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FPGA Assembly (FASM) Parser and Generation library

This repository documents the FASM file format and provides parsing libraries and simple tooling for working with FASM files.

It provides both a pure Python parser based on textx and a significantly faster C parser based on ANTLR. The library will try and use the ANTLR parser first and fall back to the textx parser if the compiled module is not found.

Which parsers are supported by your currently install can be found via python3 -c "import fasm.parser as p; print(p.available). The currently in use parser can be found via fasm.parser.implementation.

It is highly recommended to use the ANTLR parser as it is about 15 times faster.

functions for parsing and generating FASM files.

Build Instructions

CMake is required, and ANTLR has a few dependencies:

sudo apt install cmake default-jre-headless uuid-dev libantlr4-runtime-dev

Pull dependencies in third_party:

git submodule update --init

Build:

make build

Test with:

python setup.py test

The ANTLR runtime can either be linked statically or as a shared library. Use the --antlr-runtime=[static|shared] flag to select between the two modes e.g.:

python setup.py install --antlr-runtime=shared

Or, using pip:

pip install . --install-option="--antlr-runtime=shared" --no-use-pep517

The runtime will be built and statically linked by default. This flag is available in the build_ext, build, develop, and install commands.

The --no-use-pep517 flag is needed because there is currently no way to pass flags with PEP517. Relevant issue: https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/5771

FPGA Assembly (FASM)

FPGA Assembly is a file format designed by the F4PGA Project developers to provide a plain text file format for configuring the internals of an FPGA.

It is designed to allow FPGA place and route to not care about the actual bitstream format used on an FPGA.

FASM Ecosystem Diagram

Properties

Supported By

FASM is currently supported by the F4PGA Verilog to Routing fork, but we hope to get it merged upstream sometime soon.

It is also used by Project X-Ray.