From: Christiaan Baaij Date: Thu, 11 Feb 2010 11:31:42 +0000 (+0100) Subject: Add reference to Haskell and Verilog. Add something about state to introduction X-Git-Url: https://git.stderr.nl/gitweb?a=commitdiff_plain;h=997b8f1eadcc74a0a58c17f038f61f6d5a3d9fc1;p=matthijs%2Fmaster-project%2Fdsd-paper.git Add reference to Haskell and Verilog. Add something about state to introduction --- diff --git a/clash.bib b/clash.bib index dc49b3b..dbb6b1c 100644 --- a/clash.bib +++ b/clash.bib @@ -286,6 +286,20 @@ timestamp = {2010.01.20} } +@BOOK{Haskell, + title = {{Haskell 98 language and libraries}}, + year = {2003}, + editor = {Simon Peyton Jones}, + volume = {13}, + number = {1}, + pages = {1--255}, + series = {{Journal of Functional Programming}}, + booktitle = {{Journal of Functional Programming}}, + journal = {Journal of Functional Programming}, + owner = {darchon}, + timestamp = {2010.01.29} +} + @STANDARD{VHDL2008, title = {{VHDL Language Reference Manual}}, organization = {IEEE}, @@ -295,6 +309,15 @@ timestamp = {2009.11.17} } +@STANDARD{Verilog, + title = {{Verilog Hardware Description Languages}}, + organization = {{IEEE}}, + number = {1365-2005}, + year = {2005}, + owner = {darchon}, + timestamp = {2010.01.29} +} + @comment{jabref-meta: selector_journal:} @comment{jabref-meta: selector_author:} diff --git "a/c\316\273ash.lhs" "b/c\316\273ash.lhs" index 25ec7a2..f7a763e 100644 --- "a/c\316\273ash.lhs" +++ "b/c\316\273ash.lhs" @@ -465,50 +465,62 @@ The abstract goes here. \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\ and Verilog, allowed an engineer -to describe circuits using a 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. These languages also tend to have a complex syntax and a lack of -formal semantics. To overcome these complexities, and raise the abstraction -level, 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 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. What gives functional languages -as hardware description languages their merits is the fact that basic -combinatorial circuits are equivalent to mathematical function, and that -functional languages lend themselves very well to describe and compose these -mathematical functions. +Hardware description languages, 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 +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}. What this -means is that a developer is given a library of Haskell functions and types -that together form the language primitives of the domain specific language. -Using these functions, the designer does not only describes a circuit, but -actually builds a large domain-specific datatype 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. +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 to be used as hardware description language. By taking this approach, -we can capture certain language constructs, such as Haskell's choice elements -(if-statement, case-statment, etc.), which are not available in the functional -hardware description languages that are embedded in Haskell. 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. +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 the circuit part of the +input of the function and the updated state part of the output of a function. Like the standard hardware description languages, descriptions made in a -functional hardware description languages must eventually be converted into a -netlist. This research also features an a prototype translater 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 optimizing \VHDL\ synthesis tools. +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 optimizing \VHDL\ synthesis tools. \section{Hardware description in Haskell} @@ -605,7 +617,7 @@ mac a b c = add (mul a b) c 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 + 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. @@ -712,7 +724,7 @@ data IntPair = IntPair Int Int 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\ + rule by the \CLaSH\ compiler. 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 @@ -811,7 +823,7 @@ 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 +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