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[libreriscv.git] / HDL_workflow.mdwn
1 # HDL workflow
2
3 This section describes the workflow and some best practices for developing
4 the Libre-SoC hardware. We use nmigen, yosys and symbiyosys, and this
5 page is intended not just to help you get set up, it is intended to
6 help advise you of some tricks and practices that will help you become
7 effective team contributors.
8
9 It is particularly important to bear in mind that we are not just
10 "developing code", here: we are creating a "lasting legacy educational
11 resource" for other people to learn from, and for businesses and students
12 alike to be able to use, learn from and augment for their own purposes.
13
14 It is also important to appreciate and respect that we are funded under
15 NLNet's Privacy and Enhanced Trust Programme <http://nlnet.nl/PET>. Full
16 transparency, readability, documentation, effective team communication
17 and formal mathematical proofs for all code at all levels is therefore
18 paramount.
19
20 # Collaboration resources
21
22 The main message here: **use the right tool for the right job**.
23
24 * mailing list: general communication and discussion.
25 * bugtracker: task-orientated, goal-orientated *focussed* discussion.
26 * ikiwiki: document store, information store, and (editable) main website
27 * git repositories: code stores (**not binary or auto-generated output store**)
28 * ftp server (<http://ftp.libre-riscv.org>): large file store.
29
30 we will add an IRC channel at some point when there are enough people
31 to warrant having one.
32
33 ## Main contact method: mailing list
34
35 To respect the transparency requirements, conversations need to be
36 public and archived (i.e not skype, not telegram, not discord,
37 and anyone seriously suggesting slack will be thrown to the
38 lions). Therefore we have a mailing list. Everything goes through
39 there. <http://lists.libre-riscv.org/mailman/listinfo/libre-riscv-dev>
40 therefore please do google "mailing list etiquette" and at the very
41 minimum look up and understand the following:
42
43 * This is a technical mailing list with complex topics. Top posting
44 is completely inappropriate. Don't do it unless you have mitigating
45 circumstances, and even then please apologise and explain ("hello sorry
46 using phone at airport flight soon, v. quick reply: ....")
47 * Always trim context but do not cut excessively to the point where people
48 cannot follow the discussion. Especially do not cut the attribution
49 ("On monday xxx wrote")
50 * Use inline replies i.e. reply at the point in the relevant part of
51 the conversation, as if you were actually having a conversation.
52 * Follow standard IETF reply formatting, using ">" for cascaded
53 indentation of other people's replies. If using gmail, please: SWITCH
54 OFF RICH TEXT EDITING.
55 * Please for god's sake do not use "my replies are in a different
56 colour". Only old and highly regarded people still using AOL are allowed
57 to get away with that (such as Mitch).
58 * Start a new topic with a relevant subject line. If an existing
59 discussion changes direction, change the subject line to reflect the
60 new topic (or start a new conversation entirely, without using the
61 "reply" button)
62 * DMARC is a pain on the neck. Try to avoid GPG signed messages. sigh.
63 * Don't send massive attachments. Put them online (no, not on facebook or
64 google drive or anywhere else that demands privacy violations) and provide
65 the link. Which should not require any kind of login to access. ask the
66 listadmin if you don't have anywhere suitable: FTP access can be arranged.
67
68 If discussions result in any actionable items, it is important not to
69 lose track of them. Create a bugreport, find the discussion in the
70 archives <http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/>,
71 and put the link actually in the bugtracker as one of the comments.
72
73 At some point in any discussion, the sudden realisation may dawn on one
74 or more people that this is an "actionable" discussion. at that point
75 it may become better to use <http://bugs.libre-riscv.org>
76 itself to continue the discussion rather than to keep on dropping copies
77 of links into the bugtracker. The bugtracker sends copies of comments
78 *to* the list however this is 'one-way' (note from lkcl: because this
79 involves running an automated perl script from email, on every email,
80 on the server, that is a high security risk, and i'm not doing it. sorry.)
81
82 Also, please do not use the mailing list as an "information or document
83 store or poor-man's editor". We have the wiki for that. Edit a page and
84 tell people what you did (summarise rather than drop the entire contents
85 at the list) and include the link to the page.
