NAME

    Verilator Internals

INTRODUCTION

    This file discusses internal and programming details for Verilator. It's
    the first for reference for developers and debugging problems.

    See also the Verilator internals presentation at
    http://www.veripool.org.

CODE FLOWS

  Verilator Flow

    The main flow of Verilator can be followed by reading the Verilator.cpp
    process() function:

    First, the files specified on the command line are read. Reading
    involves preprocessing, then lexical analysis with Flex and parsing with
    Bison. This produces an abstract syntax tree (AST) representation of the
    design, which is what is visible in the .tree files described below.

    Verilator then makes a series of passes over the AST, progressively
    refining and optimizing it.

    Cells in the AST first linked, which will read and parse additional
    files as above.

    Functions, variable and other references are linked to their
    definitions.

    Parameters are resolved and the design is elaborated.

    Verilator then performs many additional edits and optimizations on the
    hierarchical design. This includes coverage, assertions, X elimination,
    inlining, constant propagation, and dead code elimination.

    References in the design are then pseudo-flattened. Each module's
    variables and functions get "Scope" references. A scope reference is an
    occurrence of that un-flattened variable in the flattened hierarchy. A
    module that occurs only once in the hierarchy will have a single scope
    and single VarScope for each variable. A module that occurs twice will
    have a scope for each occurrence, and two VarScopes for each variable.
    This allows optimizations to proceed across the flattened design, while
    still preserving the hierarchy.

    Additional edits and optimizations proceed on the pseudo-flat design.
    These include module references, function inlining, loop unrolling,
    variable lifetime analysis, lookup table creation, always splitting, and
    logic gate simplifications (pushing inverters, etc).

    Verilator orders the code. Best case, this results in a single "eval"
    function which has all always statements flowing from top to bottom with
    no loops.

    Verilator mostly removes the flattening, so that code may be shared
    between multiple invocations of the same module. It localizes variables,
    combines identical functions, expands macros to C primitives, adds
    branch prediction hints, and performs additional constant propagation.

    Verilator finally writes the C++ modules.

  Key Classes Used in the Verilator Flow

    "AstNode"
        The AST is represented at the top level by the class "AstNode". This
        abstract class has derived classes for the individual components
        (e.g. "AstGenerate" for a generate block) or groups of components
        (e.g. "AstNodeFTask" for functions and tasks, which in turn has
        "AstFunc" and "AstTask" as derived classes).

        Each "AstNode" has pointers to up to four children, accessed by the
        "op1p" through "op4p" methods. These methods are then abstracted in
        a specific Ast* node class to a more specific name. For example with
        the "AstIf" node (for "if" statements), "ifsp" calls "op2p" to give
        the pointer to the AST for the "then" block, while "elsesp" calls
        "op3p" to give the pointer to the AST for the "else" block, or NULL
        if there is not one.

        "AstNode" has the concept of a next and previous AST - for example
        the next and previous statements in a block. Pointers to the AST for
        these statements (if they exist) can be obtained using the "back"
        and "next" methods.

        It is useful to remember that the derived class "AstNetlist" is at
        the top of the tree, so checking for this class is the standard way
        to see if you are at the top of the tree.

        By convention, each function/method uses the variable "nodep" as a
        pointer to the "AstNode" currently being processed.

    "AstNVisitor"
        The passes are implemented by AST visitor classes (see "Visitor
        Functions"). These are implemented by subclasses of the abstract
        class, "AstNVisitor". Each pass creates an instance of the visitor
        class, which in turn implements a method to perform the pass.

    "V3Graph"
        A number of passes use graph algorithms, and the class "V3Graph" is
        provided to represent those graphs. Graphs are directed, and
        algorithms are provided to manipulate the graphs and to output them
        in *GraphViz* dot format (see <http://www.graphviz.org/>).
        "V3Graph.h" provides documentation of this class.

    "V3GraphVertex"
        This is the base class for vertices in a graph. Vertices have an
        associated "fanout", "color" and "rank", which may be used in
        algorithms for ordering the graph. A generic "user"/"userp" member
        variable is also provided.

        Virtual methods are provided to specify the name, color, shape and
        style to be used in dot output. Typically users provide derived
        classes from "V3GraphVertex" which will reimplement these methods.

        Iterators are provided to access in and out edges. Typically these
        are used in the form:

            for (V3GraphEdge *edgep = vertexp->inBeginp();
                 edgep;
                 edgep = edgep->inNextp()) {

    "V3GraphEdge"
        This is the base class for directed edges between pairs of vertices.
        Edges have an associated "weight" and may also be made "cutable". A
        generic "user"/"userp" member variable is also provided.

