commit | 40ba1a5dd7266f9c1109a736ca3f3758896769a6 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io> | Mon Dec 26 13:35:50 2022 +0800 |
committer | Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io> | Mon Dec 26 13:35:50 2022 +0800 |
tree | 411a218b93c3974012aa76a83a9b9ab645f04b2e | |
parent | 167b0c87aa280b912af64cad39f7cefadb1d54c7 [diff] |
rtl: user_project_wrapper: use wb_pio instead of example Now that we have our own project, use our own topfile instead of the example one. Signed-off-by: Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io>
A project designed to demonstrate Raspberry Pi PIO on GF180 using the Caravel harness.
Refer to README for a quickstart of how to use caravel_user_project
Refer to README for this sample project documentation.
You will need a Linux environment with Docker. Once you have that, you can set things up:
mkdir -p deps export OPENLANE_ROOT=$(pwd)/deps/openlane_src # you need to export this whenever you start a new shell export PDK_ROOT=$(pwd)/deps/pdks # you need to export this whenever you start a new shell export PDK=gf180mcuC # you can also use sky130B
These steps are included in activate-caravel.sh
, which you can just source.
Next, do a one-time setup of the project.
make setup
Next, perform the synthesis, which will take anywhere between 30 minutes and 3 hours:
make wb_pio
When it's done, the resulting files will be in openlane/wb_pio/runs/$CURRENT_DATE_TIME/results/final/
.