86
87 Or, if it is more appropriate, commit a document (or source code)
88 into the relevant git repository then look up the link in the gitweb
89 source tree browser and post that (in the bugtracker or mailing list)
90 See <http://git.libre-riscv.org>
91
92 ## Bugtracker
93
94 bugzilla. old and highly effective. sign up in the usual way. any
95 problems, ask on the list.
96
97 Please do not ask for the project to be transferred to github or other
98 proprietary nonfree service "because it's soooo convenient", as the
99 lions are getting wind and gout from overfeeding on that one.
100
101 ## ikiwiki
102
103 Runs the main libre-riscv.org site (including this page). effective,
104 stunningly light on resources, and uses a git repository not a database.
105 That means it can be edited offline.
106
107 Usual deal: register an account and you can start editing and contributing
108 straight away.
109
110 Hint: to create a new page, find a suitable page that would link to it,
111 first, then put the link in of the page you want to create, as if the
112 page already exists. Save that page, and you will find a questionmark
113 next to the new link you created. click that link, and it will fire up a
114 "create new page" editor.
115
116 Hint again: the wiki is backed by a git repository. Don't go overboard
117 but at the same time do not be afraid that you might "damage" or "lose"
118 pages. Although it would be a minor pain, the pages can always be
119 reverted or edited by the sysadmins to restore things if you get in a tiz.
120
121 Assistance in creating a much better theme greatly appreciated. e.g.
122 <http://www.math.cmu.edu/~gautam/sj/blog/20140720-ikiwiki-navbar.html>
123
124 ## git
125
126 we use git. more on this below. we also use gitolite3 running on a
127 dedicated server. again, it is extremely effective and low resource
128 utilisation. reminder: lions are involved if github is mentioned.
129
130 gitweb is provided which does a decent job. <http://git.libre-riscv.org>
131
132 ## ftp server
133
134 <http://ftp.libre-riscv.org> is available for storing large files
135 that do not belong in a git repository, if we have (or ever need)
136 any. images (etc.) if small and appropriate should go into the
137 wiki, however .tgz archives (etc.) and, at some point, binaries,
138 should be on the ftp server.
139
140 ask on the list if you have a file that belongs on the ftp server.
141
142 ## server
143
144 as an aside: all this is "old school" and run on a single core 512MB
145 VM with only a 20GB HDD allocation. it costs only 8 GBP per month from
146 mythic-beasts and means that the project is in no way dependent on anyone
147 else - not microsoft, not google, not facebook, not amazon.
148
149 we tried gitlab. it didn't go well. please don't ask to replace the
150 above extremely resource-efficient resources with it.
151
152 # Hardware
153
154 RAM is the biggest requirement. Minimum 16GB, the more the better (32
155 or 64GB starts to reach "acceptable" levels. Disk space is not hugely
156 critical: 256GB SSD should be more than adequate. Simulations and
157 FPGA compilations however are where raw processing power is a must.
158 High end Graphics Cards are nonessential.
159
160 What is particularly useful is to have hi-res screens (curved is
161 *strongly* recommended if the LCD is over 24in wide, to avoid eyeballs
162 going "prism" through longterm use), and to have several of them: the
163 more the better. Either a DisplayLink UD160A (or more modern variant)
164 or simply using a second machine (lower spec hardware because it will
165 run editors) is really effective.
166
167 Also it is really recommended to have a UHD monitor (4k - 3840x2160),
168 or at least 2560x1200. If given a choice, 4:3 aspect ratio is better
169 than 16:9 particularly when using several of them. However, caveat
170 (details below): please when editing do not assume that everyone will
171 have access to such high resolution screens.
172
173 # Operating System
174
175 First install and become familiar with Debian (ubuntu if you absolutely
176 must) for standardisation cross-team and so that toolchain installation
177 is greatly simplified. yosys in particular warns that trying to use
178 Windows, BSD or MacOS will get you into a world of pain.
179
180 Only a basic GUI desktop is necessary: fvwm2, xfce4, lxde are perfectly
181 sufficient (alongside wicd-gtk for network management). Other more
182 complex desktops can be used however may consume greater resources.
