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nextpnr netlist structures documentation
The current in-memory design in nextpnr uses several basic structures. See the FAQ for more info on terminology.
See also the Arch API reference for information on developing new architectures and accessing the architecture database.
CellInfo
: instantiation of a physical block in the netlist (currently, all cells in nextpnr are blackboxes.)NetInfo
: a connection between cell ports. Has at most one driver; and zero or more usersBaseCtx
: contains all cells and nets, subclassed byArch
and then becomesContext
Other structures used by these basic structures include:
Property
: stores a numeric or string value - isomorphic toRTLIL::Const
in YosysPortInfo
: stores the name, direction and connected net (if applicable) of cell portsPortRef
: used to reference the source/sink ports of a net; refers back to a cell and a port name
CellInfo
CellInfo
instances have the following fields:
name
andtype
areIdString
s containing the instance name, and typehierpath
is name of the hierarchical cell containing the instance, for designs with hierarchyports
is a map from port nameIdString
toPortInfo
structures for each cell portbel
andbelStrength
contain the ID of the Bel the cell is placed onto; and placement strength of the cell; if placed. Placement/ripup should always be done byArch::bindBel
andArch::unbindBel
rather than by manipulating these fields.params
andattrs
store parameters and attributes - from the input JSON or assigned in flows to add metadata - by mapping from parameter nameIdString
toProperty
.cluster
is used to specify that the cell is inside a placement cluster, with the details of the placement within the cluster provided by the architecture.region
is a reference to aRegion
if the cell is constrained to a placement region (e.g. for partial reconfiguration or out-of-context flows) ornullptr
otherwise.pseudo_cell
is an optional pointer to an implementation of the pseudo-cell API, used for cells implementing virtual functions such as partition pins without a mapped bel.bel
will always beBelId()
for pseudo-cells.
PseudoCellAPI
Pseudo-cells can be used to implement cells with runtime-defined cell pin to wire mappings. This means they don't have to be a fixed part of the architecture, example use cases could be for implementing partition pins for partial reconfiguration regions; or forcing splits between SLRs. Pseudo-cells implement a series of virtual functions to provide data that for an ordinary cell would be obtained by calling 'bel' ArchAPI functions
The pseudo-cell API is as follows:
Loc getLocation() const
: get an approximate location of the pseudocellWireId getPortWire(IdString port) const
: gets the wire corresponding to a port (or WireId if it has no wire)
It also implements functions for getting timing data, mirroring that of the Arch API:
bool getDelay(IdString fromPort, IdString toPort, DelayQuad &delay) const
TimingPortClass getPortTimingClass(IdString port, int &clockInfoCount) const
TimingClockingInfo getPortClockingInfo(IdString port, int index) const
NetInfo
NetInfo
instances have the following fields:
name
is the IdString name of the net - for nets with multiple names, one name is chosen according to a set of rules by the JSON frontendhierpath
is name of the hierarchical cell containing the instance, for designs with hierarchydriver
refers to the source of the net usingPortRef
;driver.cell == nullptr
means that the net is undriven. Nets must have zero or one driver only. The corresponding cell port must be an output and itsPortInfo::net
must refer back to this net.users
contains a list ofPortRef
references to sink ports on the net. Nets can have zero or more sinks. Each corresponding cell port must be an input or inout; and itsPortInfo::net
must refer back to this net.wires
is a map that stores the routing tree of a net, if the net is routed.- Each entry in
wires
maps from sink wire in the routing tree to its driving pip, and the binding strength of that pip (e.g. how freely the router may rip up the pip) - Manipulation of this structure is done automatically by
Arch::bindWire
,Arch::unbindWire
,Arch::bindPip
andArch::unbindPip
; which should almost always be used in lieu of manual manipulation
- Each entry in
attrs
stores metadata about the wire (which may come from the JSON or be added by passes)clkconstr
contains the period constraint if the wire is a constrained clock; or is empty otherwiseregion
is a reference to aRegion
if the net is constrained to a device region ornullptr
otherwise (N.B. not supported by the current router).
BaseCtx/Context
Relevant fields from a netlist point of view are:
cells
is a map from cell name to aunique_ptr<CellInfo>
containing cell datanets
is a map from net name to aunique_ptr<NetInfo>
containing net datanet_aliases
maps every alias for a net to its canonical name (i.e. index intonets
) - net aliases often occur when a net has a name both inside a submodule and higher level moduleports
is a list of top level ports, primarily used during JSON export (e.g. to produce a useful post-PnR simulation model). Unlike other ports, top level ports are not added to the driver or users of any connected net. In this sense, nets connected to top-level ports are dangling. However, top level ports can still see their connected net as part of theirPortInfo
.port_cells
is a map of top level port cells. This is a subset of thecells
maps containing only ports.
Context also has a method check()
that ensures all of the contracts met above are satisfied. It is strongly suggested to run this after any pass that may modify the netlist.
Performance Improvements
Two features are provided to enable performance improvements in some algorithms, generally by reducing the number of unordered_map
accesses.
The first is udata
. This is a field of both nets and cells that can be used to give an index into algorithm-specific structures, such as a flat vector
of cells. Placers and routers may use this for any purpose, but it should not be used to exchange data between passes.
The second is ArchCellInfo
and ArchNetInfo
. These are provided by architectures and used as base classes for CellInfo
and NetInfo
respectively. They allow architectures to tag information that is needed frequently - for example the clock polarity and clock net for a flipflop are needed for placement validity checking. They should only be used inside arch-specific code, and are lost when netlists are saved/loaded thus must not be used as primary storage - usually these should mirror attributes/parameters. assignArchInfo
should set these up accordingly.
Helper Functions - Context
Context
and its subclass BaseCtx
provides several helper functions that are often needed inside CAD algorithms.
nameOfBel
,nameOfWire
, andnameOfPip
gets the name of an identified object as a C string, often used in conjunction with the logging functionsnameOf
is similar to above but for netlist objects that have aname
field (e.g. cells, nets, etc)getNetinfoSourceWire
gets the physical wireWireId
associated with the source of a netgetNetinfoSinkWire
gets the physical wireWireId
associated with a given sink (specified byPortRef
)getNetinfoRouteDelay
gets the routing delay - actual if the net is fully routed, estimated otherwise - between the source and a given sink of a netgetNetByAlias
returns the pointer to a net given any of its aliases - this should be used in preference to a direct lookup innets
whenever a net name is provided by the user
Hierarchy
As most place and route algorithms require a flattened netlist to work with (consider - each leaf cell instance must have its own bel), the primary netlist structures are flattened. However, some tasks such as floorplanning require an understanding of hierarchy.
HierarchicalCell
is the main data structure for storing hierarchy. This represents an instance of a hierarchical, rather than leaf cell (leaf cells are represented by a CellInfo
).
name
andtype
are the instance name and cell typeparent
is the hierarchical path of the parent cell, andfullpath
is the hierarchical path of this cellleaf_cells
,nets
map from a name inside the hierarchical cell to a 'global' name in the flattened netlist (i.e. one that indexes intoctx->{cells,nets}
)leaf_cells_by_gname
,nets_by_gname
are the inverse of the above maps; going from{CellInfo,NetInfo}::name
to an instance name inside the cellhier_cells
maps instance names of sub-hierarchical (non-leaf) cells to global names (indexing intoctx->hierarchy
)
To preserve hierarchy during passes such as packing, ensure that hierpath
is set on new cells derived from existing ones, and call fixupHierarchy()
at the end to rebuild HierarchicalCell
structures.