clash-prelude-1.8.0: Clash: a functional hardware description language - Prelude library
Copyright(C) 2017 Google Inc
2023 QBayLogic B.V.
LicenseBSD2 (see the file LICENSE)
MaintainerQBayLogic B.V. <devops@qbaylogic.com>
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

Clash.Xilinx.ClockGen

Description

This module contains functions for instantiating clock generators on Xilinx FPGA's.

We suggest you use a clock generator even if your oscillator runs at the frequency you want to run your circuit at.

A clock generator generates a stable clock signal for your design at a configurable frequency. A clock generator in an FPGA is frequently referred to as a PLL (Phase-Locked Loop). However, Xilinx differentiates between several types of clock generator implementations in their FPGAs and uses the term PLL to refer to one specific type, so we choose to use the more generic term clock generator here.

For most use cases, you would create two or more synthesis domains describing the oscillator input and the domains you wish to use in your design, and use the regular functions below to generate the clocks and resets of the design from the oscillator input. There are use cases not covered by this simpler approach, and the unsafe functions are provided as a means to build advanced reset managers for the output domains.

Synopsis

Choosing domains

Synthesis domains are denoted by the type-parameter dom :: Domain as occurring in for instance Signal dom a; see Clash.Signal for more information. For each domain, there is only a single clock signal which clocks that domain; mixing clock signals is a design error. Conversely, it is possible to clock multiple domains using the same clock signal, in complex designs.

For the clock generator inputs, create a domain with the correct clock frequency and reset polarity. For instance, if the clock input is a free-running clock at a frequency of 50 MHz (a period of 20 ns or 20,000 ps), and the reset input connected to the clock generator is active-low, the following will instantiate the required input domain:

createDomain vSystem{vName="DomInput", vPeriod=20000, vResetPolarity=ActiveLow}

If you haven't determined the frequency you want the design to run at, the predefined 100 MHz domain XilinxSystem can be a good starting point. The datasheet for your FPGA specifies lower and upper limits, but the true maximum frequency is determined by your design.

Supposing you need a clock running at 150 MHz for your design, the following will instantiate a suitable domain:

createDomain vXilinxSystem{vName="Dom150", vPeriod=hzToPeriod 150e6}

Dom150 will have Synchronous resets on its memory elements because it was derived from vXilinxSystem, whereas DomInput will have Asynchronous resets because it was derived from vSystem. Xilinx recommends synchronous resets for circuits, but the clock generator reacts asynchronously to its reset input instead, which will need to be declared correctly in Clash. If you use the unsafe functions below, Clash does not enforce this.

Caution: actual output frequency

The clock generator in the FPGA is limited in which clock frequencies it can generate, especially when one clock generator has multiple outputs. The clock generator will pick the attainable frequency closest to the requested frequency (or possibly fail to synthesize). You can check the frequency that the wizard chose by loading your design into the Vivado GUI. In the IP sources window, choose the clock wizard and select Re-customize IP.... On the Output Clocks tab, the relevant column is Actual Output Freq (MHz). If the actual value differs, copy the actual value back to the Clash design.

Using

The functions in this module will instantiate a Xilinx MMCM clock generator corresponding to the Xilinx "Clock Wizard" with 1 reference clock input and a reset input, and 1 to 7 output clocks and a locked output.

The regular functions incorporate resetSynchronizer to convert the locked output port into a proper Reset signal for the domains which will keep the circuit in reset while the clock is still stabilizing.

The clock generator will react asynchronously to the incoming reset input. When the reset input is asserted, the clock generator's locked output will deassert, in turn causing the Reset output(s) of these functions to assert.

You can use setName to give the IP instance a specific name, which can be useful if you need to refer to the instance in Synopsys Design Constraints files.

The output of the function for n output clocks is a 2n-tuple with clock and reset outputs. The compiler needs to be able to fully determine the types of the individual tuple elements from the context; the clock generator function itself will not constrain them. If the types of the tuple elements cannot be inferred, you can use pattern type signatures to specify the types. Supposing the referenced domains have been created with createDomain, an instance with a single output clock can be instantiated using:

(clk150 :: Clock Dom150, rst150 :: Reset Dom150) = clockWizard clkIn rstIn

An instance with two clocks can be instantiated using

( clk100 :: Clock Dom100
  , rst100 :: Reset Dom100
  , clk150 :: Clock Dom150
  , rst150 :: Reset Dom150) = clockWizard clkIn rstIn

and so on up to 7 clocks, following the general pattern (Clock dom1, Reset dom1, Clock dom2, Reset dom2, ..., Clock domn, Reset domn).

