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1 # Resources and Specifications
2
3 This page aims to collect all the resources and specifications we need
4 in one place for quick access. We will try our best to keep links here
5 up-to-date. Feel free to add more links here.
6
7 [[!toc ]]
8
9 # Getting Started
10
11 This section is primarily a series of useful links found online
12
13 * [FSiC2019](https://wiki.f-si.org/index.php/FSiC2019)
14 * Fundamentals to learn to get started [[3d_gpu/tutorial]]
15
16 ## Is Open Source Hardware Profitable?
17 [RaptorCS on FOSS Hardware Interview](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5Ihqg72T3c&feature=youtu.be)
18
19 # OpenPOWER ISA
20
21 * [3.0 PDF](https://openpowerfoundation.org/?resource_lib=power-isa-version-3-0)
22 * [2.07 PDF](https://openpowerfoundation.org/?resource_lib=ibm-power-isa-version-2-07-b)
23
24 ## Overview of the user ISA:
25
26 [Raymond Chen's PowerPC series](https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20180806-00/?p=99425)
27
28 ## OpenPOWER OpenFSI Spec (2016)
29
30 * [OpenPOWER OpenFSI Spec](http://openpowerfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/OpenFSI-spec-100/OpenFSI-spec-20161212.pdf)
31
32 * [OpenPOWER OpenFSI Compliance Spec](http://openpowerfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/openpower-fsi-thts-1.0/openpower-fsi-thts-20180130.pdf)
33
34 # Communities
35
36 * <https://www.reddit.com/r/OpenPOWER/>
37 * <http://lists.mailinglist.openpowerfoundation.org/pipermail/openpower-hdl-cores/>
38 * <http://lists.mailinglist.openpowerfoundation.org/pipermail/openpower-community-dev/>
39
40
41 # JTAG
42
43 * [Useful JTAG implementation reference: Design Of IEEE 1149.1 TAP Controller IP Core by Shelja, Nandakumar and Muruganantham, DOI:10.5121/csit.2016.60910](https://web.archive.org/web/20201021174944/https://airccj.org/CSCP/vol6/csit65610.pdf)
44
45 Abstract
46
47 "The objective of this work is to design and implement a TAP controller IP core compatible with IEEE 1149.1-2013 revision of the standard. The test logic architecture also includes the Test Mode Persistence controller and its associated logic. This work is expected to serve as a ready to use module that can be directly inserted in to a new digital IC designs with little modifications."
48
49 # RISC-V Instruction Set Architecture
50
51 **PLEASE UPDATE** - we are no longer implementing full RISCV, only user-space
52 RISCV
53
54 The Libre RISC-V Project is building a hybrid CPU/GPU SoC. As the name
55 of the project implies, we will be following the RISC-V ISA I due to it
56 being open-source and also because of the huge software and hardware
57 ecosystem building around it. There are other open-source ISAs but none
58 of them have the same momentum and energy behind it as RISC-V.
59
60 To fully take advantage of the RISC-V ecosystem, it is important to be
61 compliant with the RISC-V standards. Doing so will allow us to to reuse
62 most software as-is and avoid major forks.
63
64 * [Official compiled PDFs of RISC-V ISA Manual]
65 (https://github.com/riscv/riscv-isa-manual/releases/latest)
66 * [Working draft of the proposed RISC-V Bitmanipulation extension](https://github.com/riscv/riscv-bitmanip/blob/master/bitmanip-draft.pdf)
67 * [RISC-V "V" Vector Extension](https://riscv.github.io/documents/riscv-v-spec/)
68 * [RISC-V Supervisor Binary Interface Specification](https://github.com/riscv/riscv-sbi-doc/blob/master/riscv-sbi.md)
69
70 Note: As far as I know, we aren't using the RISC-V V Extension directly
71 at the moment (correction: we were never going to). However, there are many wiki pages that make a reference
72 to the V extension so it would be good to include it here as a reference
73 for comparative/informative purposes with regard to Simple-V.