183
184 # editors and editing
185
186 Whilst this is often a personal choice, the fact that many editors are
187 GUI based and run fullscreen with the entire right hand side *and* middle
188 *and* the majority of the left side of the hi-res screen entirely unused
189 and bereft of text leaves experienced developers both amused and puzzled.
190
191 At the point where such fullscreen users commit code with line lengths
192 well over 160 characters, that amusement quickly evaporates.
193
194 Where the problems occur with fullscreen editor usage is when a project
195 is split into dozens if not hundreds of small files (as this one is). At
196 that point it becomes pretty much essential to have as many as six to
197 eight files open *and on-screen* at once, without overlaps i.e. not in
198 hidden tabs, next to at least two if not three additional free and clear
199 terminals into which commands are regularly and routinely typed (make,
200 git commit, nosetests3 etc). Illustrated with the following 3840x2160
201 screenshot (click to view full image), where *every one* of those 80x70
202 xterm windows is *relevant to the task at hand*.
203
204 [[!img 2020-01-24_11-56.png size=640x ]]
205
206 (hint/tip: fvwm2 set up with "mouse-over to raise focus, rather than
207 additionally requiring a mouseclick, can save a huge amount of cumulative
208 development time here, switching between editor terminal(s) and the
209 command terminals).
210
211 Once this becomes necessary, it it turn implies that having greater
212 than 80 chars per line - and running editors fullscreen - is a severe
213 hindance to an essential *and highly effective* workflow technique.
214
215 Additionally, care should be taken to respect that not everyone will have
216 200+ column editor windows and the eyesight of a hawk. They may only have
217 a 1280 x 800 laptop which barely fits two 80x53 xterms side by side.
218 Consequently, having excessively long functions is also a hindrance to
219 others, as such developers with limited screen resources would need to
220 continuously page-up and page-down to read the code even of a single
221 function, in full.
222
223 This helps explain in part, below, why compliance with pep8 is enforced,
224 including its 80 character limit. In short: not everyone has the same
225 "modern" GUI workflow or has access to the same computing resources as
226 you, so please do respect that.
227
228 # Software prerequisites
229
230 Whilst many resources online advocate "sudo" in front of all root-level
231 commands below, this quickly becomes tiresome. run "sudo bash", get a
232 root prompt, and save yourself some typing.
233
234 * sudo bash
235 * apt-get install vim exuberant-ctags
236 * apt-get install build-essential
237 * apt-get install git python3.7 python3.7-dev python-nosetest3
238 * apt-get install graphviz xdot gtkwave
239 * return to user prompt (ctrl-d)
240
241 This will get you python3 and other tools that are needed. graphviz is
242 essential for showing the interconnections between cells, and gtkwave
243 is essential for debugging.
244
245 ## git
246
247 Look up good tutorials on how to use git effectively. There are so many
248 it is hard to recommend one. This is however essential. If you are not
249 comfortable with git, and you let things stay that way, it will seriously
250 impede development progress.
251
252 If working all day you should expect to be making at least two commits per
253 hour, so should become familiar with it very quickly. If you are *not*
254 doing around 2 commits per hour, something is wrong and you should read
255 the workflow instructions below more carefully, and also ask for advice
256 on the mailing list.
257
258 Worth noting: *this project does not use branches*. All code is committed
259 to master and we *require* that it be either zero-impact additions or that
260 relevant unit tests pass 100%. This ensures that people's work does not
261 get "lost" or isolated and out of touch due to major branch diversion,
262 and that people communicate and coordinate with each other.
263
264 ## yosys
265
266 Follow the source code (git clone) instructions here:
267 <http://www.clifford.at/yosys/download.html>
268
269 Do not try to use a fixed revision (currently 0.9), nmigen is evolving
270 and frequently interacts with yosys
271
272 ## symbiyosys
273
274 Follow the instructions here:
275 <https://symbiyosys.readthedocs.io/en/latest/quickstart.html#installing>
276
277 You do not have to install all of those (avy, boolector can be left
278 out if desired) however the more that are installed the more effective
279 the formal proof scripts will be (less resource utilisation in certain
280 circumstances).
