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Chapter 03 Basic of Verilog

This document provides an overview of Verilog HDL concepts including: - Verilog HDL is a hardware description language used to model digital circuits. - It allows modeling at different levels of abstraction from gates to behavioral. - Key concepts include modules to describe design blocks, instances to instantiate modules, and signals to represent physical wires. - Parameters can be used to assign names to constants. - Nets are used to model electrical wires and can take different forms like wire, wand, wor, and tri.

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Bella Carberry
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
208 views

Chapter 03 Basic of Verilog

This document provides an overview of Verilog HDL concepts including: - Verilog HDL is a hardware description language used to model digital circuits. - It allows modeling at different levels of abstraction from gates to behavioral. - Key concepts include modules to describe design blocks, instances to instantiate modules, and signals to represent physical wires. - Parameters can be used to assign names to constants. - Nets are used to model electrical wires and can take different forms like wire, wand, wor, and tri.

Uploaded by

Bella Carberry
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 105

Chapter 3: Verilog HDL

2 IC Design Companies in Vietnam


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
3 Verilog HDL Basics
• EXAMPLES
What is Verilog

• Hardware Description Language (HDL)


• Hardware description languages such as Verilog
HDL and VHDL became popular
• Developed in 1983
• Standard: IEEE 1364, Dec 1995

4 Verilog HDL Basics


Design flow

5
Verilog HDL Basics
Popularity of Verilog

Verilog HDL is a general-purpose hardware


description language that is easy tolearn and easy to
use
Verilog HDL allows different levels of abstraction to
be mixed in the same model: gates, RTL, or behavioral
code
Most popular logic synthesis tools support Verilog
HDL
All fabrication vendors provide Verilog HDL libraries
for postlogic synthesis simulation
6 Verilog HDL Basics
Abstraction Levels in Verilog

Behavioral

RTL

Gate

7 Verilog HDL Basics


Design Methodologies
Top-down design methodology: we define the top-
level block and identify the sub-blocks necessary to
build the top-level block

8 Verilog HDL Basics


Design Methodologies
Bottom-up design methodology: we first identify the
building blocks that are available to us. We build
bigger cells, using these building blocks

9 Verilog HDL Basics


Main Language Concepts (i)

• Concurrency

• Structure

10 Verilog HDL Basics


4 bit counter

11 Verilog HDL Basics


4 bit counter, top-down design

12 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
13 Verilog HDL Basics
Module

A module is the basic building block in Verilog.


A module can be an element or a collection of lower-
level design blocks
A module provides the necessary functionality to the
higher-level block through its port interface (inputs
and outputs)

14 Verilog HDL Basics


Module
module <module_name> (<module_terminal_list>);
...
<module internals>
...
endmodule

15 Verilog HDL Basics


Module
Specifically, the T-flipflop could be defined as a module
as follows:
module T_FF (clock, reset, q);
clock q
.
reset
.
T_FF
<functionality of T-flipflop>
.
.
endmodule

16 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
17 Verilog HDL Basics
Instances
module ripple_carry_counter(clk, reset, q);
output [3:0] q; q[0] q[1] q[2] q[3]
input clk, reset; clk clock q clock q clock q clock q

T_FF tff0(q[0],clk, reset); reset reset reset reset

T_FF tff1(q[1],q[0], reset); reset


T_FF tff2(q[2],q[1], reset);
T_FF tff3(q[3],q[2], reset);
endmodule

18 Verilog HDL Basics


Instances
module T_FF(q, clk, reset);
output q;
input clk, reset;
wire d;
D_FF dff0(q, d, clk, reset);
not n1(d, q);
endmodule

19 Verilog HDL Basics


20 Verilog HDL Basics
Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
21 Verilog HDL Basics
User Identifiers
• Formed from {[A-Z], [a-z], [0-9], _, $}, but ..
• .. can’t begin with $ or [0-9]
– myidentifier □
– m_y_identifier □
– 3my_identifier □
– $my_identifier □
– _myidentifier$ □
• Identifiers are case sensitive
– myid ≠ Myid

