% particularly for describing and reasoning about regular circuits. The
+% Ruby~\cite{Ruby} language uses relations, instead of functions, to describe
+% circuits, and has a particular focus on layout.
+
+\acro{HML}~\cite{HML2} is a hardware modeling language based on the strict
+functional language \acro{ML}, and has support for polymorphic types and
+higher-order functions. Published work suggests that there is no direct
+simulation support for \acro{HML}, but that a description in \acro{HML} has to
+be translated to \VHDL\ and that the translated description can then be
+simulated in a \VHDL\ simulator. Certain aspects of HML, such as higher-order
+functions are however not supported by the \VHDL\ translator~\cite{HML3}. The
+\CLaSH\ compiler on the other hand can correctly translate all of the language
+constructs mentioned in this paper. % to a netlist format.
+
+\begin{figure}
+\centerline{\includegraphics{highordcpu.svg}}
+\caption{CPU with higher-order Function Units}
+\label{img:highordcpu}
+\vspace{-1.5em}
+\end{figure}
+
+Like the research presented in this paper, many functional hardware
+description languages have some sort of foundation in the functional
+programming language Haskell. Hawk~\cite{Hawk1} uses Haskell to describe
+system-level executable specifications used to model the behavior of
+superscalar microprocessors. Hawk specifications can be simulated; to the best
+knowledge of the authors there is however no support for automated circuit
+synthesis.
+
+The ForSyDe~\cite{ForSyDe2} system uses Haskell to specify abstract system
+models. A designer can model systems using heterogeneous models of
+computation, which include continuous time, synchronous and untimed models of
+computation. Using so-called domain interfaces a designer can simulate
+electronic systems which have both analog as digital parts. ForSyDe has
+several backends including simulation and automated synthesis, though
+automated synthesis is restricted to the synchronous model of computation.
+Though ForSyDe offers higher-order functions and polymorphism, ForSyDe's
+choice elements are limited to \hs{if} and \hs{case} expressions. ForSyDe's
+explicit conversions, where function have to be wrapped in processes and
+processes have to be wrapped in systems, combined with the explicit
+instantiations of components, also makes ForSyDe more verbose than \CLaSH.
+
+Lava~\cite{Lava} is a hardware description language, embedded in Haskell, and
+focuses on the structural representation of hardware. Like \CLaSH, Lava has
+support for polymorphic types and higher-order functions. Besides support for
+simulation and circuit synthesis, Lava descriptions can be interfaced with
+formal method tools for formal verification. As discussed in the introduction,
+taking the embedded language approach does not allow for Haskell's choice
+elements to be captured within the circuit descriptions. In this respect
+\CLaSH\ differs from Lava, in that all of Haskell's choice elements, such as
+\hs{case}-expressions and pattern matching, are synthesized to choice elements
+in the eventual circuit. Consequently, descriptions containing rich control
+structures can be specified in a more user-friendly way in \CLaSH\ than possible within Lava, and are hence less error-prone.
+
+Bluespec~\cite{Bluespec} is a high-level synthesis language that features
+guarded atomic transactions and allows for the automated derivation of control
+structures based on these atomic transactions. Bluespec, like \CLaSH, supports
+polymorphic typing and function-valued arguments. Bluespec's syntax and
+language features \emph{had} their basis in Haskell. However, in order to
+appeal to the users of the traditional \acrop{HDL}, Bluespec has adapted
+imperative features and a syntax that resembles Verilog. As a result, Bluespec
+is (unnecessarily) verbose when compared to \CLaSH.
+
+The merits of polymorphic typing and function-valued arguments are now also
+recognized in the traditional \acrop{HDL}, exemplified by the new \VHDL-2008
+standard~\cite{VHDL2008}. \VHDL-2008 support for generics has been extended to
+types and subprograms, allowing a designer to describe components with
+polymorphic ports and function-valued arguments. Note that the types and
+subprograms still require an explicit generic map, whereas types can be
+automatically inferred, and function-values can be automatically propagated
+by the \CLaSH\ compiler. There are also no (generally available) \VHDL\
+synthesis tools that currently support the \VHDL-2008 standard.
% Wired~\cite{Wired},, T-Ruby~\cite{T-Ruby}, Hydra~\cite{Hydra}.
%
\section{Conclusion}
-The conclusion goes here.
-
-
-
+This research demonstrates once more that functional languages are well suited
+for hardware descriptions: function applications provide an elegant notation
+for component instantiation. Where this research goes beyond the existing
+(functional) hardware descriptions languages is the inclusion of various
+choice elements, such as pattern matching, that are well suited to describe
+the conditional assignments in control-oriented circuits. Besides being able
+to translate these basic constructs to synthesizable \VHDL, the prototype
+compiler can also correctly translate descriptions that contain both
+polymorphic types and function-valued arguments.
+
+Where recent functional hardware description languages have mostly opted to
+embed themselves in an existing functional language, this research features a
+`true' compiler. As a result there is a clear distinction between compile-time
+and run-time, which allows a myriad of choice constructs to be part of the
+actual circuit description; a feature the embedded hardware description
+languages do not offer.
+
+\section{Future Work}
+The choice of describing state explicitly as extra arguments and results can
+be seen as a mixed blessing. Even though the description that use state are
+usually very clear, one finds that dealing with unpacking, passing, receiving
+and repacking can become tedious and even error-prone, especially in the case
+of sub-states. Removing this boilerplate, or finding a more suitable
+abstraction mechanism would make \CLaSH\ easier to use.
+
+The transformations in normalization phase of the prototype compiler were
+developed in an ad-hoc manner, which makes the existence of many desirable
+properties unclear. Such properties include whether the complete set of
+transformations will always lead to a normal form or if the normalization
+process always terminates. Though various use cases suggests that these
+properties usually hold, they have not been formally proven. A systematic
+approach to defining the set of transformations allows one to proof that the
+earlier mentioned properties do indeed exist.
% conference papers do not normally have an appendix
% use section* for acknowledgement
-\section*{Acknowledgment}
-
-
-The authors would like to thank...
-
-
-
-
+% \section*{Acknowledgment}
+%
+% The authors would like to thank...
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+% \IEEEtriggeratref{14}
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+\bibliography{clash}
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