Chisel is a new open-source hardware construction language developed at UC Berkeley that supports advanced hardware design using highly parameterized generators and layered domain-specific hardware languages.
Chisel is embedded in the Scala programming language, which raises the level of hardware design abstraction by providing concepts including object orientation, functional programming, parameterized types, and type inference.
Chisel can generate a high-speed C++-based cycle-accurate software simulator, or low-level Verilog designed to pass on to standard ASIC or FPGA tools for synthesis and place and route.
Visit the community website for more information.
To start working on a circuit with Chisel, create simple build.sbt and scala source file containing your Chisel code as follow.
$ cat build.sbt
scalaVersion := "2.11.7"
libraryDependencies += "edu.berkeley.cs" %% "chisel" % "latest.release"
(You want your build.sbt file to contain a reference to Scala version greater or equal to 2.10 and a dependency on the Chisel library.)
Edit the source files for your circuit
$ cat Hello.scala
import Chisel._
class HelloModule extends Module {
val io = new Bundle {}
printf("Hello World!\n")
}
class HelloModuleTests(c: HelloModule) extends Tester(c) {
step(1)
}
object hello {
def main(args: Array[String]): Unit = {
chiselMainTest(Array[String]("--backend", "c", "--compile", "--test", "--genHarness"),
() => Module(new HelloModule())){c => new HelloModuleTests(c)}
}
}
At this point you will need to download and install sbt for your favorite distribution. You will need sbt version 0.13.0 or higher because recent versions of sbt generate jars without the scala third-point version number (i.e. chisel_2.10-2.0.2.jar instead of chisel_2.10*.2*-2.0.2.jar).
Execute sbt run to generate the C++ simulation source for your circuit, and (assuming you have a g++ compiler installed), compile it, and execute it under the tester.
$ sbt run
Going further, you should read on the sbt directory structure to organize your files for bigger projects. SBT is the "official" build system for Scala but you can use any other Java build system you like (Maven, etc).
Chisel is implemented 100% in Scala!
You should have git, make, scala, and sbt installed on your development system. First, clone the Chisel repository and change to the project directory:
$ git clone https://github.com/ucb-bar/chisel.git
$ cd chisel
Compile and install your local copy of Chisel:
$ make clean test publish-local
In order to use your local copy of Chisel in your own projects, you will need to update your build.sbt files so the Chisel library dependency is satisfied by your local copy. Replace
libraryDependencies += "edu.berkeley.cs" %% "chisel" % "latest.release"
with:
libraryDependencies += "edu.berkeley.cs" %% "chisel" % "2.3-SNAPSHOT"
Before you generate a pull request, run the following command to insure all unit tests pass.
$ make test
You can follow Chisel metrics on style compliance and code coverage on the website.
If you are debugging an issue in a third-party project which depends on the Chisel jar, first check that the chisel version in your chisel code base and in the third-party project library dependency match. After editing the chisel code base, delete the local jar cache directory to make sure you are not picking up incorrect jar files, then publish the Chisel jar locally and remake your third-party project. Example:
$ cat *srcTop*/chisel/project/build.scala
...
version := "2.3-SNAPSHOT"
...
$ cat *srcTop*/riscv-sodor/project/build.scala
...
libraryDependencies += "edu.berkeley.cs" %% "chisel" % "2.3-SNAPSHOT"
...
$ cd *srcTop*/chisel && make publish-local
$ cd *srcTop*/riscv-sodor && make run-emulator
In order to generate the Chisel documentation (html and pdf formats), you'll need the LaTeX tools, tex4ht, texlive, python bs4 BeautifulSoup, imagemagick, and source-highlight.
To generate all the documentation:
$ cd doc
$ make
The following apt-get installs should work for ubuntu 14.04 LTS
$ sudo apt-get install python-bs4 python-jinja2 imagemagick source-highlight
$ sudo apt-get install tex4ht texlive-latex-base
$ sudo apt-get install texlive-latex-recommended texlive-latex-extra
$ sudo apt-get install texlive-fonts-recommended texlive-fonts-extra
On Mac OsX first install MacTeX then use brew
$ brew install miktex
$ brew install imagemagick source-highlight
$ brew install gawk
and then downaload Beautiful Soup from site unpack and run inside the folder
$ python setup.py install