74 <https://github.com/riscv/riscv-v-spec/blob/master/v-spec.adoc#vsetvlivsetvl-instructions>
75
76 # Radix MMU
77 - [Qemu emulation](https://github.com/qemu/qemu/commit/d5fee0bbe68d5e61e2d2beb5ff6de0b9c1cfd182)
78
79 # D-Cache
80
81 ## D-Cache Possible Optimizations papers and links
82 - [ACDC: Small, Predictable and High-Performance Data Cache](https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2677093)
83
84 # BW Enhancing Shared L1 Cache Design research done in cooperation with AMD
85 - [Youtube video PACT 2020 - Analyzing and Leveraging Shared L1 Caches in GPUs](https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=CGIhOnt7F6s)
86 - [Url to PDF of paper on author's website (clicking will download the pdf)](https://adwaitjog.github.io/docs/pdf/sharedl1-pact20.pdf)
87
88
89 # RTL Arithmetic SQRT, FPU etc.
90
91 ## Sqrt
92 * [Fast Floating Point Square Root](https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/5060/4e9aff0e37089c4ab9a376c3f35761ffe28b.pdf)
93 * [Reciprocal Square Root Algorithm](http://www.acsel-lab.com/arithmetic/arith15/papers/ARITH15_Takagi.pdf)
94
95 ## CORDIC and related algorithms
96
97 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=127> research into CORDIC
98 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208>
99 * [BKM (log(x) and e^x)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BKM_algorithm)
100 * [CORDIC](http://www.andraka.com/files/crdcsrvy.pdf)
101 - Does not have an easy way of computing tan(x)
102 * [zipcpu CORDIC](https://zipcpu.com/dsp/2017/08/30/cordic.html)
103 * [Low latency and Low error floating point TCORDIC](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7784797) (email Michael or Cole if you don't have IEEE access)
104 * <http://www.myhdl.org/docs/examples/sinecomp/> MyHDL version of CORDIC
105
106 ## IEEE Standard for Floating-Point Arithmetic (IEEE 754)
107
108 Almost all modern computers follow the IEEE Floating-Point Standard. Of
109 course, we will follow it as well for interoperability.
110
111 * IEEE 754-2019: <https://standards.ieee.org/standard/754-2019.html>
112
113 Note: Even though this is such an important standard used by everyone,
114 it is unfortunately not freely available and requires a payment to
115 access. However, each of the Libre RISC-V members already have access
116 to the document.
117
118 * [Lecture notes - Floating Point Appreciation](http://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~markhill/cs354/Fall2008/notes/flpt.apprec.html)
119
120 Among other things, has a nice explanation on arithmetic, rounding modes and the sticky bit.
121
122 * [What Every Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic](https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E19957-01/806-3568/ncg_goldberg.html)
123
124 Nice resource on rounding errors (ulps and epsilon) and the "table maker's dilemma".
125
126 ## Past FPU Mistakes to learn from
127
128 * [Intel Underestimates Error Bounds by 1.3 quintillion on
129 Random ASCII – tech blog of Bruce Dawson ](https://randomascii.wordpress.com/2014/10/09/intel-underestimates-error-bounds-by-1-3-quintillion/)
130 * [Intel overstates FPU accuracy 06/01/2013](http://notabs.org/fpuaccuracy)
131
132 # Khronos Standards
133
134 The Khronos Group creates open standards for authoring and acceleration
135 of graphics, media, and computation. It is a requirement for our hybrid
136 CPU/GPU to be compliant with these standards *as well* as with IEEE754,
137 in order to be commercially-competitive in both areas: especially Vulkan
138 and OpenCL being the most important. SPIR-V is also important for the
139 Kazan driver.
140
141 Thus the [[zfpacc_proposal]] has been created which permits runtime dynamic
142 switching between different accuracy levels, in userspace applications.
