Home >>  Engg. Seminars and Projects >> IT Seminar Topics
   



Project Topics 



Computer Science


Information Technology


Electrical & Electronics


CivilMechanical

Others

Seminar Topics



Computer Science


Information Technology


Electrical & Electronics


Civil


Mechanical


Others



Training Institutes




Placement Oriented Trainings







 

JHDL



JHDL (Java Hardware Description Language) is a low level hardware description language, focused primarily on building circuits via an Object Oriented approach that bundles collections of gates into Java objects. Implemented as a toolset and class library on top of the Java programming language, its primary use is for the design of FPGAs. Particular attention was paid to supporting the Xilinx series of chips.
When the design is ready to be placed in a fabric, the developer simply generates an EDIF netlist and imports it into his favorite toolkit. Once imported, the developer should be able to transfer the circuit via a JTAG cable. EDIF netlisting is supported for the XC4000, Virtex, and Virtex-II series of FPGAs.
JHDL was developed at BYU in the Configurable Computing Laboratory.
 

Features

The JHDL language features include:
Structural hardware design
Flexible module generators
Table-generated finite state machines
A graphical 'Workbench' toolkit
Behavioral synthesis is not yet fully supported.
The integrated JHDL Workbench environment is designed to allow developers to graphically test and trace their circuit designs. This tool includes:
A graphical schematic viewer
A multiclock cycle-based simulator
A command line interface
A complete list of all wires and gates
A complete status of all values passing through the circuit

 

   



   

Google