Beispiel #1
0
    def connect(self, left_port, right_port):
        """Structurally connect a Signal to another Signal or a constant, or
    two PortBundles with the same interface.

    Ports structurally connected with s.connect are guaranteed to have
    the same value during simulation:

    >>> s.connect( s.port_a, s.port_b )

    This works for slices as well:

    >>> s.connect( s.port_c[0:4], s.port_d[4:8] )

    A signal connected to a constant will be tied to that value:

    >>> s.connect( s.port_e, 8 )

    Several Signals can be structurally connected with a single
    statement by encapsulating them in PortBundles:

    >>> s.connect( s.my_bundle_a, s.my_bundle_b )
    """

        # Throw an error if connect() is used on two wires.
        if isinstance(left_port, Wire) and isinstance(right_port, Wire):
            e = ('Connecting two Wire signals is not supported!\n'
                 'If you are certain this is something you really need to do, '
                 'use connect_wire instead:\n\n '
                 '  # translation will fail if directionality is wrong!!!\n'
                 '  connect_wire( dest = <s.out>, src = <s.in_> )')
            frame, filename, lineno, func_name, lines, idx = inspect.stack()[1]
            msg = '{}\n\nLine: {} in File: {}\n>'.format(e, lineno, filename)
            msg += '>'.join(lines)
            raise PyMTLConnectError(msg)

        # Try to connect the two signals/portbundles
        try:
            if isinstance(left_port, PortBundle):
                self._connect_bundle(left_port, right_port)
            else:
                self._connect_signal(left_port, right_port)

        # Throw a helpful error on failure
        except PyMTLConnectError as e:
            frame, filename, lineno, func_name, lines, idx = inspect.stack()[1]
            msg = '{}\n\nLine: {} in File: {}\n>'.format(e, lineno, filename)
            msg += '>'.join(lines)
            raise PyMTLConnectError(msg)
Beispiel #2
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    def connect_dict(self, connections):
        """Structurally connect Signals given a dictionary mapping.

    This provides a more concise syntax for interconnecting large
    numbers of Signals by using a dictionary to specify Signal-to-Signal
    connection mapping.

    >>> s.connect_dict({
    >>>   s.mod.a : s.a,
    >>>   s.mod.b : 0b11,
    >>>   s.mod.c : s.x[4:5],
    >>> })

    """

        for left_port, right_port in connections.iteritems():
            try:
                self.connect(left_port, right_port)

            # Throw a helpful error if any pairwise connection fails
            except PyMTLConnectError as e:
                frame, filename, lineno, func_name, lines, idx = inspect.stack(
                )[1]
                msg = '{}\n\nLine: {} in File: {}\n>'.format(
                    e, lineno, filename)
                msg += '>'.join(lines)
                raise PyMTLConnectError(msg)
Beispiel #3
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    def connect_pairs(self, *connections):
        """Structurally connect pairs of signals.

    This provides a more concise syntax for interconnecting large
    numbers of Signals by allowing the user to supply a series of signals
    which are to be connected pairwise.

    >>> s.connect_pairs(
    >>>   s.mod.a, s.a,
    >>>   s.mod.b, 0b11,
    >>>   s.mod.c, s.x[4:5],
    >>> )

    Alternatively, a list of signals can be created and passed in:

    >>> s.connect_pairs( *signal_list )

    """

        # Throw an error if user tries to connect an odd number of signals
        if len(connections) & 1:
            e = 'An odd number of signals were provided!'
            frame, filename, lineno, func_name, lines, idx = inspect.stack()[1]
            msg = '{}\n\nLine: {} in File: {}\n>'.format(e, lineno, filename)
            msg += '>'.join(lines)
            raise PyMTLConnectError(msg)

        # Iterate through signals pairwise
        citer = iter(connections)
        for left_port, right_port in zip(citer, citer):
            try:
                self.connect(left_port, right_port)

            # Throw a helpful error if any pairwise connection fails
            except PyMTLConnectError as e:
                frame, filename, lineno, func_name, lines, idx = inspect.stack(
                )[1]
                msg = '{}\n\nLine: {} in File: {}\n>'.format(
                    e, lineno, filename)
                msg += '>'.join(lines)
                raise PyMTLConnectError(msg)