143
144 [**SPIR-V Main Page Link**](https://www.khronos.org/registry/spir-v/)
145
146 * [SPIR-V 1.5 Specification Revision 1](https://www.khronos.org/registry/spir-v/specs/unified1/SPIRV.html)
147 * [SPIR-V OpenCL Extended Instruction Set](https://www.khronos.org/registry/spir-v/specs/unified1/OpenCL.ExtendedInstructionSet.100.html)
148 * [SPIR-V GLSL Extended Instruction Set](https://www.khronos.org/registry/spir-v/specs/unified1/GLSL.std.450.html)
149
150 [**Vulkan Main Page Link**](https://www.khronos.org/registry/vulkan/)
151
152 * [Vulkan 1.1.122](https://www.khronos.org/registry/vulkan/specs/1.1-extensions/html/index.html)
153
154 [**OpenCL Main Page**](https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenCL/)
155
156 * [OpenCL 2.2 API Specification](https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenCL/specs/2.2/html/OpenCL_API.html)
157 * [OpenCL 2.2 Extension Specification](https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenCL/specs/2.2/html/OpenCL_Ext.html)
158 * [OpenCL 2.2 SPIR-V Environment Specification](https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenCL/specs/2.2/html/OpenCL_Env.html)
159
160 * OpenCL released the proposed OpenCL 3.0 spec for comments in april 2020
161
162 * [Announcement video](https://youtu.be/h0_syTg6TtY)
163 * [Announcement video slides (PDF)](https://www.khronos.org/assets/uploads/apis/OpenCL-3.0-Launch-Apr20.pdf)
164
165 Note: We are implementing hardware accelerated Vulkan and
166 OpenCL while relying on other software projects to translate APIs to
167 Vulkan. E.g. Zink allows for OpenGL-to-Vulkan in software.
168
169 # Graphics and Compute API Stack
170
171 I found this informative post that mentions Kazan and a whole bunch of
172 other stuff. It looks like *many* APIs can be emulated on top of Vulkan,
173 although performance is not evaluated.
174
175 <https://synappsis.wordpress.com/2017/06/03/opengl-over-vulkan-dev/>
176
177 * Pixilica is heading up an initiative to create a RISC-V graphical ISA
178
179 * [Pixilica 3D Graphical ISA Slides](https://b5792ddd-543e-4dd4-9b97-fe259caf375d.filesusr.com/ugd/841f2a_c8685ced353b4c3ea20dbb993c4d4d18.pdf)
180
181 # 3D Graphics Texture compression software and hardware
182
183 * [Proprietary Rad Game Tools Oddle Texture Software Compression](https://web.archive.org/web/20200913122043/http://www.radgametools.com/oodle.htm)
184
185 * [Blog post by one of the engineers who developed the proprietary Rad Game Tools Oddle Texture Software Compression and the Oodle Kraken decompression software and hardware decoder used in the ps5 ssd](https://archive.vn/oz0pG)
186
187 # Various POWER Communities
188 - [An effort to make a 100% Libre POWER Laptop](https://www.powerpc-notebook.org/en/)
189 The T2080 is a POWER8 chip.
190 - [Power Progress Community](https://www.powerprogress.org/campaigns/donations-to-all-the-power-progress-community-projects/)
191 Supporting/Raising awareness of various POWER related open projects on the FOSS
192 community
193 - [OpenPOWER](https://openpowerfoundation.org)
194 Promotes and ensure compliance with the Power ISA amongst members.
195 - [OpenCapi](https://opencapi.org)
196 High performance interconnect for POWER machines. One of the big advantages
197 of the POWER architecture. Notably more performant than PCIE Gen4, and is
198 designed to be layered on top of the physical PCIE link.
199 - [OpenPOWER “Virtual Coffee” Calls](https://openpowerfoundation.org/openpower-virtual-coffee-calls/)
200 Truly open bi-weekly teleconference lines for anybody interested in helping
201 advance or adopting the POWER architecture.
202
203 # Conferences
204
205 ## Free Silicon Conference
206
207 The conference brought together experts and enthusiasts who want to build
208 a complete Free and Open Source CAD ecosystem for designing analog and
209 digital integrated circuits. The conference covered the full spectrum of
210 the design process, from system architecture, to layout and verification.
211
212 * <https://wiki.f-si.org/index.php/FSiC2019#Foundries.2C_PDKs_and_cell_libraries>
213
214 * LIP6's Coriolis - a set of backend design tools:
215 <https://www-soc.lip6.fr/equipe-cian/logiciels/coriolis/>
216
217 Note: The rest of LIP6's website is in French, but there is a UK flag
218 in the corner that gives the English version.