22 Verilog HDL Basics


Comments

• // The rest of the line is a comment

• /* Multiple line
comment */

• /* Nesting /* comments */ do NOT work */

23 Verilog HDL Basics


Verilog Value Set

• 0 represents low logic level or false condition

• 1 represents high logic level or true condition

• x represents unknown logic level

• z represents high impedance logic level

24 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
25 Verilog HDL Basics
Numbers in Verilog (i)

<size>’<radix> <value>

No of Binary → b or B Consecutive chars


bits Octal → o or O 0-f, x, z
Decimal → d or D
Hexadecimal → h or H

– 8’h ax = 1010xxxx
– 12’o 3zx7 = 011zzzxxx111

26 Verilog HDL Basics


Numbers in Verilog (ii)

• You can insert “_” for readability


– 12’b 000_111_010_100
– 12’b 000111010100 Represent the same number

– 12’o 07_24
• Bit extension
– MS bit = 0, x or z ⇒ extend this
• 4’b x1 = 4’b xx_x1
– MS bit = 1 ⇒ zero extension
• 4’b 1x = 4’b 00_1x

27 Verilog HDL Basics


Numbers in Verilog (iii)

• If size is ommitted it
– is inferred from the value or
– takes the simulation specific number of bits or
– takes the machine specific number of bits

• If radix is ommitted too .. decimal is assumed


– 15 = <size>’d 15

28 Verilog HDL Basics


Parameters in Verilog (iii)

• A parameter associates an identifier name with a


constant. Let the Verilog code include the following
declarations:
parameter n = 4;
parameter S0 = 2’b00, S1 = 2’b01, S2 = 2’b10, S3
= 2’b11;

29 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
30 Verilog HDL Basics
Signal in Verilog code
• Signal = physical wire = variable without storing
• In Verilog, a signal in a circuit is represented as a net
or a variable with a specific type. The term net is
derived from the electrical jargon, where it refers to
the interconnection of two or more points in a circuit.
A net or variable declaration has the form

type [range] signal_name{signal_name};

31 Verilog HDL Basics


Nets (i)
• Can be thought as hardware wires driven by logic
• Equal z when unconnected
• Various types of nets
– wire
– wand (wired-AND)
– wor (wired-OR)
– tri (tri-state)
• In following examples: Y is evaluated,
automatically, every time A or B changes
32 Verilog HDL Basics
Nets (ii)
A wire Y; // declaration
Y
B assign Y = A & B;

wand Y; // declaration
assign Y = A;
A assign Y = B;
Y
B
wor Y; // declaration
assign Y = A;
assign Y = B;

dr
tri Y; // declaration
A Y
assign Y = (dr) ? A : z;

33 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
34 Verilog HDL Basics
Registers
• Variables that store values
• Do not represent real hardware but ..
• .. real hardware can be implemented with registers
• Only one type: reg
reg A, C; // declaration
// assignments are always done inside a procedure
A = 1;
C = A; // C gets the logical value 1
A = 0; // C is still 1
C = 0; // C is now 0
• Register values are updated explicitly!!
35 Verilog HDL Basics
Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
36 Verilog HDL Basics
Vectors
• Represent buses
wire [3:0] busA;
reg [1:4] busB;
reg [1:0] busC;

• Left number is MS bit


• Slice management
busC[1] = busA[2];
busC = busA[2:1]; ⇔
busC[0] = busA[1];

• Vector assignment (by position!!)


busB[1] = busA[3];
busB[2] = busA[2];
busB = busA; ⇔
busB[3] = busA[1];
busB[4] = busA[0];
37 Verilog HDL Basics
Integer & Real Data Types

• Declaration
integer i, k;
real r;

