<I>Digital Systems Design with VHDL and Synthesis</I> presents an integrated approach to digital design principles, processes, and implementations to help the reader design much more complex systems within a shorter design cycle. This is accomplished by introducing digital design concepts, VHDL codi
VHDL Modeling for Digital Design Synthesis
β Scribed by Yu-Chin Hsu, Kevin F. Tsai, Jessie T. Liu, Eric S. Lin (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 366
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The purpose of this book is to introduce VHSIC Hardware Description LanΒ guage (VHDL) and its use for synthesis. VHDL is a hardware description language which provides a means of specifying a digital system over different levels of abstraction. It supports behavior specification during the early stages of a design process and structural specification during the later implementation stages. VHDL was originally introduced as a hardware description language that perΒ mitted the simulation of digital designs. It is now increasingly used for design specifications that are given as the input to synthesis tools which translate the specifications into netlists from which the physical systems can be built. One problem with this use of VHDL is that not all of its constructs are useful in synthesis. The specification of delay in signal assignments does not have a clear meaning in synthesis, where delays have already been determined by the imΒ plementationtechnolo~y. VHDL has data-structures such as files and pointers, useful for simulation purposes but not for actual synthesis. As a result syntheΒ sis tools accept only subsets of VHDL. This book tries to cover the synthesis aspect of VHDL, while keeping the simulation-specifics to a minimum. This book is suitable for working professionals as well as for graduate or underΒ graduate study. Readers can view this book as a way to get acquainted with VHDL and how it can be used in modeling of digital designs.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xix
Introduction....Pages 1-14
Basic Structures in VHDL....Pages 15-34
Types, Operators and Expressions....Pages 35-55
Sequential Statements....Pages 57-74
Concurrent Statements....Pages 75-87
Subprograms and Packages....Pages 89-103
Modeling at the Structural Level....Pages 105-128
Modeling at the RT Level....Pages 129-161
Modeling at the FSMD Level....Pages 163-190
Modeling at the Algorithmic Level....Pages 191-225
Memories....Pages 227-242
VHDL Synthesis....Pages 243-278
Writing Efficient VHDL Descriptions....Pages 279-294
Practicing Designs....Pages 295-321
Back Matter....Pages 323-356
β¦ Subjects
Theory of Computation; Engineering, general; Circuits and Systems; Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design; Electrical Engineering
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>The methodology described in this book is the result of many years of research experience in the field of synthesizable VHDL design targeting FPGA based platforms. VHDL was first conceived as a documentation language for ASIC designs. Afterwards, the language was used for the behavioral simula
The methodology described in this book is the result of many years of research experience in the field of synthesizable VHDL design targeting FPGA based platforms. VHDL was first conceived as a documentation language for ASIC designs. Afterwards, the language was used for the behavioral simulation o
<p><span>The methodology described in this book is the result of many years of research experience in the field of synthesizable VHDL design targeting FPGA based platforms. VHDL was first conceived as a documentation language for ASIC designs. Afterwards, the language was used for the behavioral sim