219
220 * KLayout - Layout viewer and editor: <https://www.klayout.de/>
221
222 # The OpenROAD Project
223
224 OpenROAD seeks to develop and foster an autonomous, 24-hour, open-source
225 layout generation flow (RTL-to-GDS).
226
227 * <https://theopenroadproject.org/>
228
229 # Other RISC-V GPU attempts
230
231 * <https://fossi-foundation.org/2019/09/03/gsoc-64b-pointers-in-rv32>
232
233 * <http://bjump.org/manycore/>
234
235 * <https://resharma.github.io/RISCV32-GPU/>
236
237 TODO: Get in touch and discuss collaboration
238
239 # Tests, Benchmarks, Conformance, Compliance, Verification, etc.
240
241 ## RISC-V Tests
242
243 RISC-V Foundation is in the process of creating an official conformance
244 test. It's still in development as far as I can tell.
245
246 * //TODO LINK TO RISC-V CONFORMANCE TEST
247
248 ## IEEE 754 Testing/Emulation
249
250 IEEE 754 has no official tests for floating-point but there are
251 well-known third party tools to check such as John Hauser's TestFloat.
252
253 There is also his SoftFloat library, which is a software emulation
254 library for IEEE 754.
255
256 * <http://www.jhauser.us/arithmetic/>
257
258 Jacob is also working on an IEEE 754 software emulation library written
259 in Rust which also has Python bindings:
260
261 * Source: <https://salsa.debian.org/Kazan-team/simple-soft-float>
262 * Crate: <https://crates.io/crates/simple-soft-float>
263 * Autogenerated Docs: <https://docs.rs/simple-soft-float/>
264
265 A cool paper I came across in my research is "IeeeCC754++ : An Advanced
266 Set of Tools to Check IEEE 754-2008 Conformity" by Dr. Matthias Hüsken.
267
268 * Direct link to PDF:
269 <http://elpub.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/servlets/DerivateServlet/Derivate-7505/dc1735.pdf>
270
271 ## Khronos Tests
272
273 OpenCL Conformance Tests
274
275 * <https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenCL-CTS>
276
277 Vulkan Conformance Tests
278
279 * <https://github.com/KhronosGroup/VK-GL-CTS>
280
281 MAJOR NOTE: We are **not** allowed to say we are compliant with any of
282 the Khronos standards until we actually make an official submission,
283 do the paperwork, and pay the relevant fees.
284
285 ## Formal Verification
286
287 Formal verification of Libre RISC-V ensures that it is bug-free in
288 regards to what we specify. Of course, it is important to do the formal
289 verification as a final step in the development process before we produce
290 thousands or millions of silicon.
291
292 * Possible way to speed up our solvers for our formal proofs <https://web.archive.org/web/20201029205507/https://github.com/eth-sri/fastsmt>
293
294 * Algorithms (papers) submitted for 2018 International SAT Competition <https://web.archive.org/web/20201029205239/https://helda.helsinki.fi/bitstream/handle/10138/237063/sc2018_proceedings.pdf> <https://web.archive.org/web/20201029205637/http://www.satcompetition.org/>
295
296 Some learning resources I found in the community:
297
298 * ZipCPU: <http://zipcpu.com/> ZipCPU provides a comprehensive
299 tutorial for beginners and many exercises/quizzes/slides:
300 <http://zipcpu.com/tutorial/>
301 * Western Digital's SweRV CPU blog (I recommend looking at all their
302 posts): <https://tomverbeure.github.io/>
303 * <https://tomverbeure.github.io/risc-v/2018/11/19/A-Bug-Free-RISC-V-Core-without-Simulation.html>
304 * <https://tomverbeure.github.io/rtl/2019/01/04/Under-the-Hood-of-Formal-Verification.html>
305
306 ## Automation
307
308 * <https://www.ohwr.org/project/wishbone-gen>
309
310 # LLVM
311
312 ## Adding new instructions:
313
314 * <https://archive.fosdem.org/2015/schedule/event/llvm_internal_asm/>
315
316 # Branch Prediction
317
318 * <https://danluu.com/branch-prediction/>
319
320 # Python RTL Tools
321
322 * [Migen - a Python RTL](https://jeffrey.co.in/blog/2014/01/d-flip-flop-using-migen/)
323 * [LiTeX](https://github.com/timvideos/litex-buildenv/wiki/LiteX-for-Hardware-Engineers)
324 An SOC builder written in Python Migen DSL. Allows you to generate functional
325 RTL for a SOC configured with cache, a RISCV core, ethernet, DRAM support,
326 and parameterizeable CSRs.
