2

I have the following verilog code. Idea is to store value of counter at the time of reset. However, I am not sure if it would be synthesizable(memories need synchronous reset). I get DRC violatins and the memory, bufreadaddr, bufreadval are all optimized out. What are some other ways to write this?

module counter (clk,reset, d_out,laststoredvalue, bufreadaddr, bufreadval, resetcount) ;
input clk ,reset ;
input [5:0] resetcount;

output [15:0] d_out;
output [15:0] laststoredvalue;
input [5:0] bufreadaddr;
output [15:0] bufreadval;
reg [15:0] bufreadval;

reg [15:0] laststoredvalue;

reg [15:0] d_out;
reg [15:0] d_out_mem[63:0];

always @(negedge reset or posedge clk) begin
        if (reset == 0) begin
             d_out <= 16'h0000;
             d_out_mem[resetcount] <= d_out;
             laststoredvalue <= d_out;
         end else begin
              d_out <= d_out + 1'b1; 
          end
end

always @(bufreadaddr)
        bufreadval = d_out_mem[bufreadaddr];


integer count;
initial begin
  count = 0;
end
always @(posedge clk ) begin
    count = count + 1;
    //$display(count);
end


endmodule
1

1 Answer 1

0

hi i have made a small change for your code; added a temporary variable to store the output in a register it will store previous value on reset;

module counter (clk,reset, d_out,laststoredvalue, bufreadaddr, bufreadval, resetcount) ;
input clk ,reset ;
input [5:0] resetcount;

output [15:0] d_out;
output [15:0] laststoredvalue;
input [5:0] bufreadaddr;
output [15:0] bufreadval;
reg [15:0] bufreadval;

reg [15:0] laststoredvalue;
reg [15:0] temp;
reg [15:0] d_out;
reg [15:0] d_out_mem[63:0];

always @(negedge reset or posedge clk) begin
        if (reset == 0) begin

             d_out_mem[resetcount] = d_out;
             laststoredvalue = temp;
                 d_out  = #10 16'h0000;
         end 
            else begin

              d_out = d_out + 1'b1;
                    temp = d_out; 
          end
end

always @(bufreadaddr)
        bufreadval = d_out_mem[bufreadaddr];

endmodule

remaining code is same as it is.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.