If you need access to the locked output to build a more advanced reset manager, you should use the unsafe functions instead.

See also the Clocking Wizard LogiCORE IP Product Guide

Example

When the oscillator connected to the FPGA runs at 50 MHz and the external reset signal is active-low, this will generate a 150 MHz clock for use by the circuit:

createDomain vSystem{vName="DomInput", vPeriod=20000, vResetPolarity=ActiveLow}
createDomain vXilinxSystem{vName="Dom150", vPeriod=hzToPeriod 150e6}

topEntity
  :: Clock DomInput
  -> Reset DomInput
  -> Signal Dom150 Int
  -> Signal Dom150 Int
topEntity clkIn rstIn = exposeClockResetEnable (register 0) clk rst enableGen
 where
  (clk, rst) = clockWizard clkIn rstIn

Type checking errors

When type checking cannot infer the types of the tuple elements, or they have the wrong type, the GHC compiler will complain about satisfying NumOutClocks. The error message on GHC 9.4 and up is:

    • Cannot satisfy: clash-prelude-[...]:Clash.Clocks.Internal.NumOutClocks
                        (clash-prelude-[...]:Clash.Clocks.Internal.ClocksSyncClocksInst
                           ([...])
                           DomInput) <= 7
    • In the expression: clockWizard clkIn rstIn

On older GHC versions, the error message is:

    • Couldn't match type ‘clash-prelude-[...]:Clash.Clocks.Internal.NumOutClocks
                             (clash-prelude-[...]:Clash.Clocks.Internal.ClocksSyncClocksInst
                                ([...])
                                DomInput)
                           <=? 7’
                     with ‘'True’
        arising from a use of ‘clockWizard’
    • In the expression: clockWizard clkIn rstIn

The above error message is also emitted when trying to instantiate more than 18 output clocks, as it will fail to find an instance. As the wizard supports no more than 7 clocks, trying to instantiate between 8 and 18 output clocks will also cause a type checking error. On GHC 9.4 and up, the error for attempting to instantiate 8 clocks is:

    • Cannot satisfy: 8 <= 7
    • In the expression: clockWizard clkIn rstIn

On older GHC versions, the error message is less clear:

    • Couldn't match type ‘'False’ with ‘'True’
        arising from a use of ‘clockWizard’
    • In the expression: clockWizard clkIn rstIn

Tcl

When generating HDL, these functions will emit a Tcl script for Vivado that instantiates the needed IP core for the function. This Tcl script adheres to the Clash<->Tcl API. The Tcl Connector bundled in clash-lib:Clash.DataFiles will automatically process these scripts and build your design in Vivado. See clash-lib:Clash.DataFiles for more information.

Regular functions

clockWizard Source #

Arguments

:: forall t domIn. (HasAsynchronousReset domIn, ClocksSyncCxt t domIn, NumOutClocksSync t domIn <= 7) 
=> Clock domIn

Free running clock (e.g. a clock pin connected to a crystal oscillator)

-> Reset domIn

Reset for the clock generator

-> t 

Instantiate a Xilinx MMCM clock generator corresponding to the Xilinx "Clock Wizard" with 1 single-ended reference clock input and a reset input, and 1 to 7 output clocks and a locked output.

This function incorporates resetSynchronizers to convert the locked output port into proper Reset signals for the output domains which will keep the circuit in reset while the clock is still stabilizing.

clockWizardDifferential Source #

Arguments

:: forall t domIn. (HasAsynchronousReset domIn, ClocksSyncCxt t domIn, NumOutClocksSync t domIn <= 7) 
=> DiffClock domIn

Free running clock (e.g. a clock pin pair connected to a crystal oscillator)

-> Reset domIn

Reset for the clock generator

-> t 

Instantiate a Xilinx MMCM clock generator corresponding to the Xilinx "Clock Wizard" with 1 differential reference clock input and a reset input, and 1 to 7 output clocks and a locked output.