327 * [Migen Tutorial](http://blog.lambdaconcept.com/doku.php?id=migen:tutorial>)
328 * There is a great guy, Robert Baruch, who has a good
329 [tutorial](https://github.com/RobertBaruch/nmigen-tutorial) on nMigen.
330 He also build an FPGA-proven Motorola 6800 CPU clone with nMigen and put
331 [the code](https://github.com/RobertBaruch/n6800) and
332 [instructional videos](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEeZWGE3PwbbjxV7_XnPSR7ouLR2zjktw)
333 online.
334 * [Minerva](https://github.com/lambdaconcept/minerva)
335 An SOC written in Python nMigen DSL
336 * Minerva example using nmigen-soc
337 <https://github.com/jfng/minerva-examples/blob/master/hello/core.py>
338 * [Using our Python Unit Tests(old)](http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2019-March/000705.html)
339 * <https://chisel.eecs.berkeley.edu/api/latest/chisel3/util/DecoupledIO.html>
340 * <http://www.clifford.at/papers/2016/yosys-synth-formal/slides.pdf>
341
342 # Other
343
344 * <https://wiki.f-si.org/index.php/FSiC2019>
345 * <https://fusesoc.net>
346 * <https://www.lowrisc.org/open-silicon/>
347 * <http://fpgacpu.ca/fpga/Pipeline_Skid_Buffer.html> pipeline skid buffer
348 * <https://pyvcd.readthedocs.io/en/latest/vcd.gtkw.html> GTKwave
349 * <http://www.sunburst-design.com/papers/CummingsSNUG2002SJ_Resets.pdf>
350 Synchronous Resets? Asynchronous Resets? I am so confused! How will I
351 ever know which to use? by Clifford E. Cummings
352 * <http://www.sunburst-design.com/papers/CummingsSNUG2008Boston_CDC.pdf>
353 Clock Domain Crossing (CDC) Design & Verification Techniques Using
354 SystemVerilog, by Clifford E. Cummings
355 In particular, see section 5.8.2: Multi-bit CDC signal passing using
356 1-deep / 2-register FIFO synchronizer.
357 * <http://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/2016/EECS-2016-143.pdf>
358 Understanding Latency Hiding on GPUs, by Vasily Volkov
359 * Efabless "Openlane" <https://github.com/efabless/openlane>
360 * Co-simulation plugin for verilator, transferring to ECP5
361 <https://github.com/vmware/cascade>
362 * Multi-read/write ported memories
363 <https://tomverbeure.github.io/2019/08/03/Multiport-Memories.html>
364 * Data-dependent fail-on-first aka "Fault-tolerant speculative vectorisation"
365 <https://arxiv.org/pdf/1803.06185.pdf>
366 * OpenPOWER Foundation Membership
367 <https://openpowerfoundation.org/membership/how-to-join/membership-kit-9-27-16-4/>
368 * Clock switching (and formal verification)
369 <https://zipcpu.com/formal/2018/05/31/clkswitch.html>
370 * Circuit of Compunit <http://home.macintosh.garden/~mepy2/libre-soc/comp_unit_req_rel.html>
371 * Circuitverse 16-bit <https://circuitverse.org/users/17603/projects/54486>
372 * Nice example model of a Tomasulo-based architecture, with multi-issue, in-order issue, out-of-order execution, in-order commit, with reservation stations and reorder buffers, and hazard avoidance.
