NAME¶
Verilog::Parser - Parse Verilog language files
SYNOPSIS¶
use Verilog::Parser;
my $parser = new Verilog::Parser;
$string = $parser->unreadback ();
$line = $parser->lineno ();
$parser->parse ($text)
$parser->parse_file ($filename)
DESCRIPTION¶
Verilog::Parser will tokenize a Verilog file when the
parse() method is
called and invoke various callback methods. This is useful for extracting
information and editing files while retaining all context. For netlist like
extractions, see Verilog::Netlist.
See the "Which Package" section of Verilog::Language if you are unsure
which parsing package to use for a new application.
Note the parser allows some constructs that are syntax errors according to the
specification (for example "
foo.bar(1)++".) This is done
when the parser can't easily detect these cases. It's up to the consumer of
the parser to filter out such errors if it cares.
METHODS¶
- $parser = Verilog::Parser->new (args...)
- Create a new Parser.
Adding "symbol_table => []" will use the specified symbol table
for this parse, and modify the array reference to include those symbols
detected by this parse. As the SystemVerilog language requires packages
and typedefs to exist before they are referenced, you must pass the same
symbol_table to subsequent parses that are for the same compilation scope.
The internals of this symbol_table should be considered opaque, as it will
change between package versions, and must not be modified by user code.
Adding "use_cb_{callback-name} => 0" will disable the specified
callback. By default, all callbacks will be called; disabling callbacks
can greatly speed up the parser as a large percentage of time is spent
calling between C and Perl to invoke the callbacks. When using this
feature, use_unreadback=>0 should be used too, as since whole tokens
are skipped, skipping whitespace shouldn't matter either.
Adding "use_std => 1" will add parsing of the SystemVerilog
built-in std:: package, or "use_std => 0" will disable it. If
unspecified it is silently included (no callbacks will be involed) when
suspected to be necessary.
Adding "use_unreadback => 0" will disable later use of the
unreadback method, which may improve performance.
Adding "use_vars => 0" will disable contassign, defparam, pin,
var and port callbacks to Verilog::SigParser. This can greatly speed
parsing when variable and interconnect information is not required.
- $parser->callback_names ()
- Return an array of callback function names. This may be used to
automatically create callbacks for all functions, or to test for different
callback functionality between versions of Verilog-Perl.
- $parser->eof ()
- Indicate the end of the input stream. All incomplete tokens will be parsed
and all remaining callbacks completed.
- $parser->filename ($set)
- Return (if $set is undefined) or set current filename.
- $parser->lineno ($set)
- Return (if $set is undefined) or set current line number.
- $parser->parse ($string)
- Parse the $string as verilog text. Can be called multiple times. Note not
all callbacks may be invoked until the eof method is called.
- $parser->parse_file ($filename);
- This method can be called to parse text from a file. The argument can be a
filename or an already opened file handle. The return value from
parse_file() is a reference to the parser object.
- $parser->parse_preproc_file ($preproc);
- This method can be called to parse preprocessed text from a predeclared
Verilog::Preproc object.
- $parser->unreadback ($string)
- Return any input string from the file that has not been sent to the
callback. This will include whitespace and tokens which did not have a
callback. (For example comments, if there is no comment callback.) This is
useful for recording the entire contents of the input, for preprocessors,
pretty-printers, and such.
With the optional argument, set the text to be returned with the next
unreadback call. See also unreadbackCat, which is much faster.
To use this option, "use_unreadback => 1" must have been passed
to the constructor.
- $parser->unreadbackCat ($text)
- Add text to be returned with the next unreadback call. This is much faster
than using "$parser->unreadback($parser->unreadback .
$text)".
CALLBACKS¶
In order to make the parser do anything interesting, you must make a subclass
where you override one or more of the following callback methods as
appropriate.
- $self->attribute ( $token )
- This method is called when any text in (* *) are recognized. The first
argument, $token, is the contents of the attribute including the
delimiters.
- $self->comment ( $token )
- This method is called when any text in // or /**/ comments are recognized.
The first argument, $token, is the contents of the comment including the
comment delimiters.
- $self->endparse ( $token )
- This method is called when the file has been completely parsed, at the
End-Of-File of the parsed file. It is useful for writing clean up
routines.
- $self->keyword ( $token )
- This method is called when any Verilog keyword is recognized. The first
argument, $token, is the keyword.
- $self->number ( $token )
- This method is called when any number is recognized. The first argument,
$token, is the number. The Verilog::Language::number_value function may be
useful for converting a Verilog value to a Perl integer.
- $self->operator ( $token )
- This method is called when any symbolic operator (+, -, etc) is
recognized. The first argument, $token, is the operator.
- $self->preproc ( $token )
- This method is called when any Verilog preprocessor `command is
recognized. Most of these are handled by the preprocessor, however any
unrecognized `defines are passed through. For backward compatibility, if
not defined this function will call the symbol callback.
- $self->string ( $token )
- This method is called when any text in double quotes are recognized, or on
the text of protected regions. The first argument, $token, is the contents
of the string including the quotes.
- $self->symbol ( $token )
- This method is called when any Verilog symbol is recognized. A symbol is
considered a non-keyword bare-word. The first argument, $token, is the
symbol.
- $self->sysfunc ( $token )
- This method is called when any Verilog $syscall is recognized. The first
argument, $token, is the symbol. For backward compatibility, if not
defined this function will call the symbol callback.
EXAMPLE¶
Here's a simple example which will print every symbol in a verilog file.
package MyParser;
use Verilog::Parser;
@ISA = qw(Verilog::Parser);
# parse, parse_file, etc are inherited from Verilog::Parser
sub new {
my $class = shift;
#print "Class $class\n";
my $self = $class->SUPER::new();
bless $self, $class;
return $self;
}
sub symbol {
my $self = shift;
my $token = shift;
$self->{symbols}{$token}++;
}
sub report {
my $self = shift;
foreach my $sym (sort keys %{$self->{symbols}}) {
printf "Symbol %-30s occurs %4d times\n",
$sym, $self->{symbols}{$sym};
}
}
package main;
my $parser = MyParser->new();
$parser->parse_file (shift);
$parser->report();
BUGS¶
This is being distributed as a baseline for future contributions. Don't expect a
lot, the Parser is still naive, and there are many awkward cases that aren't
covered.
The parser currently assumes the string it is passed ends on a newline boundary.
It should be changed to allow arbitrary chunks.
Cell instantiations without any arguments are not supported, an empty set of
parenthesis are required. (Use "cell
cell();", not "cell
cell;".)
DISTRIBUTION¶
Verilog-Perl is part of the <
http://www.veripool.org/> free Verilog EDA
software tool suite. The latest version is available from CPAN and from
<
http://www.veripool.org/verilog-perl>.
Copyright 2000-2014 by Wilson Snyder. This package is free software; you can
redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either the GNU Lesser
General Public License Version 3 or the Perl Artistic License Version 2.0.
AUTHORS¶
Wilson Snyder <wsnyder@wsnyder.org>
SEE ALSO¶
Verilog-Perl, Verilog::Preproc, Verilog::SigParser, Verilog::Language,
Verilog::Netlist, Verilog::Getopt, vrename, vpassert vppreproc