• Use as registers (inside procedures)


i = 1; // assignments occur inside procedure
r = 2.9;
k = r; // k is rounded to 3
• Integers are not initialized!!
• Reals are initialized to 0.0
38 Verilog HDL Basics
Time Data Type

• Special data type for simulation time measuring


• Declaration
time my_time;

• Use inside procedure


my_time = $time; // get current sim time

• Simulation runs at simulation time, not real time

39 Verilog HDL Basics


Arrays (i)
• Syntax
integer count[1:5]; // 5 integers
reg var[-15:16]; // 32 1-bit regs
reg [7:0] mem[0:1023]; // 1024 8-bit regs
• Accessing array elements
– Entire element: mem[10] = 8’b 10101010;
– Element subfield (needs temp storage):
reg [7:0] temp;
..
temp = mem[10];
var[6] = temp[2];

40 Verilog HDL Basics


Arrays (ii)

• Limitation: Cannot access array subfield or entire


array at once
var[2:9] = ???; // WRONG!!
var = ???; // WRONG!!

• No multi-dimentional arrays
reg var[1:10] [1:100]; // WRONG!!

• Arrays don’t work for the Real data type


real r[1:10]; // WRONG !!

41 Verilog HDL Basics


Strings
• Implemented with regs:
reg [8*13:1] string_val; // can hold up to 13 chars
..
string_val = “Hello Verilog”;
string_val = “hello”; // MS Bytes are filled with 0
string_val = “I am overflowed”; // “I ” is truncated

• Escaped chars:
– \n newline
– \t tab
– %% %
– \\ \
– \“ “

42 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
43 Verilog HDL Basics
Logical Operators

• && → logical AND


• || → logical OR
• ! → logical NOT
• Operands evaluated to ONE bit value: 0, 1 or x
• Result is ONE bit value: 0, 1 or x
A = 6; A && B → 1 && 0 → 0
B = 0; A || !B → 1 || 1 → 1
C = x; C || B → x || 0 → x but C&&B=0

44 Verilog HDL Basics


Bitwise Operators (i)

• & → bitwise AND


• | → bitwise OR
• ~ → bitwise NOT
• ^ → bitwise XOR
• ~^ or ^~ → bitwise XNOR

• Operation on bit by bit basis

45 Verilog HDL Basics


Bitwise Operators (ii)
c = ~a; c = a & b;

• a = 4’b1010;
b = 4’b1100;

c = a ^ b;

• a = 4’b1010;
b = 2’b11;

46 Verilog HDL Basics


Reduction Operators
• & → AND
• | → OR
• ^ → XOR
• ~& → NAND
• ~| → NOR
• ~^ or ^~ → XNOR

• One multi-bit operand → One single-bit result


a = 4’b1001;
..
c = |a; // c = 1|0|0|1 = 1

47 Verilog HDL Basics


Shift Operators

• >> → shift right


• << → shift left

• Result is same size as first operand, always zero filled

a = 4’b1010;
...
d = a >> 2; // d = 0010
c = a << 1; // c = 0100

48 Verilog HDL Basics


Concatenation Operator
• {op1, op2, ..} → concatenates op1, op2, .. to single number
• Operands must be sized !!
reg a;
reg [2:0] b, c;
..
a = 1’b 1;
b = 3’b 010;
c = 3’b 101;
catx = {a, b, c}; // catx = 1_010_101
caty = {b, 2’b11, a}; // caty = 010_11_1
catz = {b, 1}; // WRONG !!
• Replication ..
catr = {4{a}, b, 2{c}}; // catr = 1111_010_101101
49 Verilog HDL Basics
Relational Operators
• > → greater than
• < → less than
• >= → greater or equal than
• <= → less or equal than

• Result is one bit value: 0, 1 or x


1 > 0 →1
’b1x1 <= 0 →x
10 < z →x
50 Verilog HDL Basics
Equality Operators
• == → logical equality
Return 0, 1 or x
• != → logical inequality
• === → case equality
Return 0 or 1
• !== → case inequality

– 4’b 1z0x == 4’b 1z0x →x


– 4’b 1z0x != 4’b 1z0x → x
– 4’b 1z0x === 4’b 1z0x → 1
– 4’b 1z0x !== 4’b 1z0x → 0

51 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
52 Verilog HDL Basics
Conditional Operator

• cond_expr ? true_expr : false_expr

• Like a 2-to-1 mux ..