373 <https://www.brown.edu/Departments/Engineering/Courses/En164/Tomasulo_10.pdf>
374 # Real/Physical Projects
375
376 * [Samuel's KC5 code](http://chiselapp.com/user/kc5tja/repository/kestrel-3/dir?ci=6c559135a301f321&name=cores/cpu)
377 * <https://chips4makers.io/blog/>
378 * <https://hackaday.io/project/7817-zynqberry>
379 * <https://github.com/efabless/raven-picorv32>
380 * <https://efabless.com>
381 * <https://efabless.com/design_catalog/default>
382 * <https://wiki.f-si.org/index.php/The_Raven_chip:_First-time_silicon_success_with_qflow_and_efabless>
383 * <https://mshahrad.github.io/openpiton-asplos16.html>
384
385 # ASIC tape-out pricing
386
387 * <https://europractice-ic.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/General-MPW-EUROPRACTICE-200505-v8.pdf>
388
389 # Funding
390
391 * <https://toyota-ai.ventures/>
392 * [NLNet Applications](http://bugs.libre-riscv.org/buglist.cgi?columnlist=assigned_to%2Cbug_status%2Cresolution%2Cshort_desc%2Ccf_budget&f1=cf_nlnet_milestone&o1=equals&query_format=advanced&resolution=---&v1=NLnet.2019.02)
393
394 # Good Programming/Design Practices
395
396 * [Liskov Substitution Principle](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liskov_substitution_principle)
397 * [Principle of Least Astonishment](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principle_of_least_astonishment)
398 * <https://peertube.f-si.org/videos/watch/379ef007-40b7-4a51-ba1a-0db4f48e8b16>
399 * [Rust-Lang Philosophy and Consensus](http://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps/blog/2019/04/19/aic-adventures-in-consensus/)
400
401 * <https://youtu.be/o5Ihqg72T3c>
402 * <http://flopoco.gforge.inria.fr/>
403 * Fundamentals of Modern VLSI Devices
404 <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/d/msg/hw-dev/b4pPvlzBzu0/7hDfxArEAgAJ>
405
406 # 12 skills summary
407
408 * <https://www.crnhq.org/cr-kit/>
409
410 # Analog Simulation
411
412 * <https://github.com/Isotel/mixedsim>
413 * <http://www.vlsiacademy.org/open-source-cad-tools.html>
414 * <http://ngspice.sourceforge.net/adms.html>
415 * <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verilog-AMS#Open_Source_Implementations>
416
417 # Libre-SOC Standards
418
419 This list auto-generated from a page tag "standards":
420
421 [[!inline pages="tagged(standards)" actions="no" archive="yes" quick="yes"]]
422
423 # Server setup
424
425 * [[resources/server-setup/web-server]]
426 * [[resources/server-setup/git-mirroring]]
427 * [[resources/server-setup/nagios-monitoring]]
428
429 # Testbeds
430
431 * <https://www.fed4fire.eu/testbeds/>
432
433 # Really Useful Stuff
434
435 * <https://github.com/im-tomu/fomu-workshop/blob/master/docs/requirements.txt>
436 * <https://github.com/im-tomu/fomu-workshop/blob/master/docs/conf.py#L39-L47>
437
438 # Digilent Arty
439
440 * https://store.digilentinc.com/pmod-sf3-32-mb-serial-nor-flash/
441 * https://store.digilentinc.com/arty-a7-artix-7-fpga-development-board-for-makers-and-hobbyists/
442 * https://store.digilentinc.com/pmod-vga-video-graphics-array/
443 * https://store.digilentinc.com/pmod-microsd-microsd-card-slot/
444 * https://store.digilentinc.com/pmod-rtcc-real-time-clock-calendar/
445 * https://store.digilentinc.com/pmod-i2s2-stereo-audio-input-and-output/
446
447 # CircuitJS experiments
448
449 * [[resources/high-speed-serdes-in-circuitjs]]
450
451 # ASIC Timing and Design flow resources
452
453 * <https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/asic-design-flow-introduction-timing-constraints-mahmoud-abdellatif/>
454 * <https://www.icdesigntips.com/2020/10/setup-and-hold-time-explained.html>
455 * <https://www.vlsiguide.com/2018/07/clock-tree-synthesis-cts.html>
456 * <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_divider>