This function incorporates resetSynchronizers to convert the locked output port into proper Reset signals for the output domains which will keep the circuit in reset while the clock is still stabilizing.

To create a differential clock in a test bench, you can use clockToDiffClock.

Unsafe functions

These functions are provided for the cases where the regular functions cannot provide the desired behavior, like when implementing certain advanced reset managers. These functions directly expose the asynchronous locked output of the clock generator, which will assert when the output clocks are stable. locked is usually connected to reset circuitry to keep the circuit in reset while the clock is still stabilizing.

The output of the function for n output clocks is an n+1-tuple with n clock outputs and a locked signal. The compiler needs to be able to fully determine the types of the individual tuple elements from the context; the clock generator function itself will not constrain them. If the types of the tuple elements cannot be inferred, you can use pattern type signatures to specify the types. Supposing the referenced domains have been created with createDomain, an instance with a single output clock can be instantiated using:

(clk150 :: Clock Dom150, locked :: Signal Dom150 Bool) = unsafeClockWizard clkIn rstIn

An instance with two clocks can be instantiated using

(clk100 :: Clock Dom100
  , clk150 :: Clock Dom150
  , locked :: Signal Dom100 Bool) = unsafeClockWizard clkIn rstIn

and so on up to 7 clocks, following the general pattern (Clock dom1, Clock dom2, ..., Clock domn, Signal pllLock Bool).

Though the locked output is specified as a Signal pllLock Bool, it is an asynchronous signal and will need to be synchronized before it can be used as a (reset) signal. While in the examples above the locked output has been assigned the domain of one of the output clocks, the domain pllLock is left unrestricted. If the lock signal is to be used in multiple domains, the pllLock domain should probably be set to domIn (the domain of the input clock and reset). While in HDL unsafeSynchronizer is just a wire, in Haskell simulation it does actually resample the signal, and by setting pllLock to domIn, there is no resampling of the simulated lock signal. The simulated lock signal is simply the inverse of the reset input: locked is asserted whenever the reset input is deasserted and vice versa.

Example

createDomain vSystem{vName="DomInput", vPeriod=20000, vResetPolarity=ActiveLow}
createDomain vXilinxSystem{vName="Dom150", vPeriod=hzToPeriod 150e6}

topEntity
  :: Clock DomInput
  -> Reset DomInput
  -> Signal Dom150 Int
  -> Signal Dom150 Int
topEntity clkIn rstIn = exposeClockResetEnable (register 0) clk rst enableGen
 where
  (clk, locked) = unsafeClockWizard clkIn rstIn
  rst = resetSynchronizer clk (unsafeFromActiveLow locked)

resetSynchronizer will keep the reset asserted when locked is False, hence the use of unsafeFromActiveLow locked.

unsafeClockWizard Source #

Arguments

:: forall t domIn. (KnownDomain domIn, Clocks t, ClocksCxt t, NumOutClocks t <= 7) 
=> Clock domIn

Free running clock (e.g. a clock pin connected to a crystal oscillator)

-> Reset domIn

Reset for the clock generator

-> t 

Instantiate a Xilinx MMCM clock generator corresponding to the Xilinx "Clock Wizard" with 1 single-ended reference clock input and a reset input, and 1 to 7 output clocks and a locked output.

NB: Because the clock generator reacts asynchronously to the incoming reset input, the signal must be glitch-free.

unsafeClockWizardDifferential Source #

Arguments

:: forall t domIn. (KnownDomain domIn, Clocks t, ClocksCxt t, NumOutClocks t <= 7) 
=> DiffClock domIn

Free running clock (e.g. a clock pin pair connected to a crystal oscillator)

-> Reset domIn

Reset for the clock generator

-> t 

Instantiate a Xilinx MMCM clock generator corresponding to the Xilinx "Clock Wizard" with 1 differential reference clock input and a reset input, and 1 to 7 output clocks and a locked output.

NB: Because the clock generator reacts asynchronously to the incoming reset input, the signal must be glitch-free.

To create a differential clock in a test bench, you can use clockToDiffClock.