+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

Date post: 23-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: isi
View: 44 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL. Basic VHDL LANGUAGE Elements. BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS. Comments Identifiers Data Objects Data Types VHDL Operators VDHL Design Entity. BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS. Comments Identifiers Data Objects Data Types VHDL Operators - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
39
BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL 1
Transcript
Page 1: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

1

BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS

Digital Design for Instrumentation with

VHDL

Page 2: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

2

BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS

1. Comments2. Identifiers3. Data Objects4. Data Types5. VHDL Operators6. VDHL Design Entity

Page 3: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

3

BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS

1. Comments2. Identifiers3. Data Objects4. Data Types5. VHDL Operators6. VDHL Design Entity

Page 4: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

4

1. Comments

Comments are preceded by two consecutive hyphens (--) and are terminated at the end of the line.

Example:

-- This is a comment

Page 5: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

5

BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS

1. Comments2. Identifiers3. Data Objects4. Data Types5. VHDL Operators6. VDHL Design Entity

Page 6: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

6

2.Identifiers

VHDL identifier syntax: A sequence of one or more uppercase letters,

lowercase letters, digits, and the underscore. Upper and lowercase letters are treated the

same (i.e., case insensitive). The first character must be a letter. The last character cannot be the underscore Two underscores cannot be together. Identifier values and numbers:

1. Individual logic signals ‘0’, ‘1’2. Multiple logic signal “01110”

Page 7: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

7

BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS

1. Comments2. Identifiers3. Data Objects4. Data Types5. VHDL Operators6. VDHL Design Entity

Page 8: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

8

3. Data Objects

There are three kinds of data objects: SIGNALs, VARIABLEs, and CONSTANTs.

3.1 SIGNAL Data Objects3.2 VARIABLE Data Objects3.3 CONSTANT Data Objects

Page 9: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

9

3.1 SIGNAL Data Objects

SIGNAL data objects represent logic signals on a wire in the circuit.

SIGNALs are used for communication between components.

A signal does not have memory; thus, if the source of the signal is removed, the signal will not have a value.

There are three places in which SIGNALs can be declared in VHDL code:

1. ENTITY declaration.2. Declarative part of ARCHITECTURE.3. Declarative part of PACKAGE.

CONT………..

Page 10: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

10

3.1 SIGNAL Data Objects

General form of SIGNAL declaration:

SIGNAL signal_name, signal_name, .…….. : type name;

Page 11: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

11

3.2 VARIABLE Data Objects

A VARIABLE; unlike SIGNAL; does not represent a signal on a wire in the circuit.

VARIABLE data objects are sometimes used to hold results of computation and for index variables in the loops.

VARIABLES can be declared only inside the declarative part of PROCESS.

General form of VARIABLE declaration:

VARIABLE variable_name, variable_name, ……. : type_name;

Page 12: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

12

3.3 CONSTANT Data Objects

The CONSTANT data objects must be initialized with a value when declared and this value cannot be changed.

CONSTANT can be declared only inside the declarative part of ARCHITECTURE.

General form of CONSTANT declaration:

CONSTANT constant_name: type_name:=constant value;

Page 13: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

13

Example of Data Objects

SIGNAL x: BIT;

VARIABLE y: INTEGER;

CONSTANT one: STD_LOGIC_VECTOR (3 DOWNTO 0):= "0001";

Page 14: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

14

BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS

1. Comments2. Identifiers3. Data Objects4. Data Types5. VHDL Operators6. VDHL Design Entity

Page 15: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

15

4. Data Types

The VHDL data types are:1. BIT and BIT_VECTOR Data Type2. STD_LOGIC and STD_LOGIC_VECTOR Data

Type3. SIGNED and UNSIGNED Data Type4. INTEGER Data Type5. BOOLEAN Data Type6. Enumeration Data Type7. ARRAY Data Type

Page 16: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

16

4.1 BIT and BIT_VECTOR Data Type

The BIT and BIT_VECTOR types are predefined in VHDL standards IEEE1076 and IEEE1164, hence no need for LIBRARY statement.

Objects of these types can only have the values ‘0’ or ‘1’.

The BIT_VECTOR type is simply a vector of type BIT.

CONT…………

Page 17: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

17

4.1 BIT and BIT_VECTOR Data Type

Example:SIGNAL x: BIT;SIGNAL Y: BIT_VECTOR (5 DOWNTO 0);SIGNAL z: BIT_VECTOR (0 TO 4);...x <= '1';y <= "000010";z <= (OTHERS => '0'); -- same as "00000"

z(4) Z(3) Z(z) z(1) z(0)Y(5) Y(4) Y(3) Y(2) Y(1) Y(0)Y z

CONT…………

Page 18: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

18

Notes:1. The syntax “lower_index TO higher index” is

useful for a multi bit signal that is simply an array of bits.

