clash-ghc
ICFP2020_Bluespec_Tutorial
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clash-ghc | ICFP2020_Bluespec_Tutorial | |
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33 | 1 | |
1,372 | 55 | |
1.5% | - | |
9.1 | 0.0 | |
about 9 hours ago | over 1 year ago | |
Haskell | HTML | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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clash-ghc
- Clash: A Functional Hardware Description Language
- Clash (Haskell) for ASIC design
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Building a Networked Key-Value-Store on an FPGA
> You'd be better off with a higher-level or more modern HDL that compiles to Verilog/VHDL. "Chisel" is one such.
As is Clash :) https://clash-lang.org/
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Need project idea
You can take a look at https://clash-lang.org/. There is also a book for it. https://gergo.erdi.hu/retroclash/
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5 layered CNN implementation on arduino/FPGAs [P]
I don't know much about FPGAs, but Clash lang compiles to VHDL, and might do the trick: https://clash-lang.org
- An addressable little explored language gap: HDL - Hardware Description Languages, any language used for electronic circuit design, description, and specs
- Pedagogical Downsides of Haskell
- Ask HN: Choice of HDL for an FPGA Project
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Baud rate 1.5% lower than expected, is this normal?
if you need inspiration there is a full UART core available in clash: https://github.com/clash-lang/clash-compiler/blob/master/clash-cores/src/Clash/Cores/UART.hs
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A circuit simulator that doesn't look like it was made in 2003
Perhaps peripheral (the original site has been hugged to death).
Both clashlang: https://clash-lang.org/
And Hardcaml: https://github.com/janestreet/hardcaml
have personally fueled my interest in hardware.
Dan Luu speaks eloquently and at length about how better options are needed for logic design. I would recommend both of the above to the enthusiastic novice.
ICFP2020_Bluespec_Tutorial
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Linear types for circuit design in Haskell/Clash
I watched recently another talk, on Bluespec Haskell ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCxE3JQAXY0 / https://github.com/rsnikhil/ICFP2020_Bluespec_Tutorial ), and it seems that BH takes a really different approach from Clash. I wonder what you make of it. I have no clue about circuits, but it seems that they impose way more higher-order organisation on the circuit. (I know this isn't linear types related, but still).
What are some alternatives?
wiringPi - A Haskell binding to the wiringPi library, for using GPIO on the Raspberry Pi.
contranomy
clash-prelude
clash-spaceinvaders - Intel 8080-based Space Invaders arcade machine implemented on an FPGA, written in CLaSH
mercury-api - Haskell binding to Mercury API for ThingMagic RFID readers
VELDT-getting-started - Where Lions Roam: Haskell & Hardware on VELDT
riscv-cores-list - RISC-V Cores, SoC platforms and SoCs
amaranth - A modern hardware definition language and toolchain based on Python
verismith - Verilog Fuzzer to test the major simulators and sythesisers by generating random, valid Verilog.
hidapi - Haskell HIDAPI bindings
clash-prelude-quickcheck - QuickCheck instances for various types in the CλaSH Prelude
serialport - Cross platform haskell library for using the serial port