281
282 ## nmigen
283
284 nmigen may be installed as follows:
285
286 * mkdir ~/src
287 * cd !$
288 * git clone https://github.com/m-labs/nmigen.git
289 * cd nmigen
290 * sudo bash
291 * python3 setup.py develop
292 * ctrl-d
293
294 testing can then be carried out with "python3 setup.py test"
295
296 ## Softfloat and sfpy
297
298 These are a test suite dependency for the ieee754fpu library, and
299 will be changed in the future to use Jacob's algorithmic numeric
300 library. In the meantime, sfpy can be built as follows:
301
302 git clone --recursive https://github.com/billzorn/sfpy.git
303 cd sfpy
304 cd SoftPosit
305 git apply ../softposit_sfpy_build.patch
306 git apply /path/to/ieee754fpu/SoftPosit.patch
307 cd ../berkely-softfloat-3
308 # Note: Do not apply the patch included in sfpy for berkely-softfloat,
309 # it contains the same changes as this one
310 git apply /path/to/ieee754fpu/berkeley-softfloat.patch
311 cd ..
312
313 # install dependencies
314 python3 -m venv .env
315 . .env/bin/activate
316 pip3 install --upgrade -r requirements.txt
317
318 # build
319 make lib -j8
320 make cython
321 make inplace -j8
322 make wheel
323
324 # install
325 deactivate # deactivates venv, optional
326 pip3 install dist/sfpy*.whl
327
328 You can test your installation by doing the following:
329
330 python3
331 >>> from sfpy import *
332 >>> Posit8(1.3)
333
334 It should print out `Posit8(1.3125)`
335
336 ## Coriolis2
337
338 See [[coriolis2]] page, for those people doing layout work.
339
340 # Registering for git repository access
341
342 After going through the onboarding process and having agreed to take
343 responsibility for certain tasks, ask on the mailing list for git
344 repository access, sending in a public key (id_rsa.pub). If you do
345 not have one then generate it with ssh-keygen -t rsa. You will find it
346 in ~/.ssh
347
348 NEVER SEND ANYONE THE PRIVATE KEY. By contrast the public key, on
349 account of being public, is perfectly fine to make... err... public.
350
351 Create a file ~/.ssh/config with the following lines:
352
353 Host git.libre-riscv.org
354 Port 922
355
356 Wait for the Project Admin to confirm that the ssh key has been added
357 to the required repositories. Once confirmed, you can clone any of the
358 repos at http://git.libre-riscv.org:
359
360 git clone gitolite3@git.libre-riscv.org:REPONAME.git
361
362 Alternatively, the .ssh/config can be skipped and this used:
363
364 git clone ssh://gitolite3@git.libre-riscv.org:922/REPONAME.git
365
366 # git configuration
367
368 Although there are methods online which describe how (and why) these
369 settings are normally done, honestly it is simpler and easier to open
370 ~/.gitconfig and add them by hand.
371
372 core.autocrlf is a good idea to ensure that anyone adding DOS-formatted
373 files they don't become a pain. pull.rebase is something that is greatly
374 preferred for this project because it avoids the mess of "multiple
375 extra merge git tree entries", and branch.autosetuprebase=always will,
376 if you want it, always ensure that a new git checkout is set up with rebase.
377
378 [core]
379 autocrlf = input
380 [push]
381 default = simple
382 [pull]
383 rebase = true
384 [branch]
385 autosetuprebase = always
386
387 # Checking out the HDL repositories
388
389 * mkdir ~/src
390 * cd !$
391 * git clone gitolite3@git.libre-riscv.org:nmutil.git
392 * git clone gitolite3@git.libre-riscv.org:ieee754fpu.git
393 * git clone gitolite3@git.libre-riscv.org:soc.git
394
395 In each of these directories, in the order listed, track down the
396 setup.py file, then, as root (sudo bash), run the following:
397
398 * python3 setup.py develop
399
400 The reason for using "develop" mode is that the code may be edited
401 in-place yet still imported "globally". There are variants on this theme
402 for multi-user machine use however it is often just easier to get your
403 own machine these days.
404
405 The reason for the order is because soc depends on ieee754fpu, and
406 ieee754fpu depends on nmutil
407
408 If "python3 setup.py install" is used it is a pain: edit, then
409 install. edit, then install. It gets extremely tedious, hence why
410 "develop" was created.