        Accessors, "fromp" and "top" return the "from" and "to" vertices
        respectively.

        Virtual methods are provided to specify the label, color and style
        to be used in dot output. Typically users provided derived classes
        from "V3GraphEdge" which will reimplement these methods.

    "V3GraphAlg"
        This is the base class for graph algorithms. It implements a "bool"
        method, "followEdge" which algorithms can use to decide whether an
        edge is followed. This method returns true if the graph edge has
        weight greater than one and a user function, "edgeFuncp" (supplied
        in the constructor) returns "true".

        A number of predefined derived algorithm classes and access methods
        are provided and documented in "V3GraphAlg.cpp".

  Verilated Flow

    The evaluation loop outputted by Verilator is designed to allow a single
    function to perform evaluation under most situations.

    On the first evaluation, the Verilated code calls initial blocks, and
    then "settles" the modules, by evaluating functions (from always
    statements) until all signals are stable.

    On other evaluations, the Verilated code detects what input signals have
    changes. If any are clocks, it calls the appropriate sequential
    functions (from always @ posedge statements). Interspersed with
    sequential functions it calls combo functions (from always @*). After
    this is complete, it detects any changes due to combo loops or
    internally generated clocks, and if one is found must reevaluate the
    model again.

    For SystemC code, the eval() function is wrapped in a SystemC SC_METHOD,
    sensitive to all inputs. (Ideally it would only be sensitive to clocks
    and combo inputs, but tracing requires all signals to cause evaluation,
    and the performance difference is small.)

    If tracing is enabled, a callback examines all variables in the design
    for changes, and writes the trace for each change. To accelerate this
    process the evaluation process records a bitmask of variables that might
    have changed; if clear, checking those signals for changes may be
    skipped.

CODING CONVENTIONS

  Indentation style

    To match the indentation of Verilator C++ sources, use 4 spaces per
    level, and leave tabs at 8 columns, so every other indent level is a tab
    stop.

    All files should contain the magic header to insure standard
    indentation:

        // -*- mode: C++; c-file-style: "cc-mode" -*-

    This sets indentation to the cc-mode defaults. (Verilator predates a
    CC-mode change of several years ago which overrides the defaults with
    GNU style indentation; the c-set-style undoes that.)

  The "astgen" script

    Some of the code implementing passes is extremely repetitive, and must
    be implemented for each sub-class of "AstNode". However, while
    repetitive, there is more variability than can be handled in C++ macros.

    In Verilator this is implemented by using a Perl script, "astgen" to
    pre-process the C++ code. For example in "V3Const.cpp" this is used to
    implement the "visit()" functions for each binary operation using the
    TREEOP macro.

    The original C++ source code is transformed into C++ code in the
    "obj_opt" and "obj_dbg" sub-directories (the former for the optimized
    version of Verilator, the latter for the debug version). So for example
    "V3Const.cpp" into "V3Const__gen.cpp".

  Visitor Functions

    Verilator uses the *Visitor* design pattern to implement its refinement
    and optimization passes. This allows separation of the pass algorithm
    from the AST on which it operates. Wikipedia provides an introduction to
    the concept at <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visitor_pattern>.

    As noted above, all visitors are derived classes of "AstNVisitor". All
    derived classes of "AstNode" implement the "accept" method, which takes
    as argument a reference to an instance or a "AstNVisitor" derived class
    and applies the visit method of the "AstNVisitor" to the invoking
    AstNode instance (i.e. "this").

    One possible difficulty is that a call to "accept" may perform an edit
    which destroys the node it receives as argument. The
    "acceptSubtreeReturnEdits" method of "AstNode" is provided to apply
    "accept" and return the resulting node, even if the original node is
    destroyed (if it is not destroyed it will just return the original
    node).

    The behavior of the visitor classes is achieved by overloading the
    "visit" function for the different "AstNode" derived classes. If a
    specific implementation is not found, the system will look in turn for
    overloaded implementations up the inheritance hierarchy. For example
    calling "accept" on "AstIf" will look in turn for:

      void visit (AstIf* nodep, AstNUser* vup)
      void visit (AstNodeIf* nodep, AstNUser* vup)
      void visit (AstNodeStmt* nodep, AstNUser* vup)
      void visit (AstNode* nodep, AstNUser* vup)

    There are three ways data is passed between visitor functions.

