Book Image

FPGA Programming for Beginners

By : Frank Bruno
5 (1)
Book Image

FPGA Programming for Beginners

5 (1)
By: Frank Bruno

Overview of this book

Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) have now become a core part of most modern electronic and computer systems. However, to implement your ideas in the real world, you need to get your head around the FPGA architecture, its toolset, and critical design considerations. FPGA Programming for Beginners will help you bring your ideas to life by guiding you through the entire process of programming FPGAs and designing hardware circuits using SystemVerilog. The book will introduce you to the FPGA and Xilinx architectures and show you how to work on your first project, which includes toggling an LED. You’ll then cover SystemVerilog RTL designs and their implementations. Next, you’ll get to grips with using the combinational Boolean logic design and work on several projects, such as creating a calculator and updating it using FPGA resources. Later, the book will take you through the advanced concepts of AXI and show you how to create a keyboard using PS/2. Finally, you’ll be able to consolidate all the projects in the book to create a unified output using a Video Graphics Array (VGA) controller that you’ll design. By the end of this SystemVerilog FPGA book, you’ll have learned how to work with FPGA systems and be able to design hardware circuits and boards using SystemVerilog programming.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to FPGAs and Xilinx Architectures
3
Section 2: Introduction to Verilog RTL Design, Simulation, and Implementation
9
Section 3: Interfacing with External Components

Implementing our first state machine

In general, a state machine takes in a number of events and, based on the events, moves through a set of states that can produce one or more outputs. A state machine can be quite simple or extremely complex. In the previous chapter, we designed a simple circuit to control our 7-segment display. The 7-segment controller contained two counters that cycled a zero through the cathodes and presented the anode data for each digit. We could have written a state machine to handle this; however, it was easier to write it the way we did.

Before we dive into our calculator project, we need to go over the two ways of coding state machines and the two traditional state machine implementations.

Writing a purely sequential state machine

The first way of coding a state machine is to write it in a single always block driven by a clock.

This kind of state machine would look something like this:

enum bit {IDLE, DATA} state;
initial state = IDLE; /...