This a layer of test harnesses for Chisel
Chisel is an open-source hardware construction language developed at UC Berkeley that supports advanced hardware design using highly parameterized generators and layered domain-specific hardware languages.
Visit the community website for more information.
The Chisel Tutorials provide many examples of how to use these harnesses
There are currently three harnesses available. All make it easy to construct a circuit, implemented as chisel Module, named the device under test (or DUT) by specifying what goes into the module's inputs and what is expected to come out of the module's outputs. The types of IO ports used by the circuit determines which tester to use.
Tests the DUT by poking values into its inputs and testing values of its outputs. PeekPokeTester is the most flexible tester, peeks and pokes are done in a software based model. Peeking can be done at any time, and the value returned can be tested and used to take different branches during the text execution. The PeekPokeTester supports two separate backends.
- The Firrtl Interpreter: a lightweight scala based low firrtl execution engine, with rapid spinup but slower overall speed.
- A verilator backend: which builds a c++ compiled circuit emulation. Faster execution, but with a longer spinup.
This is in contrast to the following hardware oriented testers, in which a testing circuit is built that drives the circuit, or device under test (DUT) from value vectors for each input. Testing the outputs each cycle against a separate set of value vectors for each output.
For a longer description, see the Using the PeekPokeTester.
Tests the DUT by poking values into its inputs and testing values of its outputs. Tests are executed in a fixed order and at a fixed cycle
For a long description see the Using the Hardware IO Testers
Tests a DUT that uses decoupled flow control for its inputs and outputs. Tests values are applied in order mediated by the ready/valid controls. The implementer does not have to manage this flow control.