    1.  A visitor-class member variable. This is generally for passing
        "parent" information down to children. "m_modp" is a common example.
        It's set to NULL in the constructor, where that node ("AstModule"
        visitor) sets it, then the children are iterated, then it's cleared.
        Children under an "AstModule" will see it set, while nodes elsewhere
        will see it clear. If there can be nested items (for example an
        "AstFor" under an "AstFor") the variable needs to be
        save-set-restored in the "AstFor" visitor, otherwise exiting the
        lower for will lose the upper for's setting.

    2.  User attributes. Each "AstNode" (Note. The AST node, not the
        visitor) has five user attributes, which may be accessed as an
        integer using the "user1()" through "user5()" methods, or as a
        pointer (of type "AstNUser") using the "user1p()" through "user5p()"
        methods (a common technique lifted from graph traversal packages).

        A visitor first clears the one it wants to use by calling
        "AstNode::user#ClearTree()", then it can mark any node's user() with
        whatever data it wants. Readers just call "nodep->user()", but may
        need to cast appropriately, so you'll often see
        "nodep->userp()->castSOMETYPE()". At the top of each visitor are
        comments describing how the "user()" stuff applies to that visitor
        class. For example:

            // NODE STATE
            // Cleared entire netlist
            //   AstModule::user1p()     // bool. True to inline this module

        This says that at the "AstNetlist" "user1ClearTree()" is called.
        Each "AstModule"'s "user1()" is used to indicate if we're going to
        inline it.

        These comments are important to make sure a "user#()" on a given
        "AstNode" type is never being used for two different purposes.

        Note that calling "user#ClearTree" is fast, it doesn't walk the
        tree, so it's ok to call fairly often. For example, it's commonly
        called on every module.

    3.  Parameters can be passed between the visitors in close to the
        "normal" function caller to callee way. This is the second "vup"
        parameter of type "AstNUser" that is ignored on most of the visitor
        functions. V3Width does this, but it proved more messy than the
        above and is deprecated. (V3Width was nearly the first module
        written. Someday this scheme may be removed, as it slows the program
        down to have to pass vup everywhere.)

  Iterators

    "AstNode" provides a set of iterators to facilitate walking over the
    tree. Each takes two arguments, a visitor, "v", of type "AstNVisitor"
    and an optional pointer user data, "vup", of type "AstNUser*". The
    second is one of the ways to pass parameters to visitors described in
    "Visitor Functions", but its use is now deprecated and should *not* be
    used for new visitor classes.

    "iterate()"
        This just applies the "accept" method of the "AstNode" to the
        visitor function.

    "iterateAndNextIgnoreEdit"
        Applies the "accept" method of each "AstNode" in a list (i.e.
        connected by "nextp" and "backp" pointers).

    "iterateAndNext"
        Applies the "accept" method of each "AstNode" in a list. If a node
        is edited by the call to "accept", apply "accept" again, until the
        node does not change.

    "iterateListBackwards"
        Applies the "accept" method of each "AstNode" in a list, starting
        with the last one.

    "iterateChildren"
        Apply the "iterateAndNext" method on each child "op1p" through
        "op4p" in turn.

    "iterateChildrenBackwards"
        Apply the "iterateListBackwards" method on each child "op1p" through
        "op4p" in turn.

   Caution on Using Iterators When Child Changes

    Visitors often replace one node with another node; V3Width and V3Const
    are major examples. A visitor which is the parent of such a replacement
    needs to be aware that calling iteration may cause the children to
    change. For example:

        // nodep->lhsp() is 0x1234000
        nodep->lhsp()->iterateAndNext(...);  // and under covers nodep->lhsp() changes
        // nodep->lhsp() is 0x5678400
        nodep->lhsp()->iterateAndNext(...);

    Will work fine, as even if the first iterate causes a new node to take
    the place of the lhsp(), that edit will update nodep->lhsp() and the
    second call will correctly see the change. Alternatively:

        lp = nodep->lhsp();
        // nodep->lhsp() is 0x1234000, lp is 0x1234000
        lp->iterateAndNext(...); **lhsp=NULL;** // and under covers nodep->lhsp() changes
        // nodep->lhsp() is 0x5678400, lp is 0x1234000
        lp->iterateAndNext(...);

    This will cause bugs or a core dump, as lp is a dangling pointer. Thus
    it is advisable to set lhsp=NULL shown in the *'s above to make sure
    these dangles are avoided. Another alternative used in special cases
    mostly in V3Width is to use acceptSubtreeReturnEdits, which operates on
    a single node and returns the new pointer if any. Note
    acceptSubtreeReturnEdits does not follow nextp() links.

