NVC is a VHDL compiler and simulator.
NVC supports almost all of VHDL-2008 with the exception of PSL, and it has been successfully used to simulate several real-world designs. Experimental support for VHDL-2019 is under development.
NVC has a particular emphasis on simulation performance and uses LLVM to compile VHDL to native machine code.
NVC is not a synthesizer. That is, it does not output something that could be used to program an FPGA or ASIC. It implements only the simulation behaviour of the language as described by the IEEE 1076 standard.
NVC supports popular verification frameworks including OSVVM, UVVM, VUnit and cocotb. See below for installation instructions.
Simulating a VHDL hardware design involves three steps: analysing the
source files; elaborating the design; and running the
simulation. This is analogous to compiling, linking, and executing a
software program. With NVC these steps are accomplished using the -a
,
-e
, and -r
commands:
$ nvc -a my_design.vhd my_tb.vhd
$ nvc -e my_tb
$ nvc -r my_tb
Or more succinctly, as a single command:
$ nvc -a my_design.vhd my_tb.vhd -e my_tb -r
Where my_tb
is the name of the top-level test-bench entity.
The full manual can be read after installation using man nvc
or
online.
This program is free software distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 or later. You may use, modify, and redistribute the program as you wish but if you distribute modifications you must preserve the license text and copyright notices, and also make the modified source code available to your users.
The source files for the IEEE standard libraries are included in the
repository. These were originally provided under a proprietary license
that forbid distribution of modifications, but in 2019 were relicensed
under Apache 2.0. Freely redistributable versions of the 1993 libraries
were made by editing and removing declarations from the 2019 libraries,
and so are also licensed under Apache 2.0. Certain VHDL libraries
developed specifically for NVC under lib/nvc
and lib/std
are also
licensed under Apache 2.0. See the individual files for details.
The VITAL libraries are distributed under lib/vital
. These were
derived from draft copies of the packages freely available on the
internet. The license status of these is unclear as the final text is
part of the VITAL standard which must be purchased from the IEEE. If
you are packaging this program for a distribution with strict free
software requirements you should strip these files from the tarball and
configure with --disable-vital
.
NVC is developed under GNU/Linux and is regularly tested on macOS and Windows under MSYS2.
On macOS NVC can be installed with brew install nvc
. NVC is also
packaged for FreeBSD,
Gentoo, Arch
Linux AUR, and several other
distributions. A Windows
installer is available from the releases
page and can be installed using
winget
with winget install NickGasson.NVC
. Users of systems without existing
packages should build from source.
NVC has both a release branch and a development master branch. The master branch should be stable enough for day-to-day use and has comprehensive regression tests, but the release branch is more suitable for third party packaging. The latest released version is 1.14.2. Significant changes since the last release are detailed in NEWS.md.
If you are building from a Git clone rather than a released tarball you first need to generate the configure script using:
./autogen.sh
In-tree builds are not supported so create a separate build directory:
mkdir build && cd build
Finally build and install using the standard autotools steps:
../configure
make
sudo make install
To use a specific version of LLVM add --with-llvm=/path/to/llvm-config
to the configure command. The minimum supported LLVM version is 8.0.
Versions between 8 and 18 have all been tested.
NVC also depends on Flex to generate the lexical analyser.
On a Debian derivative the following should be sufficient to install all required dependencies:
sudo apt-get install build-essential automake autoconf \
flex check llvm-dev pkg-config zlib1g-dev libdw-dev \
libffi-dev libzstd-dev
On rpm
based distributions, the following can be installed to fulfill
required dependencies:
sudo dnf install autoconf automake flex check llvm-devel libffi-devel \
zlib-ng-compat-devel libzstd-devel elfutils-devel
Only the MSYS2 environment on Windows is supported. The required dependencies can be installed with:
pacman -S base-devel mingw-w64-x86_64-{llvm,ncurses,libffi,check,pkg-config,zstd}
GTKWave or Surfer can be used to view simulation waveforms. For GTKWave, version 3.3.79 or later is required for the default FST format.
To run the regression tests:
make check
The unit tests require the check library.
Report bugs to nick@nickg.me.uk or using the GitHub issue tracker. Please include enough information to reproduce the problem, ideally with a small VHDL test case. Issue #412 is a good example.
Please remember that this software is provided to you with NO WARRANTY and no expectation of support, but I will do my best to help with any issues you encounter.
Patches can be sent as either pull requests on GitHub or by email using git --send-email. Please note however that as this is purely a spare-time hobby project for me, I have limited time available to review patches. All code submitted must follow the guidelines in contrib/STYLE.md.
I will not accept patches that add new copyright owners under src/
.
This is to ensure there is clear legal ownership should, for example,
the license need to be updated. Significant contributors are instead
listed in THANKS.md.
VHDL standard revisions are commonly referred to by the year they were
published. For example IEEE 1076-2008 is known as VHDL-2008. The
default standard in NVC is currently VHDL-2008 but this can be changed
with the --std
argument. For example --std=1993
selects the
VHDL-1993 standard.
The 1993, 2000, and 2002 revisions of the standard are fully supported. Please raise bugs for any missing or incorrectly implemented features you encounter. The current status of VHDL-2008 and VHDL-2019 support can be found on the features page.
The VHDL standard contains a comprehensive API called VHPI for interfacing with foreign code written in C or another language. NVC implements a subset of VHPI sufficient for running cocotb. Refer to the manual for more information.
NVC provides scripts to compile popular verification frameworks and the simulation libraries of common FPGA vendors.
- For OSVVM use
nvc --install osvvm
- For UVVM use
nvc --install uvvm
- For Xilinx ISE use
nvc --install ise
- For Xilinx Vivado use
nvc --install vivado
and additionallynvc --install xpm_vhdl
if you require simulation models of the XPM macros - For Altera Quartus use
nvc --install quartus
- For Lattice iCEcube2 use
nvc --install icecube2
- For Free Model Foundry common
packages use
nvc --install fmf
The libraries will be installed under ~/.nvc/lib
.