A
1
Y
Y = (sel)? A : B;
B 0
sel

53 Verilog HDL Basics


Arithmetic Operators (i)
• +, -, *, /, %

• If any operand is x the result is x


• Negative registers:
– regs can be assigned negative but are treated as unsigned
reg [15:0] regA;
..
regA = -4’d12; // stored as 216-12 = 65524
regA/3 evaluates to 21861

54 Verilog HDL Basics


Arithmetic Operators (ii)

• Negative integers:
– can be assigned negative values
– different treatment depending on base specification or not
reg [15:0] regA;
integer intA;
..
intA = -12/3; // evaluates to -4 (no base spec)
intA = -’d12/3; // evaluates to 1431655761 (base spec)

55 Verilog HDL Basics


Operator Precedence

Use parentheses to
enforce your
priority

56 Verilog HDL Basics


Hierarchical Design

Top Level
E.g.
Module

Full Adder
Sub-Module Sub-Module
1 2

Half Adder Half Adder


Basic Module Basic Module Basic Module
1 2 3

57 Verilog HDL Basics


Module
module my_module(out1, .., inN);

in1 my_module out1 output out1, .., outM;

out2 input in1, .., inN;


in2

f .. // declarations
inN outM .. // description of f (maybe
.. // sequential)

endmodule

Everything you write in Verilog must be inside a module


exception: compiler directives

58 Verilog HDL Basics


Example: Half Adder

A module half_adder(S, C, A, B);


S
output S, C;
B input A, B;
C
wire S, C, A, B;

assign S = A ^ B;
A S
Half assign C = A & B;
B Adder C
endmodule

59 Verilog HDL Basics


Example: Full Adder
in1 A Half S I1 A Half S sum
Adder 1 Adder
in2 B C I2 B C I3
ha1 ha2 cout

cin
module full_adder(sum, cout, in1, in2, cin);
output sum, cout;
input in1, in2, cin;

wire sum, cout, in1, in2, cin;


Module wire I1, I2, I3; Instance
name name
half_adder ha1(I1, I2, in1, in2);
half_adder ha2(sum, I3, I1, cin);

assign cout = I2 || I3;

endmodule
60 Verilog HDL Basics
Hierarchical Names

ha2.A

in1 A Half S I1 A Half S sum


Adder 1 Adder
in2 B C I2 B C I3
ha1 ha2 cout

cin

Remember to use instance names,


not module names

61 Verilog HDL Basics


Port Assignments

module
• Inputs reg or net net

module

• Outputs reg or net net

module

net net
• Inouts

62 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
63 Verilog HDL Basics
Continuous Assignements
a closer look
• Syntax:
assign #del <id> = <expr>;

optional net type !!


• Where to write them:
– inside a module
– outside procedures
• Properties:
– they all execute in parallel
– are order independent
– are continuously active
64 Verilog HDL Basics
Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
65 Verilog HDL Basics
Structural Model (Gate Level)

• Built-in gate primitives:


and, nand, nor, or, xor, xnor, buf, not, bufif0,
bufif1, notif0, notif1

• Usage:
nand (out, in1, in2); 2-input NAND without delay
and #2 (out, in1, in2, in3); 3-input AND with 2 t.u. delay
not #1 N1(out, in); NOT with 1 t.u. delay and instance name
xor X1(out, in1, in2); 2-input XOR with instance name