411
412 # Development Rules
413
414 team communication:
415
416 * communicate on the mailing list or the bugtracker an intent to take
417 responsibility for a particular task.
418 * assign yourself as the bug's owner
419 * *keep in touch* about what you are doing, and why you are doing it.
420 * if you cannot do something that you have taken responsibility for,
421 then unless it is a dire personal emergency please say so, on-list. we
422 won't mind. we'll help sort it out.
423
424 regarding the above it is important that you read, understand, and agree
425 to the [[charter]] because the charter is about ensuring that we operate
426 as an effective organisation. It's *not* about "setting rules and meting
427 out punishment".
428
429 for actual code development:
430
431 * plan in advance to write not just code but a full test suite for
432 that code. **this is not optional**. large python projects that do not
433 have unit tests **FAIL** (see separate section below).
434 * only commit code that has been tested (or is presently unused). other
435 people will be depending on you, so do take care not to screw up.
436 not least because, as it says in the [[charter]] it will be your
437 responsibility to fix. that said, do not feel intimidated: ask for help
438 and advice, and you'll get it straight away.
439 * commit often. several times a day, and "git push" it. this is
440 collaboration. if something is left even overnight uncommitted and not
441 pushed so that other people can see it, it is a red flag. if you find
442 yourself thinking "i'll commit it when it's finished" or "i don't want to
443 commit something that people might criticise" *this is not collaboration*,
444 it is making yourself a bottleneck. pair-programming is supposed to help
445 avoid this kind of thing however pair-programming is difficult to organise
446 for remote collaborative libre projects (suggestions welcomed here)
447 * **do not commit autogenerated output**. write a shell script and commit
448 that, or add a Makefile to run the command that generates the output, but
449 **do not** add the actual output of **any** command to the repository.
450 ever. this is really important. even if it is a human-readable file
451 rather than a binary object file.
452 it is very common to add pdfs (the result of running latex2pdf) or configure.in (the result of running automake), they are an absolute nuisance and interfere hugely with git diffs, as well as waste hard disk space *and* network bandwidth. don't do it.
453 * if the command needed to create any given autogenerated output is not
454 currently in the list of known project dependencies, first consult on
455 the list if it is okay to make that command become a hard dependency of
456 the project (hint: java, node.js php and .NET commands may cause delays
457 in response time due to other list participants laughing hysterically),
458 and after a decision is made, document the dependency and how its source
459 code is obtained and built (hence why it has to be discussed carefully)
460 * if you find yourself repeating commands regularly, chances are high
461 that someone else will need to run them, too. clearly this includes
462 yourself, therefore, to make everyone's lives easier including your own,
463 put them into a .sh shell script (and/or a Makefile), commit them to
464 the repository and document them at the very minimum in the README,
465 INSTALL.txt or somewhere in a docs folder as appropriate. if unsure,
466 ask on the mailing list for advice.
467 * edit files making minimal *single purpose* modifications (even if
468 it involves multiple files. Good extreme example: globally changing
469 a function name across an entire codebase is one purpose, one commit,
470 yet hundreds of files. miss out one of those files, requiring multiple
471 commits, and it actually becomes a nuisance).
472 * prior to committing make sure that relevant unit tests pass, or that
473 the change is a zero-impact addition (no unit tests fail at the minimum)
474 * keep working code working **at all times**. find ways to ensure that this is the case. examples include writing alternative classes that replace existing functionality and adding runtime optiobs to select between old and new code.
475 * commit no more than around 5 to 10 lines at a time, with a CLEAR message
476 (no "added this" or "changed that").
477 * if as you write you find that the commit message involves a *list* of
478 changes or the word "and", then STOP. do not proceed: it is a "red flag"
479 that the commit has not been properly broken down into separate-purpose
480 commits. ask for advice on-list on how to proceed.
481 * if it is essential to commit large amounts of code, ensure that it
482 is **not** in use **anywhere** by any other code. then make a *small*
483 (single purpose) followup commit which actually puts that code into use.