        lp = lp->acceptSubtreeReturnEdits()

  Identifying derived classes

    A common requirement is to identify the specific "AstNode" class we are
    dealing with. For example a visitor might not implement separate "visit"
    methods for "AstIf" and "AstGenIf", but just a single method for the
    base class:

      void visit (AstNodeIf* nodep, AstNUser* vup)

    However that method might want to specify additional code if it is
    called for "AstGenIf". Verilator does this by providing a
    "castSOMETYPE()" method for each possible node type, using C++
    "dynamic_cast". This either returns a pointer to the object cast to that
    type (if it is of class "SOMETYPE", or a derived class of "SOMETYPE") or
    else NULL. So our "visit" method could use:

      if (nodep->castAstGenIf()) {
          <code specific to AstGenIf>
      }

    A common test is for "AstNetlist", which is the node at the root of the
    AST.

TESTING

    For an overview of how to write a test see the BUGS section of the
    Verilator primary manual.

    It is important to add tests for failures as well as success (for
    example to check that an error message is correctly triggered).

    Tests that fail should by convention have the suffix "_bad" in their
    name, and include "fails => 1" in either their "compile" or "execute"
    step as appropriate.

  Preparing to Run Tests

    For all tests to pass you must install the following packages:

    * SystemC to compile the SystemC outputs, see http://systemc.org

    * Parallel::Forker from CPAN to run tests in parallel, you can install
    this with e.g. "sudo cpan install Parallel::Forker".

    * vcddiff to find differences in VCD outputs. See the readme at
    https://github.com/veripool/vcddiff

  Controlling the Test Driver

    Test drivers are written in PERL. All invoke the main test driver
    script, which can provide detailed help on all the features available
    when writing a test driver.

      test_regress/t/driver.pl --help

    For convenience, a summary of the most commonly used features is
    provided here. All drivers require a call to "compile" subroutine to
    compile the test. For run-time tests, this is followed by a call to the
    "execute" subroutine. Both of these functions can optionally be provided
    with a hash table as argument specifying additional options.

    The test driver assumes by default that the source Verilog file name
    matches the PERL driver name. So a test whose driver is "t/t_mytest.pl"
    will expect a Verilog source file "t/t_mytest.v". This can be changed
    using the "top_filename" subroutine, for example

      top_filename("t/t_myothertest.v");

    By default all tests will run with major simulators (Icarus Verilog, NC,
    VCS, ModelSim) as well as Verilator, to allow results to be compared.
    However if you wish a test only to be used with Verilator, you can use
    the following:

      $Self->{vlt} or $Self->skip("Verilator only test");

    Of the many options that can be set through arguments to "compiler" and
    "execute", the following are particularly useful:

    "verilator_flags2"
        A list of flags to be passed to verilator when compiling.

    "fails"
        Set to 1 to indicate that the compilation or execution is intended
        to fail.

    For example the following would specify that compilation requires two
    defines and is expected to fail.

      compile (
          verilator_flags2 => ["-DSMALL_CLOCK -DGATED_COMMENT"],
          fails => 1,
          );

  Regression Testing for Developers

    Developers will also want to call ./configure with two extra flags:

    --enable-ccwarn
        Causes the build to stop on warnings as well as errors. A good way
        to ensure no sloppy code gets added, however it can be painful when
        it comes to testing, since third party code used in the tests (e.g.
        SystemC) may not be warning free.

    --enable-longtests
        In addition to the standard C, SystemC tests also run the tests in
        the "test_verilated" and "test_regress" directories when using *make
        test*. This is disabled by default as SystemC installation problems
        would otherwise falsely indicate a Verilator problem.

    When enabling the long tests, some additional PERL modules are needed,
    which you can install using cpan.

        cpan install Unix::Processors

    There are some traps to avoid when running regression tests

    *   When checking the MANIFEST, the test will barf on unexpected code in
        the Verilator tree. So make sure to keep any such code outside the
        tree.

    *   Not all Linux systems install Perldoc by default. This is needed for
        the *--help* option to Verilator, and also for regression testing.
        This can be installed using cpan:

            cpan install Pod::Perldoc

        Many Linux systems also offer a standard package for this. Red
        Hat/Fedora/Centos offer *perl-Pod-Perldoc*, while
        Debian/Ubuntu/Linux Mint offer *perl-doc*.