• Write them inside module, outside procedures

66 Verilog HDL Basics


Example: Half Adder,
2nd Implementation
A module half_adder(S, C, A, B);
S
output S, C;
B input A, B;
C
wire S, C, A, B;

xor #2 (S, A, B);


and #1 (C, A, B);
Assuming:
• XOR: 2 t.u. delay endmodule
• AND: 1 t.u. delay

67 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
68 Verilog HDL Basics
Behavioral Model - Procedures (i)
• Procedures = sections of code that we know they
execute sequentially
• Procedural statements = statements inside a
procedure (they execute sequentially)
• e.g. another 2-to-1 mux implem:
begin
if (sel == 0)
Execution Y = B;
Flow Procedural assignments:
else
Y must be reg !!
Y = A;
end
69 Verilog HDL Basics
Behavioral Model - Procedures (ii)

• Modules can contain any number of procedures


• Procedures execute in parallel (in respect to each
other) and ..
• .. can be expressed in two types of blocks:
– initial → they execute only once
– always → they execute for ever (until simulation finishes)

70 Verilog HDL Basics


“Initial” Blocks
• Start execution at sim time zero and finish when
their last statement executes
module nothing;

initial
$display(“I’m first”); Will be displayed
at sim time 0
initial begin
#50;
$display(“Really?”); Will be displayed
end at sim time 50

endmodule

71 Verilog HDL Basics


“Always” Blocks
• Start execution at sim time zero and continue until
sim finishes

72 Verilog HDL Basics


Events (i)
• @
always @(signal1 or signal2 or ..) begin
..
end execution triggers every
time any signal changes
always @(posedge clk) begin
.. execution triggers every
end
time clk changes
from 0 to 1
always @(negedge clk) begin
.. execution triggers every
end time clk changes
from 1 to 0

73 Verilog HDL Basics


Examples

• 3rd half adder implem • Behavioral edge-triggered


module half_adder(S, C, A, DFF implem
B); module dff(Q, D, Clk);
output S, C; output Q;
input A, B; input D, Clk;

reg S,C; reg Q;


wire A, B; wire D, Clk;

always @(A or B) begin always @(posedge Clk)


S = A ^ B; Q = D;
C = A && B;
end endmodule

endmodule 74 Verilog HDL Basics


Events (ii)

• wait (expr)
always begin
wait (ctrl) execution loops every
#10 cnt = cnt + 1; time ctrl = 1 (level
#10 cnt2 = cnt2 + 2; sensitive timing control)
end

• e.g. Level triggered DFF ?

75 Verilog HDL Basics


Example

always @(res or posedge clk) begin


res if (res) begin
a Y = 0;
b Y W = 0;
end
else begin
c W Y = a & b;
W = ~c;
clk end
end

76 Verilog HDL Basics


Timing (i)

d
initial begin
#5 c = 1; c
#5 b = 0;
#5 d = c; b
end
0 5 10 15
Time
Each assignment is
blocked by its previous one

77 Verilog HDL Basics


Timing (ii)

d
initial begin
fork c
#5 c = 1;
#5 b = 0; b
#5 d = c;
join 0 5 10 15
end Time

Assignments are
not blocked here

78 Verilog HDL Basics


Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
79 Verilog HDL Basics
Procedural Statements: if
E.g. 4-to-1 mux:
module mux4_1(out, in, sel);
output out;
if (expr1) input [3:0] in;
true_stmt1; input [1:0] sel;

reg out;
else if (expr2) wire [3:0] in;
wire [1:0] sel;
true_stmt2;
.. always @(in or sel)
if (sel == 0)
else out = in[0];
def_stmt; else if (sel == 1)
out = in[1];
else if (sel == 2)
out = in[2];
else
out = in[3];
endmodule
80 Verilog HDL Basics
Procedural Statements: case
E.g. 4-to-1 mux:
module mux4_1(out, in, sel);
case (expr) output out;
input [3:0] in;
input [1:0] sel;
item_1, .., item_n: stmt1;
reg out;
item_n+1, .., item_m: stmt2; wire [3:0] in;
.. wire [1:0] sel;

default: def_stmt; always @(in or sel)


case (sel)
0: out = in[0];
endcase 1: out = in[1];
2: out = in[2];
3: out = in[3];
endcase
endmodule