484
485 this last rule is kinda flexible, because if you add the code *and* add
486 the unit test *and* added it into the main code *and* ran all relevant
487 unit tests on all cascade-impacted areas by that change, that's perfectly
488 fine too. however if it is the end of a day, and you need to stop and
489 do not have time to run the necessary unit tests, do *not* commit the
490 change which integrates untested code: just commit the new code (only)
491 and follow up the next day *after* running the full relevant unit tests.
492
493 the reason for all the above is because python is a weakly typed language.
494 make one tiny change at the base level of the class hierarchy and the
495 effect may be disastrous.
496
497 it is therefore worth reiterating: make absolutely certain that you *only*
498 commit working code or zero-impact code.
499
500 therefore, if you are absolutely certain that a new addition (new file,
501 new class, new function) is not going to have any side-effects, committing
502 it (a large amount of code) is perfectly fine.
503
504 as a general rule, however, do not use this an an excuse to write code
505 first then write unit tests as an afterthought. write *less* code *in
506 conjunction* with its (more basic) unit tests, instead. then, folliw up with
507 additions and improvements.
508
509 the reason for separating out commits to single purpose only becomes
510 obvious (and regretted if not followed) when, months later, a mistake
511 has to be tracked down and reverted. if the commit does not have an
512 easy-to-find message, it cannot even be located, and once found, if the
513 commit confuses several unrelated changes, not only the diff is larger
514 than it should be, the reversion process becomes extremely painful.
515
516 * all code needs to conform to pep8. use either pep8checker or better
517 run autopep8. however whenever committing whitespace changes, *make a
518 separate commit* with a commit message "whitespace" or "autopep8 cleanup".
519 * pep8 REQUIRES no more than 80 chars per line. this is non-negotiable. if
520 you think you need greater than 80 chars, it *fundamentally* indicates
521 poor code design. split the code down further into smaller classes
522 and functions.
523 * TBD there is a docstring checker. at the minimum make sure to have
524 an SPD license header, module header docstring, class docstring and
525 function docstrings on at least non-obvious functions.
526 * make liberal but not excessive use of comments. describe a group of
527 lines of code, with terse but useful comments describing the purpose,
528 documenting any side-effects, and anything that could trip you or other
529 developers up. unusual coding techniques should *definitely* contain
530 a warning.
531 * unless they are very closely related, only have one module (one class)
532 per file. a file only 25 lines long including imports and docstrings
533 is perfectly fine however don't force yourself. again, if unsure,
534 ask on-list.
535 * *keep files short and simple*. see below as to why
536 * create a decent directory hierarchy but do not go mad. ask for advice
537 if unsure
538 * please do not use "from module import \*". it is extremely bad practice,
539 causes unnecessary resource utilisation, makes code readability and
540 tracking extremely difficult, and results in unintended side-effects.
541 * try to keep both filenames and variable names short but not ridiculously
542 obtuse. an interesting compromise on imports is "from ridiculousfilename
543 import longsillyname as lsn", and to assign variables as well: "comb =
544 m.d.comb" followed by multiple "comb += nmigen_stmt" lines is a good trick
545 that can reduce code indentation by 6 characters without reducing clarity.
546
547 regarding code structure: we decided to go with small modules that are
548 both easy to analyse, as well as fit onto a single page and be readable
549 when displayed as a visual graph on a full UHD monitor. this is done
550 as follows:
551
552 * using the capability of nmigen (TODO crossref to example) output the
553 module to a yosys ilang (.il) file
554 * in a separate terminal window, run yosys
555 * at the yosys prompt type "read_ilang modulename.il"
556 * type "show top" and a graphviz window should appear. note that typing
557 show, then space, then pressing the tab key twice will give a full list
558 of submodules (one of which will be "top")
559
560 you can now fullsize the graphviz window and scroll around. if it looks
561 reasonably obvious at 100% zoom, i.e the connections can be clearly
562 related in your mind back to the actual code (by matching the graph names
563 against signals and modules in the original nmigen code) and the words are
564 not tiny when zoomed out, and connections are not total incomprehensible
565 spaghetti, then congratulations, you have well-designed code. If not,
566 then this indicates a need to split the code further into submodules
567 and do a bit more work.