    *   Running regression may exhaust resources on some Linux systems,
        particularly file handles and user processes. Increase these to
        respectively 16,384 and 4,096. The method of doing this is system
        dependent, but on Fedora Linux it would require editing the
        "/etc/security/limits.conf" file as root.

DEBUGGING

  --debug

    When you run with --debug there are two primary output file types placed
    into the obj_dir, .tree and .dot files.

  .dot output

    Dot files are dumps of internal graphs in Graphviz
    <http://www.graphviz.org/> dot format. When a dot file is dumped,
    Verilator will also print a line on stdout that can be used to format
    the output, for example:

        dot -Tps -o ~/a.ps obj_dir/Vtop_foo.dot

    You can then print a.ps. You may prefer gif format, which doesn't get
    scaled so can be more useful with large graphs.

    For dynamic graph viewing consider ZGRViewer
    <http://zvtm.sourceforge.net/zgrviewer.html>. If you know of better
    viewers let us know; ZGRViewer isn't great for large graphs.

  .tree output

    Tree files are dumps of the AST Tree and are produced between every
    major algorithmic stage. An example:

         NETLIST 0x90fb00 <e1> {a0}
        1: MODULE 0x912b20 <e8822> {a8}  top  L2 [P]
       *1:2: VAR 0x91a780 <e74#> {a22} @dt=0xa2e640(w32)  out_wide [O] WIRE
        1:2:1: BASICDTYPE 0xa2e640 <e2149> {e24} @dt=this(sw32)  integer kwd=integer range=[31:0]

        The following summarizes the above example dump, with more detail on
        each field in the section below.

        "1:2:" indicates the hierarchy of the "VAR" is the "op2p" pointer
        under the "MODULE", which in turn is the "op1p" pointer under the
        "NETLIST"

        "VAR" is the AstNodeType.

        "0x91a780" is the address of this node.

        "<e74>" means the 74th edit to the netlist was the last modification
        to this node.

        "{a22}" indicates this node is related to line 22 in the source
        filename "a", where "a" is the first file read, "z" the 26th, and
        "aa" the 27th.

        "@dt=0x..." indicates the address of the data type this node
        contains.

        "w32" indicates the width is 32 bits.

        "out_wide" is the name of the node, in this case the name of the
        variable.

        "[O]" are flags which vary with the type of node, in this case it
        means the variable is an output.

    In more detail the following fields are dumped common to all nodes. They
    are produced by the "AstNode::dump()" method:

    Tree Hierarchy
        The dump lines begin with numbers and colons to indicate the child
        node hierarchy. As noted above in "Key Classes Used in the Verilator
        Flow", "AstNode" has lists of items at the same level in the AST,
        connected by the "nextp()" and "prevp()" pointers. These appear as
        nodes at the same level. For example after inlining:

             NETLIST 0x929c1c8 <e1> {a0} w0
            1: MODULE 0x92bac80 <e3144> {e14} w0  TOP_t  L1 [P]
            1:1: CELLINLINE 0x92bab18 <e3686#> {e14} w0  v -> t
            1:1: CELLINLINE 0x92bc1d8 <e3688#> {e24} w0  v__DOT__i_test_gen -> test_gen
            ...
            1: MODULE 0x92b9bb0 <e503> {e47} w0  test_gen  L3
            ...

    AstNode type
        The textual name of this node AST type (always in capitals). Many of
        these correspond directly to Verilog entities (for example "MODULE"
        and "TASK"), but others are internal to Verialtor (for example
        "NETLIST" and "BASICDTYPE").

    Address of the node
        A hexadecimal address of the node in memory. Useful for examining
        with the debugger.

    Last edit number
        Of the form "<ennnn>" or "<ennnn#>" , where "nnnn" is the number of
        the last edit to modify this node. The trailing "#" indicates the
        node has been edited since the last tree dump (which typically means
        in the last refinement or optimization pass). GDB can watch for
        this, see "Debugging with GDB".

    Source file and line
        Of the form "{xxnnnn}", where C{xx} is the filename letter (or
        letters) and "nnnn" is the line number within that file. The first
        file is "a", the 26th is "z", the 27th is "aa" and so on.

    User pointers
        Shows the value of the node's user1p...user5p, if non-NULL.

    Data type
        Many nodes have an explicit data type. "@dt=0x..." indicates the
        address of the data type (AstNodeDType) this node uses.

        If a data type is present and is numeric, it then prints the width
        of the item. This field is a sequence of flag characters and width
        data as follows:

        "s" if the node is signed.

