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Caravel User Project

License User CI Caravel Build

Table of contents

Overview

This repo contains a sample user project that utilizes the caravel chip user space. The user project is a simple counter that showcases how to make use of caravel's user space utilities like IO pads, logic analyzer probes, and wishbone port. The repo also demonstrates the recommended structure for the open-mpw shuttle projects.

Prerequisites

Install Caravel

To setup caravel, run the following:

git clone https://github.com/efabless/caravel_user_project.git
cd caravel_user_project

make install

To remove caravel, run

make uninstall

By default caravel-lite is installed. To install the full version of caravel, run this prior to calling make install.

export CARAVEL_LITE=0

Caravel Integration

Repo Integration

Caravel files are kept separate from the user project by having caravel as submodule. The submodule commit should point to the latest of caravel/caravel-lite master/main branch. The following files should have a symbolic link to caravel's corresponding files:

  • Openlane Makefile: This provides an easier way for running openlane to harden your macros. Refer to Hardening the User Project Macro using Openlane. Also, the makefile retains the openlane summary reports under the signoff directory.
  • Pin order file for the user wrapper: The hardened user project wrapper macro must have the same pin order specified in caravel's repo. Failing to adhere to the same order will fail the gds integration of the macro with caravel's back-end.

The symbolic links are automatically set when you run make install.

Verilog Integration

You need to create a wrapper around your macro that adheres to the template at user_project_wrapper. The wrapper top module must be named user_project_wrapper and must have the same input and output ports as the golden wrapper template. The wrapper gives access to the user space utilities provided by caravel like IO ports, logic analyzer probes, and wishbone bus connection to the management SoC.

For this sample project, the user macro makes use of:

  • The IO ports for displaying the count register values on the IO pads.
  • The LA probes for supplying an optional reset and clock signals and for setting an initial value for the count register.
  • The wishbone port for reading/writing the count value through the management SoC.

Refer to user_project_wrapper for more information.

Layout Integration

The caravel layout is pre-designed with an empty golden wrapper in the user space. You only need to provide us with a valid user_project_wrapper GDS file. And, as part of the tapeout process, your hardened user_project_wrapper will be inserted into a vanilla caravel layout to get the final layout shipped for fabrication.

To make sure that this integration process goes smoothly without having any DRC or LVS issues, your hardened user_project_wrapper must adhere to a number of requirements listed at User Project Wrapper Requirements .

Building the PDK

For more information about volare click here

# set PDK_ROOT to the path you wish to use for the pdk
export PDK_ROOT=<pdk-installation-path>

# set the PDK variant depending on your shuttle, if you don't know leave it as default
export PDK=sky130B

# use volare to download the pdk
# To change the default pdk version you can export OPEN_PDKS_COMMIT=<pdk_commit>
make pdk-with-volare 

Running Full Chip Simulation

First, you will need to install the simulation environment, by

make simenv

This will pull a docker image with the needed tools installed.

Then, run the RTL simulation by

export PDK_ROOT=<pdk-installation-path>
make verify-<testbench-name>-rtl

# For example
make verify-io_ports-rtl

Once you have the physical implementation done and you have the gate-level netlists ready, it is crucial to run full gate-level simulations to make sure that your design works as intended after running the physical implementation.

Run the gate-level simulation by:

export PDK_ROOT=<pdk-installation-path>
make verify-<testbench-name>-gl

# For example
make verify-io_ports-gl

To make sure that your design is timing clean, one way is running sdf annotated gate-level simulation Run the sdf annotated gate-level simulation by:

export PDK_ROOT=<pdk-installation-path>
make verify-<testbench-name>-gl-sdf

# For example
make verify-io_ports-gl-sdf

This sample project comes with four example testbenches to test the IO port connection, wishbone interface, and logic analyzer. The test-benches are under the verilog/dv directory. For more information on setting up the simulation environment and the available testbenches for this sample project, refer to README.

