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shell.nix
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shell.nix
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# nix.shell: PicoRV32 Development Environment
#
# This file allows you to use the Nix Package Manager (https://nixos.org/nix)
# in order to download, install, and prepare a working environment for doing
# PicoRV32/PicoSoC development on _any_ existing Linux distribution, provided
# the Nix package manager is installed.
#
# Current included tools:
#
# - Synthesis: Recent Yosys and SymbiYosys
# - Place and Route: arachne-pnr and nextpnr (ICE40, ECP5, Python, no GUI)
# - Packing: Project IceStorm (Trellis tools may be included later?)
# - SMT Solvers: Z3 4.7.x, Yices 2.6.x, and Boolector 3.0.x
# - Verification: Recent Verilator, Recent (unreleased) Icarus Verilog
# - A bare-metal RISC-V cross compiler toolchain, based on GCC 8.2.x
#
# With these tools, you can immediately begin development, simulation, firmware
# hacking, etc with almost no need to fiddle with recent tools yourself. Almost
# all of the tools will be downloaded on-demand (except the GCC toolchain)
# meaning you don't have to compile any recent tools yourself. Due to the
# "hermetic" nature of Nix, these packages should also work on practically any
# Linux distribution, as well.
#
# (This environment should also be suitable for running riscv-formal test
# harnesses on PicoRV32, as well. In fact it is probably useful for almost
# _any_ RTL implementation of the RV32I core.)
#
# Usage
# -----
#
# At the top-level of the picorv32 directory, simply run the 'nix-shell' command,
# which will then drop you into a bash prompt:
#
#
# $ nix-shell
# ...
# [nix-shell:~/src/picorv32]$
#
#
# When you run 'nix-shell', you will automatically begin downloading all of the
# various tools you need from an upstream "cache", so most of this will execute
# very quickly. However, this may take a while, as you will at least have to
# build a cross-compiled RISC-V toolchain, which may take some time. (These
# binaries are not available from the cache, so they must be built by you.) Once
# you have done this once, you do not need to do it again.
#
# At this point, once you are inside the shell, you can begin running tests
# like normal. For example, to run the Verilator tests with the included test
# firmware, which is substantially faster than Icarus:
#
# [nix-shell:~/src/picorv32]$ make test_verilator TOOLCHAIN_PREFIX=riscv32-unknown-elf-
# ...
#
#
# Note that you must override TOOLCHAIN_PREFIX (in the top-level Makefile, it
# looks in /opt by default).
#
# This will work immediately with no extra fiddling necessary. You can also run
# formal verification tests using a provided SMT solver, for example, yices and
# boolector (Z3 is not used since it does not complete in a reasonable amount
# of time for these examples):
#
# [nix-shell:~/src/picorv32]$ make check-yices check-boolector
# ...
#
# You can also run the PicoSoC tests and build bitstreams. To run the
# simulation tests and then build bitstreams for the HX8K and IceBreaker
# boards:
#
# [nix-shell:~/src/picorv32]$ cd picosoc/
# [nix-shell:~/src/picorv32/picosoc]$ make hx8ksynsim icebsynsim
# ...
# [nix-shell:~/src/picorv32/picosoc]$ make hx8kdemo.bin icebreaker.bin
# ...
#
# The HX8K simulation and IceBreaker simulation will be synthesized with Yosys
# and then run with Icarus Verilog. The bitstreams for HX8K and IceBreaker will
# be P&R'd with arachne-pnr and nextpnr, respectively.
#
{ architecture ? "rv32imc"
}:
# TODO FIXME: fix this to a specific version of nixpkgs.
# ALSO: maybe use cachix to make it easier for contributors(?)
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let
# risc-v toolchain source code. TODO FIXME: this should be replaced with
# upstream versions of GCC. in the future we could also include LLVM (the
# upstream nixpkgs LLVM expression should be built with it in time)
riscv-toolchain-ver = "8.2.0";
riscv-src = pkgs.fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "riscv";
repo = "riscv-gnu-toolchain";
rev = "c3ad5556197e374c25bc475ffc9285b831f869f8";
sha256 = "1j9y3ai42xzzph9rm116sxfzhdlrjrk4z0v4yrk197j72isqyxbc";
fetchSubmodules = true;
};
# given an architecture like 'rv32i', this will generate the given
# toolchain derivation based on the above source code.
make-riscv-toolchain = arch:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "riscv-${arch}-toolchain-${version}";
version = "${riscv-toolchain-ver}-${builtins.substring 0 7 src.rev}";
src = riscv-src;
configureFlags = [ "--with-arch=${arch}" ];
installPhase = ":"; # 'make' installs on its own
hardeningDisable = [ "all" ];
enableParallelBuilding = true;
# Stripping/fixups break the resulting libgcc.a archives, somehow.
# Maybe something in stdenv that does this...
dontStrip = true;
dontFixup = true;
nativeBuildInputs = with pkgs; [ curl gawk texinfo bison flex gperf ];
buildInputs = with pkgs; [ libmpc mpfr gmp expat ];
};
riscv-toolchain = make-riscv-toolchain architecture;
# These are all the packages that will be available inside the nix-shell
# environment.
buildInputs = with pkgs;
# these are generally useful packages for tests, verification, synthesis
# and deployment, etc
[ python3 gcc
yosys symbiyosys nextpnr arachne-pnr icestorm
z3 boolector yices
verilog verilator
# also include the RISC-V toolchain
riscv-toolchain
];
# Export a usable shell environment
in runCommand "picorv32-shell" { inherit buildInputs; } ""