OpenCores
URL https://opencores.org/ocsvn/dblclockfft/dblclockfft/trunk

Subversion Repositories dblclockfft

[/] [dblclockfft/] [trunk/] [bench/] [cpp/] [fft_tb.m] - Rev 40

Rev

Go to most recent revision | Details | Compare with Previous | Blame

Filtering Options

Clear current filter

Rev Log message Author Age Path
28 This revision represents a lot of work to get the Verilator simulation to now
match the FPGA performance. The big problem turned out to be in the
bit reversal stage, where a '=' was used on a register instead of a '<='.
Neither Verilator nor Vivado complained, but they each treated the result
differently. In addition, a bug was traced to the soft butterfly, butterfly.v,
whereby the delay through the butterfly did not properly change when the
delay through the multiply changed. All of this has been fixed, and now
appears to work and work well in both hardware and simulation.
dgisselq 3444d 17h /dblclockfft/trunk/bench/cpp/fft_tb.m
26 A lot of updates and upgrades in this release. Specifically, work took place
over the last several days to demonstrate this FFT on an FPGA. It was
demonstrated on the Xilinx Artix-7 found on a Basys-3 development board.
Part of the effort stemmed around making certain that the DSPs were used
optimally, part of it stemmed around making certain that various parts of the
FFT could use block RAM-type memories. The other massive change involved
removing as much unnecessary logic as possible, so that two 16-bit 1k FFTs
could fit onto this part--together with other glue logic. The bottom line,
though, is that it all now works. Specifically, I've tested it successfully
with

fftgen -f <FFTSIZE> -n 16 -m 16 -p 7 -c 1 -x 1

and with FFTSIZEs of 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, and 1024.

Oh, I should mention that there's also an undocumented DEBUG interface to the
part, and I fixed where the Verilog files went when given an argument, so
that they actually went to the directory specified. Minor updates have taken
place to the documentation format, making it match the documentation format
for other opencores projects that I've produced.

On a sadder note, the Verilator simulation fft_tb no longer works. (Yeah, get
that---the FFT implementation works but Verilator does not. Sigh).
dgisselq 3467d 00h /dblclockfft/trunk/bench/cpp/fft_tb.m
14 Found several bugs in the previous version. The biggest were in the qtrstage.
Apparently, the qtrstage didn't work before, even though I thought it did.
Further, the FFT testbench has been adjusted to place proper values into
the fft_tb.dbl file it creates. (I've been testing it by reading this into
Octave, and visually inspecting the results--quantitative testing of the
fft_tb and ifft_tb are still lacking.) Now, however, if I cascade the
forward and reverse together, I seem to get something at least close to the
right answer. Close, of course, is relative. I think all that I still
struggle with is rounding and truncation errors, hence I'm checking in
my changes.

The FFT generator was also modified to allow arbitrary length paths
in the command line specified path prefix. This has not been tested.

A bug was also found in the butterfly, whereby for certain multiply delays
the butterfly would be unable to determine whether or not its results were
valid. Adding an extra bit to the FIFO address in these cases fixed the
problem. This change was encapsulated into the lgdelay() function, and
an additional bflydelay function. In my frustration, I modified the
fftstage function so that, when it is built, the parameters it is built
with are the default parameters. This should only affect testing, by
making any testing more realistic, but that may still remain to be seen.

Another change was made to the core generator, so that now when a core
is generated, the main file now contains a copy of the arguments that were
used when the core generator was invoked. This is good for posterity, in
case you ever need to ask yourself how I ended up here.
dgisselq 3554d 12h /dblclockfft/trunk/bench/cpp/fft_tb.m

powered by: WebSVN 2.1.0

© copyright 1999-2024 OpenCores.org, equivalent to Oliscience, all rights reserved. OpenCores®, registered trademark.