DesignWare RISC-V nSIM and HAPS FPGA boards
Overview
This platform can be used to run Zephyr RTOS on the widest possible range of Synopsys RISC-V processors in simulation with Designware ARC nSIM or run same images on FPGA prototyping platform HAPS. The platform includes the following features:
RISC-V processor core, which implements riscv32 ISA
Virtual serial console (a standard
ns16550
UART model)
Supported board targets for that platform are listed below:
nsim_arc_v/rmx100
- Synopsys RISC-V RMX100 core
It is recommended to look at precise description of a particular board target in .props
files in boards/snps/nsim_arc_v/support/ directory to understand
which options are configured and so will be used on invocation of the simulator.
Warning
All nSIM targets are used for demo and testing purposes. They are not meant to represent any real system and so might be renamed, removed or modified at any point.
Programming and Debugging
Required Hardware and Software
To run single-core Zephyr RTOS applications in simulation on this board, either DesignWare ARC nSIM or DesignWare ARC Free nSIM is required.
Building & Running Sample Applications
Most board targets support building with both GNU and ARC MWDT toolchains, however
there might be exceptions from that, especially for newly added targets. You can check supported
toolchains for the board targets in the corresponding .yaml
file.
I.e. for the nsim_arc_v/rmx100
board we can check boards/snps/nsim_arc_v/nsim_arc_v_rmx100.yaml
The supported toolchains are listed in toolchain:
array in .yaml
file, where we can find:
zephyr - implies RISC-V GNU toolchain from Zephyr SDK. You can find more information about Zephyr SDK here.
cross-compile - implies RISC-V GNU cross toolchain, which is not a part of Zephyr SDK. Note that some (especially new) board targets may declare
cross-compile
toolchain support withoutzephyr
toolchain support because corresponding target CPU support hasn’t been added to Zephyr SDK yet. You can find more information about its usage here: here.arcmwdt - implies proprietary ARC MWDT toolchain. You can find more information about its usage here: here.
Note
Note that even if both GNU and MWDT toolchain support is declared for the target some tests or samples can be only built with either GNU or MWDT toolchain due to some features limited to a particular toolchain.
Use this configuration to run basic Zephyr applications and kernel tests in nSIM, for example, with the Basic Synchronization sample:
# From the root of the zephyr repository
west build -b nsim_arc_v/rmx100 samples/synchronization
west flash
This will build an image with the synchronization sample app, boot it using nSIM, and display the following console output:
*** Booting Zephyr OS build zephyr-v3.2.0-3948-gd351a024dc87 ***
thread_a: Hello World from cpu 0 on nsim_arc_v!
thread_b: Hello World from cpu 0 on nsim_arc_v!
thread_a: Hello World from cpu 0 on nsim_arc_v!
thread_b: Hello World from cpu 0 on nsim_arc_v!
thread_a: Hello World from cpu 0 on nsim_arc_v!
Note
To exit the simulator, use Ctrl+], then Ctrl+c
Tip
You can get more details about the building process by running build in verbose mode. It can be
done by passing -v
flag to the west: west -v build -b nsim_hs samples/synchronization
Debugging
Debugging with GDB
Note
Debugging on nSIM via GDB is only supported on single-core targets (which use standalone nSIM).
Note
The normal west debug
command won’t work for debugging applications using nsim boards
because both the nSIM simulator and the debugger use the same console for
input / output.
In case of GDB debugger it’s possible to use a separate terminal windows for GDB and nSIM to
avoid intermixing their output.
After building your application, open two terminal windows. In terminal one, use nSIM to start a GDB server and wait for a remote connection with following command:
west debugserver --runner arc-nsim
In terminal two, connect to the GDB server using RISC-V GDB. You can find it in Zephyr SDK:
you should use
riscv64-zephyr-elf-gdb
This command loads the symbol table from the elf binary file, for example the
build/zephyr/zephyr.elf
file:
riscv64-zephyr-elf-gdb -ex 'target remote localhost:3333' -ex load build/zephyr/zephyr.elf
Now the debug environment has been set up, and it’s possible to debug the application with gdb commands.
Modifying the configuration
If modification of existing nsim configuration is required or even there’s a need in creation of a new one it’s required to maintain alignment between
Zephyr OS configuration
nSIM configuration
GNU & MWDT toolchain compiler options
Note
The .tcf
configuration files are not supported by Zephyr directly. There are multiple
reasons for that. .tcf
perfectly suits building of bare-metal single-thread application -
in that case all the compiler options from .tcf
are passed to the compiler, so all the HW
features are used by the application and optimal code is being generated.
The situation is completely different when multi-thread feature-rich operation system is
considered. Of course it is still possible to build all the code with all the
options from .tcf
- but that may be far from optimal solution. For example, such approach
require so save & restore full register context for all tasks (and sometimes even for
interrupts). And for DSP-enabled or for FPU-enabled systems that leads to dozens of extra
registers save and restore even if the most of the user and kernel tasks don’t actually use
DSP or FPU. Instead we prefer to fine-tune the HW features usage which (with all its pros)
require us to maintain them separately from .tcf
configuration.
Zephyr OS configuration
Zephyr OS configuration is defined via Kconfig and Device tree. These are non RISC-V-specific mechanisms which are described in board porting guide.
It is advised to look for <board_name>_defconfig
, <board_name>.dts
and
<board_name>.yaml
as an entry point for board target.
nSIM configuration
nSIM configuration is defined in props files.
Generally they are identical to the values from corresponding .tcf
configuration with few
exceptions:
The UART model is added
CLINT model is added
GNU & MWDT toolchain compiler options
The hardware-specific compiler options are set in corresponding SoC cmake file. For nsim_arc_v
board
it is soc/snps/nsim/arc_v/CMakeLists.txt.
For the GNU toolchain the basic configuration is set via -march
which is defined in generic code
and based on the selected CPU model via Kconfig. It still can be forcefully set to required value
on SoC level.
Note
The non hardware-specific compiler options like optimizations, library selections, C / C++ language options are still set in Zephyr generic code. It could be observed by running build in verbose mode.