VCS is not free. Neither is the vcd format.
Fortunately, verilator and gtkwave ARE free ... and faster too.
This patch adds targets:
run-regression-tests-fst
run-asm-tests-fst
... which create opensource-compatible fst waveforms for gtkwave.
Fundamental new features:
* Added tile package: This package is intended to hold components re-usable across different types of tile. Will be the future location of TL2-RoCC accelerators and new diplomatic versions of intra-tile interfaces.
* Adopted [ModuleName]Params convention: Code base was very inconsistent about what to name case classes that provide parameters to modules. Settled on calling them [ModuleName]Params to distinguish them from config.Parameters and config.Config. So far applied mostly only to case classes defined within rocket and tile.
* Defined RocketTileParams: A nested case class containing case classes for all the components of a tile (L1 caches and core). Allows all such parameters to vary per-tile.
* Defined RocketCoreParams: All the parameters that can be varied per-core.
* Defined L1CacheParams: A trait defining the parameters common to L1 caches, made concrete in different derived case classes.
* Defined RocketTilesKey: A sequence of RocketTileParams, one for every tile to be created.
* Provided HeterogeneousDualCoreConfig: An example of making a heterogeneous chip with two cores, one big and one little.
* Changes to legacy code: ReplacementPolicy moved to package util. L1Metadata moved to package tile. Legacy L2 cache agent removed because it can no longer share the metadata array implementation with the L1. Legacy GroundTests on life support.
Additional changes that got rolled in along the way:
* rocket: Fix critical path through BTB for I$ index bits > pgIdxBits
* coreplex: tiles connected via :=*
* groundtest: updated to use TileParams
* tilelink: cache cork requirements are relaxed to allow more cacheless masters
We want to keep the banks split in the outer SoC if there is an L3.
Furthermore, each channel might go to different memory subsystems,
like DDR/HMC/Zero, from rocketchip.
* Configs: use a uniform syntax without Match exceptions
The old style of specifying Configs used total functions. The only way to
indicate that a key was not matched was to throw an exception. Not only was
this a performance concern, but it also caused confusing error messages
whenever you had a match failure from a lookup within a lookup. The
exception could get handled by an outer-lookup that then reported the wrong
key as missing.