2. The syntax “higher_index DOWNTO lower_index” is useful if the signal represents a binary number.

4.1 BIT and BIT_VECTOR Data Type

Page 19: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

194.2 STD_LOGIC and STD_LOGIC_VECTOR Data Type

The STD_LOGIC and STD_LOGIC_VECTOR types are not predefined.

Therefore, the following two library statements must be included in order to use these types:

LIBRARY IEEE;

USE IEEE.STD_LOGIC_1164.ALL;

CONT…………

Page 20: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

20

If objects of type STD_LOGIC_VECTOR are to be used as binary numbers in arithmetic manipulations, then either one of the following two USE statements must also be included:

For signed number arithmetic

For unsigned number arithmetic

4.2 STD_LOGIC and STD_LOGIC_VECTOR Data Type

CONT…………

USE IEEE.STD_LOGIC_SIGNED.ALL;

USE IEEE.STD_LOGIC_UNSIGNED.ALL;

Page 21: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

21

The STD_LOGIC and STD_LOGIC_VECTOR types provide more values than the BIT type for modelling a real circuit more accurately.

Objects of these types can have the following values:

'0' = normal 0 Useful ‘L’ =weak 0'1' = normal 1 for 'H' =weak 1'Z' =high impedance Logic 'U' =uninitialized'_' = don’t-care Circuits ‘X’ = unknown

'W'=weak unknown

4.2 STD_LOGIC and STD_LOGIC_VECTOR Data Type

CONT…………

Page 22: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

22

Example:

4.2 STD_LOGIC and STD_LOGIC_VECTOR Data Type

LIBRARY IEEE;USE IEEE.STD_LOGIC_1164.ALL;SIGNAL x: STD_LOGIC;SIGNAL y: STD_LOGIC_VECTOR (7 DOWNTO 0);x <= 'Z';y <= "0000001Z";y <= (OTHERS => '0'); -- same as "00000000"

Page 23: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

23

4.3 SIGNED and UNSIGNED Data Type

These types are used for arithmetic operation; they represent an array of STD_LOGIC signals.

The purpose of SIGNED and UNSIGNED data types is to allow the user to indicate in the VHDL code what kind of number representation is being used.

CONT…………

Page 24: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

24

To use these types, the code must include the following statement:

The SIGNED is used with 2’s complement representation.

4.3 SIGNED and UNSIGNED Data Type

CONT…………

LIBRARY IEEE;

USE IEEE.STD_LOGIC_ARITH.ALL;

Page 25: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

25

4.4 INTEGER Data Type

The predefined INTEGER type defines binary number objects for use with arithmetic operators.

By default, an INTEGER signal uses 32 bits to represent a signed number.

Integers using fewer bits can also be declared with the RANGE keyword.

CONT…………

Page 26: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

26

Example:

This defines y as 7-bit binary number.

4.4 INTEGER Data Type

SIGNAL x: INTEGER;

SIGNAL y: INTEGER RANGE –64 to 63;

Page 27: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

27

4.5 BOOLEAN Data Type

The predefined BOOLEAN type defines objects having the two values TRUE and FALSE.

Example:SIGNAL x: BOOLEAN;

Page 28: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

28

BASIC VHDL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS

1. Comments2. Identifiers3. Data Objects4. Data Types5. VHDL Operators6. VDHL Design Entity

Page 29: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

29

5. VHDL Operators

1. Logical Operator2. Arithmetic Operators3. Assignment Operators4. Relational Operators5. Shift and Rotate Operators

Page 30: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

30

5.1 Logical Operators

Page 31: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

31

5.2 Arithmetic Operators

Page 32: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

32

5.2 Arithmetic Operators

Used with STD_LOGIC_VECTOR, SIGNED, UNSIGNED, INTEGER

c <= -a; (c equals to the 2’s complement of a).

There are no synthesis restrictions regarding (Addition, Subtraction, and Multiplication).

For Division, only power of two dividers is allowed.

CONT…….

Page 33: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

33

5.2 Arithmetic Operators

For Exponentiation, only static values of base and exponent are accepted.

(y MOD x) returns the reminder of y/x. with the signal of x.

(y REM x) returns the reminder of y/x with the signal y.

(MOD, REM, ABS) operators are generally little or no synthesis support.

CONT…….

Page 34: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

34

5.3 Assignment Operators

<= Used to assign a value to a SIGNAL

:=Used to assign Value to VARIABLES, CONSTANTS, or GENERIC

=>Used to assign values to individual vector elements, or with OTHERS

Page 35: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

35

5.3 Assignment Operators cont….

Page 36: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

36

5.4 Relational Operators

Used to compare expressions

Result of comparison TRUE or FALSE

Compared expressions must be of the same type

Page 37: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

37

5.4 Relational Operators cont…..

Page 38: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

38

5.5 Shift and Rotate Operators

Page 39: Digital Design for Instrumentation with VHDL

39

5.5 Shift and Rotate Operators - Example


Recommended