User Project Wrapper Requirements

Your hardened user_project_wrapper must match the golden user_project_wrapper in the following:

  • Area (2.920um x 3.520um)
  • Top module name "user_project_wrapper"
  • Pin Placement
  • Pin Sizes
  • Core Rings Width and Offset
  • PDN Vertical and Horizontal Straps Width

You are allowed to change the following if you need to:

  • PDN Vertical and Horizontal Pitch & Offset

To make sure that you adhere to these requirements, we run an exclusive-or (XOR) check between your hardened user_project_wrapper GDS and the golden wrapper GDS after processing both layouts to include only the boundary (pins and core rings). This check is done as part of the mpw-precheck tool.

Hardening the User Project using OpenLane

OpenLane Installation

You will need to install openlane by running the following

export OPENLANE_ROOT=<openlane-installation-path>

# you can optionally specify the openlane tag to use
# by running: export OPENLANE_TAG=<openlane-tag>
# if you do not set the tag, it defaults to the last verfied tag tested for this project

make openlane

For detailed instructions on the openlane and the pdk installation refer to README.

Hardening Options

There are three options for hardening the user project macro using openlane:

+--------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ | Option 1 | Option 2 | Option 3 | +--------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ | Hardening the user macro(s) first, then inserting it in the | Flattening the user macro(s) with the | Placing multiple macros in the wrapper | | user project wrapper with no standard cells on the top level | user_project_wrapper | along with standard cells on the top level | +==============================================================+============================================+============================================+ | pic1 | pic2 | pic3 | | | | | +--------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ | ex: caravel_user_project | | ex: caravel_ibex | +--------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+

For more details on hardening macros using openlane, refer to README.

Running OpenLane

For this sample project, we went for the first option where the user macro is hardened first, then it is inserted in the user project wrapper without having any standard cells on the top level.

To reproduce hardening this project, run the following:

# DO NOT cd into openlane

# Run openlane to harden user_proj_example
make user_proj_example
# Run openlane to harden user_project_wrapper
make user_project_wrapper

For more information on the openlane flow, check README.

Running MPW Precheck Locally

You can install the mpw-precheck by running

# By default, this install the precheck in your home directory
# To change the installtion path, run "export PRECHECK_ROOT=<precheck installation path>" 
make precheck

This will clone the precheck repo and pull the latest precheck docker image.

Then, you can run the precheck by running

make run-precheck

This will run all the precheck checks on your project and will produce the logs under the checks directory.

Other Miscellaneous Targets

The makefile provides a number of useful that targets that can run LVS, DRC, and XOR checks on your hardened design outside of openlane's flow.

Run make help to display available targets.

Run lvs on the mag view,

make lvs-<macro_name>

Run lvs on the gds,

make lvs-gds-<macro_name>

Run lvs on the maglef,

make lvs-maglef-<macro_name>

Run drc using magic,

make drc-<macro_name>

Run antenna check using magic,

make antenna-<macro_name>

Run XOR check,

make xor-wrapper

Checklist for Open-MPW Submission

  • ✔️ The project repo adheres to the same directory structure in this repo.
  • ✔️ The project repo contain info.yaml at the project root.
  • ✔️ Top level macro is named user_project_wrapper.
  • ✔️ Full Chip Simulation passes for RTL and GL (gate-level)
  • ✔️ The hardened Macros are LVS and DRC clean
  • ✔️ The project contains a gate-level netlist for user_project_wrapper at verilog/gl/user_project_wrapper.v
  • ✔️ The hardened user_project_wrapper adheres to the same pin order specified at pin_order
  • ✔️ The hardened user_project_wrapper adheres to the fixed wrapper configuration specified at fixed_wrapper_cfgs
  • ✔️ XOR check passes with zero total difference.
  • ✔️ Openlane summary reports are retained under ./signoff/
  • ✔️ The design passes the mpw-precheck