81 Verilog HDL Basics


Procedural Statements: for
for (init_assignment; cond; step_assignment)
stmt;
E.g.
module count(Y, start);
output [3:0] Y;
input start;

reg [3:0] Y;
wire start;
integer i;

initial
Y = 0;

always @(posedge start)


for (i = 0; i < 3; i = i + 1)
#10 Y = Y + 1;
endmodule

82 Verilog HDL Basics


Procedural Statements: while
E.g.
module count(Y, start);
output [3:0] Y;
input start;

reg [3:0] Y;
wire start;
integer i;
while (expr) stmt;
initial
Y = 0;

always @(posedge start) begin


i = 0;
while (i < 3) begin
#10 Y = Y + 1;
i = i + 1;
end
end
endmodule
83 Verilog HDL Basics
Procedural Statements: repeat

E.g.
module count(Y, start);
output [3:0] Y;
input start;

repeat (times) stmt; reg [3:0] Y;


wire start;

initial
Can be either an Y = 0;
integer or a variable
always @(posedge start)
repeat (4) #10 Y = Y + 1;
endmodule

84 Verilog HDL Basics


Procedural Statements: forever

Typical example:
clock generation in test modules
module test;

reg clk; Tclk = 20 time units


forever stmt;
initial begin
clk = 0;
forever #10 clk = ~clk;
Executes until sim end
finishes
other_module1 o1(clk, ..);
other_module2 o2(.., clk, ..);

endmodule

85 Verilog HDL Basics


Mixed Model
Code that contains various both structure and behavioral styles
module simple(Y, c, clk, res);
output Y;
input c, clk, res;

reg Y;
wire c, clk, res;
res wire n;
c n Y not(n, c); // gate-level
clk
always @(res or posedge clk)
if (res)
Y = 0;
else
Y = n;
endmodule
86 Verilog HDL Basics
Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
87 Verilog HDL Basics
System Tasks
Always written inside procedures

• $display(“..”, arg2, arg3, ..); → much like printf(), displays formatted string
in std output when encountered
• $monitor(“..”, arg2, arg3, ..); → like $display(), but .. displays string each
time any of arg2, arg3, .. Changes
• $stop; → suspends sim when encountered
• $finish; → finishes sim when encountered
• $fopen(“filename”); → returns file descriptor (integer); then, you can use
$fdisplay(fd, “..”, arg2, arg3, ..); or $fmonitor(fd, “..”, arg2, arg3, ..); to write
to file
• $fclose(fd); → closes file
• $random(seed); → returns random integer; give her an integer as a seed

88 Verilog HDL Basics


$display & $monitor string format

89 Verilog HDL Basics


Compiler Directives
• `include “filename” → inserts contents of file into current file; write it
anywhere in code ..

• `define <text1> <text2> → text1 substitutes text2;


– e.g. `define BUS reg [31:0] in declaration part: `BUS data;

• `timescale <time unit>/<precision>


– e.g. `timescale 10ns/1ns later: #5 a = b;

50ns

90 Verilog HDL Basics


Parameters
in[3:0] p_in[3:0]
out[2:0]
wu
A. Implelementation
without parameters
wd
clk
module dff4bit(Q, D, clk); module dff2bit(Q, D, clk);
output [3:0] Q; output [1:0] Q;
input [3:0] D; input [1:0] D;
input clk; input clk;

reg [3:0] Q; reg [1:0] Q;


wire [3:0] D; wire [1:0] D;
wire clk; wire clk;

always @(posedge clk) always @(posedge clk)