568
569 The reasons for doing a proper modularisation job are several-fold:
570
571 * firstly, we will not be doing a full automated layout-and-hope
572 using alliance/coriolis2, we will be doing leaf-node thru tree node
573 half-automated half-manual layout, finally getting to the floorplan,
574 then revising and iteratively adjusting.
575 * secondly, examining modules at the gate level (or close to it) is just
576 good practice. poor design creeps in by *not* knowing what the tools
577 are actually doing (word to experienced developers: yes, we know that
578 the yosys graph != final netlist).
579 * thirdly, unit testing, particularly formal proofs, is far easier on
580 small sections of code, and complete in a reasonable time.
581
582 ## Special warning / alert to vim users!
583
584 Some time around the beginning of 2019 some bright spark decided that
585 an "auto-recommend-completion-of-stuff" option would be a nice, shiny
586 idea to enable by default from that point onwards.
587
588 This incredibly annoying "feature" results in tabs (or spaces) being
589 inserted "on your behalf" when you press return on one line, for your
590 "convenience" of not needing to type lots of spaces/tabs just to get
591 to the same indentation level.
592
593 Of course, this "feature", if you press return on one line in edit
594 mode and then press "escape", leaves a bundle-of-joy extraneous
595 whitespace **exactly** where you don't want it, and didn't ask for it,
596 pooped all over your file.
597
598 Therefore, *please*: **before** running "git commit", get into the
599 habit of always running "git diff", and at the very minimum
600 speed-skim the entire diff, looking for tell-tale "red squares"
601 (these show up under bash diff colour-syntax-highlighting) that
602 inform you that, without your knowledge or consent, vim has
603 "helpfully" inserted extraneous whitespace.
604
605 Remove them **before** git committing because they are not part
606 of the actual desired code-modifications, and committing them
607 is a major and constant distraction for reviewers about actual
608 important things like "the code that actually *usefully* was
609 modified for that commit"
610
611 This has the useful side-effect of ensuring that, right before
612 the commit, you've got the actual diff right in front of you
613 in the xterm window, on which you can base the "commit message".
614
615 ## Unit tests
616
617 This deserves its own special section. It is extremely important to
618 appreciate that without unit tests, python projects are simply unviable.
619 Python itself has over 25,000 individual tests.
620
621 This can be quite overwhelming to a beginner developer, especially one
622 used to writing scripts of only 100 lines in length.
623
624 Thanks to Samuel Falvo we learned that writing unit tests as a formal
625 proof is not only shorter, it's also far more readable and also, if
626 written properly, provides 100% coverage of corner-cases that would
627 otherwise be overlooked or require tens to hundreds of thousands of
628 tests to be run.
629
630 No this is not a joke or even remotely hypothetical, this is an actual
631 real-world problem.
632
633 The ieee754fpu requires several hundreds of thousands of tests to be
634 run (currently needing several days to run them all), and even then we
635 cannot be absolutely certain that all possible combinations of input have
636 been tested. With 2^128 permutations to try with 2 64 bit FP numbers
637 it is simply impossible to even try.
638
639 This is where formal proofs come into play.
640
641 Samuel illustrated to us that "ordinary" unit tests can then be written
642 to *augment* the formal ones, serving the purpose of illustrating how
643 to use the module, more than anything.
644
645 However it is appreciated that writing formal proofs is a bit of a
646 black art. This is where team collaboration particularly kicks in,
647 so if you need help, ask on the mailing list.
648
649 # TODO Tutorials
650
651 Find appropriate tutorials for nmigen and yosys, as well as symbiyosys.
652
653 * Although a verilog example this is very useful to do
654 <https://symbiyosys.readthedocs.io/en/latest/quickstart.html#first-step-a-simple-bmc-example>
655 * This tutorial looks pretty good and will get you started
656 <http://blog.lambdaconcept.com/doku.php?id=nmigen:nmigen_install> and
657 walks not just through simulation, it takes you through using gtkwave
658 as well.
659 * There exist several nmigen examples which are also executable
660 <https://github.com/m-labs/nmigen/tree/master/examples/> exactly as
661 described in the above tutorial (python3 filename.py -h)