Hi Stephen, First, thank you for posting directly to the sv reflector. We want to hear from more users. We know many users are apprehensive with posting in fear of getting pounced on by so-called experts. If more users did this, there would be less pouncing. :-) Second, a committee member calling themselves exclusively a user representative or tool representative is sometimes a misnomer. I would like to think that I represent the users of Mentor's tools equally as much as I do the tool developers. From what I have heard, Shalom, as an example, represents both end users within his company, as well as the tool developers internal to Intel. And like many tool representatives on this committee, we don't have complete control over what those tool developers actual do. In reality, the committee that defines this LRM is a political stew of people representing their own best interests. This is not to be taken as a bad thing. Third, as a former customer, colleague, competitor, and vendor to most of the people on this committee, as well as being directly responsible for the support of 8 independently developed tools that had to interpret Verilog or SystemVerilog, I can tell you that users treat warning messages as background noise. Mandating a warning message is comparable to making it fully legal behavior. We have tried to make things illegal when the code written is virtually assured not be the user's intent, and the difficulty in detecting the problem code is significant. That's why SV requires an extra set of parenthesis when there is an assignment within an expression, and doesn't require always blocks to have blocking statements, causing hangs. But still, most users are more interested in having their new tool work in the same the as their old tool, rather than changing their code to be LRM compliant. That is why we have the mess otherwise know as "mixing ANSI with NON-ANSI port declarations". Finally, in regard to out-of-range bounds checking, how is the user supposed to distinguish between meaningful warnings that require correction versus ones that can be ignored? By visual inspection? You're going to have to code this condition up as a procedural check, or use an assertion. We can also entertain an enhancement request that might help make the coding easier in the next rev of the standard. Dave Rich ________________________________ From: owner-sv-ec@server.eda.org [mailto:owner-sv-ec@server.eda.org] On Behalf Of Stephen Hill Sent: Sunday, May 03, 2009 3:12 PM To: Vreugdenhil, Gordon; Bresticker, Shalom Cc: Jonathan Bromley; sv-ec@server.eda.org; SV_BC List; Stephen Hill; Stephen Hill Subject: RE: [sv-bc] Re: Mandated warnings -- was Re: [sv-ec] Mantis 2701, ballot ID #44 - Arturo's feedback It hard to see that it should be left to tool developers since having different tools warn about different things is quite painful for users. It means that code that is clean on one tool is not on others. So when a new tool is used either we have to open up the code and fix things or turn we just off warnings. This is one of the few legitimate reasons for turning off warnings. If warnings are clearly captured in the LRM this problem becomes a lot less significant. Of course there are not-so-sensible users about but shouldn't we can to support sensible users in doing the right thing. ...Stephen ________________________________ From: Vreugdenhil, Gordon [mailto:gordon_vreugdenhil@mentor.com] Sent: Saturday, May 02, 2009 5:44 PM To: Stephen Hill; Bresticker, Shalom Cc: Jonathan Bromley; sv-ec@server.eda.org; SV_BC List; Vreugdenhil, Gordon Subject: RE: [sv-bc] Re: Mandated warnings -- was Re: [sv-ec] Mantis 2701, ballot ID #44 - Arturo's feedback I'm not sure there is a disconnect -- there is just a big difference in opinion as to what is appropriate for an LRM as opposed to a user guide or customer/vendor discussion. I have no problem having customers ask for additional warnings, etc. and will make business/implementation decisions about implementation and defaults based on the very wide user community. I have pretty substantial objections to an LRM mandating, as in the 2701 proposal, that exactly one warning be issued for a particular construct. That is way beyond what the LRM should be trying to dictate. In addition, if many users will just turn off the warnings, (which is reality) why mandate the warning at all? If we really want to reflect reality, shouldn't we really just mandate suppression of such warnings at time 0? That is the primary reason that users turn off warnings. Oh, and if we do that, shouldn't we ..... Gord. -----Original Message----- From: Stephen Hill [mailto:Stephen.Hill@arm.com] Sent: Sat 5/2/2009 4:23 AM To: Vreugdenhil, Gordon; Bresticker, Shalom Cc: Jonathan Bromley; sv-ec@server.eda.org; SV_BC List; Stephen Hill Subject: RE: [sv-bc] Re: Mandated warnings -- was Re: [sv-ec] Mantis 2701, ballot ID #44 - Arturo's feedback Hi Gord, I think there is a significant disconnect here. No one is suggesting implementing warnings without control to let users express their design intent. They key is giving the users the case-by-case option. Not fixing this as always-on or always-off. The question is really over whether the default should be warning "on" or "off". I suspect the "on" behavior is by far the most desirable, at least in synthesizable code. Currently I have to tell people that they should really create an assertion for every array write to spot these problems... unsurprisingly their reaction is incredulous. It just feels like something that should be automatic not manual. The assertion should be there automatically and overridden by users in the rare case when something else is needed. On the optimization front - of course it's good to optimize tools but taking a step back it well be more efficient for the users to run slightly more slowly but not have to debug hard-to-find masked problems like this. Cheers, ...Stephen Stephen Hill ARM R&D EMail: Stephen.Hill@arm.com -----Original Message----- From: owner-sv-bc@eda.org [mailto:owner-sv-bc@eda.org] On Behalf Of Gordon Vreugdenhil Sent: Friday, May 01, 2009 3:26 PM To: Bresticker, Shalom Cc: jonathan.bromley@doulos.com; sv-ec@server.eda.org; SV_BC List Subject: [sv-bc] Re: Mandated warnings -- was Re: [sv-ec] Mantis 2701, ballot ID #44 - Arturo's feedback Bresticker, Shalom wrote: > I also find the following > >> The recent vote in SV-BC where vendors >> unanimously opposed a warning on any array bound write violation >> and users unanimously supported the warning > > very disturbing and not "a good indicator" at all. It indicates a bad disconnect between vendors and users. That was actually my point -- it is a good indicator that there is a problem. I've stated my position on the problem. Gord. > > Shalom > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > Intel Israel (74) Limited > > This e-mail and any attachments may contain confidential material for > the sole use of the intended recipient(s). Any review or distribution > by others is strictly prohibited. If you are not the intended > recipient, please contact the sender and delete all copies. > -- -------------------------------------------------------------------- Gordon Vreugdenhil 503-685-0808 Model Technology (Mentor Graphics) gordonv@model.com -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. -- IMPORTANT NOTICE: The contents of this email and any attachments are confidential and may also be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately and do not disclose the contents to any other person, use it for any purpose, or store or copy the information in any medium. Thank you. -- IMPORTANT NOTICE: The contents of this email and any attachments are confidential and may also be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately and do not disclose the contents to any other person, use it for any purpose, or store or copy the information in any medium. Thank you. -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner <http://www.mailscanner.info/> , and is believed to be clean. -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.Received on Wed May 6 17:48:35 2009
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