Q = D; Q = D;

endmodule endmodule
91 Verilog HDL Basics
Parameters
(ii)
module top(out, in, clk);
output [1:0] out;
A. Implelementation input [3:0] in;
input clk;
without parameters (cont.)
wire [1:0] out;
wire [3:0] in;
wire clk;

wire [3:0] p_in; // internal nets


wire wu, wd;

assign wu = p_in[3] & p_in[2];


assign wd = p_in[1] & p_in[0];

dff4bit instA(p_in, in, clk);


dff2bit instB(out, {wu, wd}, clk);
// notice the concatenation!!

endmodule
92 Verilog HDL Basics
Parameters
(iii)
module top(out, in, clk);
B. Implelementation output [1:0] out;
with parameters input [3:0] in;
input clk;
wire [1:0] out;
module dff(Q, D, clk); wire [3:0] in;
wire clk;
parameter WIDTH = 4;
output [WIDTH-1:0] Q; wire [3:0] p_in;
input [WIDTH-1:0] D; wire wu, wd;
input clk;
assign wu = p_in[3] & p_in[2];
reg [WIDTH-1:0] Q; assign wd = p_in[1] & p_in[0];
wire [WIDTH-1:0] D;
wire clk; dff instA(p_in, in, clk);
// WIDTH = 4, from declaration
always @(posedge clk) dff instB(out, {wu, wd}, clk);
Q = D; defparam instB.WIDTH = 2;
// We changed WIDTH for instB only
endmodule
endmodule
93 Verilog HDL Basics
Outline
• Verilog?
• Module
• Instances
• User Identifiers
• Numbers in Verilog
• Signal and Nets in Verilog
• Registers
• Vectors and Arrays
• Logical vs Bitwise Operators
• Conditional Operator
• Continuous Assignments
• Structural Model (Gate Level)
• Behavioral Model – Procedures: Initial vs Always
• Procedural Statements: If – case – for
• System Tasks
94 Verilog HDL Basics
• EXAMPLES
Encoder - Using if-else Statement

• http://www.asic-
world.com/examples/verilog/encoder.html#Encod
er_-_Using_if-else_Statement

95 Verilog HDL Basics


Encoder - Using case Statement

• http://www.asic-
world.com/examples/verilog/encoder.html#Encod
er_-_Using_if-else_Statement

96 Verilog HDL Basics


Pri-Encoder - Using if-else Statement

• http://www.asic-
world.com/examples/verilog/pri_encoder.html#Pri
ority_Encoders

97 Verilog HDL Basics


Encoder - Using assign Statement

• http://www.asic-
world.com/examples/verilog/pri_encoder.html#Pri
ority_Encoders

98 Verilog HDL Basics


Decoder - Using case Statement

• http://www.asic-
world.com/examples/verilog/decoder.html#Decod
er_-_Using_case_Statement

99 Verilog HDL Basics


Decoder - Using assign Statement

• http://www.asic-
world.com/examples/verilog/decoder.html#Decod
er_-_Using_case_Statement

100 Verilog HDL Basics


Mux : Using assign Statement

101 Verilog HDL Basics


Mux : Using if Statement

102 Verilog HDL Basics


Mux : Using case Statement

103 Verilog HDL Basics


Testing Your Modules

Input output

Testbench Verilog Module

104 Verilog HDL Basics


Testing Your Modules
module top_test;
wire [1:0] t_out; // Top’s signals
reg [3:0] t_in;
reg clk;

top inst(t_out, t_in, clk); // Top’s instance

initial begin // Generate clock


clk = 0;
forever #10 clk = ~clk;
end

initial begin // Generate remaining inputs


$monitor($time, " %b -> %b", t_in, t_out);
#5 t_in = 4'b0101;
#20 t_in = 4'b1110;
#20 t_in[0] = 1;
#300 $finish;
end

endmodule

105 Verilog HDL Basics

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