        "d" if the node is a double (i.e a floating point entity).

        "w" always present, indicating this is the width field.

        "u" if the node is unsized.

        "/nnnn" if the node is unsized, where "nnnn" is the minimum width.

    Name of the entity represented by the node if it exists
        For example for a "VAR" it is the name of the variable.

    Many nodes follow these fields with additional node specific
    information. Thus the "VARREF" node will print either "[LV]" or "[RV]"
    to indicate a left value or right value, followed by the node of the
    variable being referred to. For example:

        1:2:1:1: VARREF 0x92c2598 <e509> {e24} w0  clk [RV] <- VAR 0x92a2e90 <e79> {e18} w0  clk [I] INPUT

    In general, examine the "dump()" method in "V3AstNodes.cpp" of the node
    type in question to determine additional fields that may be printed.

    The "MODULE" has a list of "CELLINLINE" nodes referred to by its
    "op1p()" pointer, connected by "nextp()" and "prevp()" pointers.

    Similarly the "NETLIST" has a list of modules referred to by its
    "op1p()" pointer.

  Debugging with GDB

    The test_regress/driver.pl script accepts --debug --gdb to start
    Verilator under gdb and break when an error is hit or the program is
    about to exit. You can also use --debug --gdbbt to just backtrace and
    then exit gdb. To debug the Verilated executable, use --gdbsim.

    If you wish to start Verilator under GDB (or another debugger), then you
    can use --debug and look at the underlying invocation of verilator_dgb.
    For example

      t/t_alw_dly.pl --debug

    shows it invokes the command:

      ../verilator_bin_dbg --prefix Vt_alw_dly --x-assign unique --debug
        -cc -Mdir obj_dir/t_alw_dly --debug-check -f input.vc t/t_alw_dly.v

    Start GDB, then "start" with the remaining arguments.

      gdb ../verilator_bin_dbg
      ...
      (gdb) start --prefix Vt_alw_dly --x-assign unique --debug -cc -Mdir
                obj_dir/t_alw_dly --debug-check  -f input.vc t/t_alw_dly.v
                > obj_dir/t_alw_dly/vlt_compile.log
      ...
      Temporary breakpoint 1, main (argc=13, argv=0xbfffefa4, env=0xbfffefdc)
          at ../Verilator.cpp:615
      615         ios::sync_with_stdio();
      (gdb)

    You can then continue execution with breakpoints as required.

    To break at a specific edit number which changed a node (presumably to
    find what made a <e####> line in the tree dumps):

       watch AstNode::s_editCntGbl==####

    To print a node:

       pn nodep
       # or: call nodep->dumpGdb() # aliased to "pn" in src/.gdbinit
       pnt nodep
       # or: call nodep->dumpTreeGdb()  # aliased to "pnt" in src/.gdbinit

    When GDB halts, it is useful to understand that the backtrace will
    commonly show the iterator functions between each invocation of "visit"
    in the backtrace. You will typically see a frame sequence something like

      ...
      visit()
      iterateChildren()
      iterateAndNext()
      accept()
      visit()
      ...

ADDING A NEW FEATURE

    Generally what would you do to add a new feature?

    1.  File a bug (if there isn't already) so others know what you're
        working on.

    2.  Make a testcase in the test_regress/t/t_EXAMPLE format, see TESTING.

    3.  If grammar changes are needed, look at the git version of
        VerilogPerl's src/VParseGrammar.y, as this grammar supports the full
        SystemVerilog language and has a lot of back-and-forth with
        Verilator's grammar. Copy the appropriate rules to src/verilog.y and
        modify the productions.

    4.  If a new Ast type is needed, add it to V3AstNodes.h.

    Now you can run "test_regress/t/t_{new testcase}.pl --debug" and it'll
    probably fail but you'll see a
    test_regress/obj_dir/t_{newtestcase}/*.tree file which you can examine
    to see if the parsing worked. See also the sections above on debugging.

    Modify the later visitor functions to process the new feature as needed.

  Adding a new pass

    For more substantial changes you may need to add a new pass. The
    simplest way to do this is to copy the ".cpp" and ".h" files from an
    existing pass. You'll need to add a call into your pass from the
    "process()" function in "src/verilator.cpp".

    To get your pass to build you'll need to add its binary filename to the
    list in "src/Makefile_obj.in" and reconfigure.

DISTRIBUTION

    The latest version is available from <http://www.veripool.org/>.

    Copyright 2008-2015 by Wilson Snyder. Verilator 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.

