JUNEww / netv2-fpga

Quickstart for building FPGA code for NeTV2

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NeTV2 LiteX Quickstart Guide

Please check out the wiki (https://github.com/AlphamaxMedia/netv2-fpga/wiki) for more documentation on the NeTV2 project.

Updates

Grab the latest update by first ensuring the NeTV2 is on the network, then plugging a keyboard and mouse into the NeTV2’s USB ports and typing 'ctrl-q'. Double click the "Update FPGA" icon that appears on the left hand side of the screen. The screen should blank for about a minute, and then come back.

As of September 2019, the latest update enables 1080p, 1080i, and 720p auto-resolution support, and you can also pick YCrCb chroma coding for the overlay. If your overlay shows up looking pink and green, this is likely the issue. You can pick YCrCb by logging into your NeTV2 via SSH and running the command ~/code/netv2mvp-scripts/set_ycrcb.sh. This command only appears after the latest update.

Hacking

Note that the NeTV2 hardware uses primarily torx screws. You will need a Torx T6 bit to open the case, and a 2.5mm hex key (or Torx T10) bit to remove the motherboard from its standoffs.

If you’re using the NeTV2 as "just a board" without the Raspberry Pi attached, please read https://github.com/AlphamaxMedia/netv2-fpga/wiki/Using-NeTV2-as-a-Dev-Board for more on how to use it.

IMPORTANT: If you want to connect a regular HDMI cable to the "overlay" port, you will need to re-build the FPGA with the correct pattern of differential pair inversions to match an HDMI cable. See https://github.com/AlphamaxMedia/netv2-fpga/blob/master/netv2mvp.py#L148. The pattern of inversions checked into the master branch targets the custom M2M jumper, which swaps some differential pairs to improve routing.

These instructions can be used to quickly start FPGA development.

tl;dr:

  1. Check out this repo with git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/AlphamaxMedia/netv2-fpga.

  2. Ensure you have Python 3.5 or newer installed.

  3. Ensure you have make installed.

  4. Download the Risc-V toolchain from https://www.sifive.com/products/tools/ and put it in your PATH.

  5. Go to https://www.xilinx.com/support/download.html and download All OS installer Single-File Download

  6. Do a minimal Xilinx install to /opt/Xilinx/, and untick everything except Design Tools / Vivado Design Suite / Vivado and Devices / Production Devices / 7 Series

  7. Go to https://www.xilinx.com/member/forms/license-form.html, get a license, and place it in ~/.Xilinx/Xilinx.lic

  8. Run ./netv2mvp.py (or python3 ./netv2mvp.py)

Source code update

To update the repo to the upstream version, including all dependencies, run:

git pull
git submodule update --recursive

Using lxbuildenv.py Environment

lxbuildenv is a Python module. It sets up the build environment and ensures you have the correct dependencies. To use it, start your program off with:

#!/usr/bin/env python3
import lxbuildenv

lxbuildenv.py has some very surprising behaviors that you should be aware of:

  1. In order to set environment variables such as PYTHONHASHSEED, lxbuildenv will actually re-exec the Python interpreter. This will, among other things, cause the pid to change. This is why lxbuildenv should be imported first.

  2. The environment variable PYTHONPATH is replaced to include every directory under deps/. If you rely on PYTHONPATH to be something else, this may surprise you.

  3. lxbuildenv has several command line parameters that it can accept. To display these, run your command with the --lx-help parameter.

  4. The deps/ directory includes its own site.py implementation, adapted from a Debian implementation. This is because some distros force /usr/share/python/site-packages/ to be first in the dependency list, which causes confusing dependency interactions. If you’re relying on site packages being in a certain order, this may cause problems. You can try deleting deps/site/ in order to disable this behavior.

In exchange for some deviation from other build environments, lxbuildenv gives you several benefits that come in handy for hardware projects:

  1. Python dicts enumerate in constant order, giving some consistency to build results.

  2. You will probably be modifying code in the dependencies. By keeping them inside the project directory, this becomes much simpler.

  3. Additionally, all dependencies remain under version control, which you would otherwise lose when installing dependencies as packages.

  4. Hardware, moreso than software, depends on exact version numbers. By using git to track dependency versions, this build becomes more reproducible.

  5. It is cross-platform, and works anywhere Xilinx does.

  6. The lxbuildenv environment doesn’t rely on opaque environment variables, or otherwise have a special environment you enter. Everything is documented behind --help flags.

Working with Dependencies

Dependencies are managed through git, and managing their usage is largely an exercise in working with git.

For example, if you would like to make a change to litex, go into deps/litex and checkout a new branch and create a new upstream repo. If you’re working on Github, you would do something like fork the repo to your own organization.

As an example, assume sutajiokousagi has forked upstream litex:

$ cd deps/litex
$ git checkout -b new-feature
$ git remote add kosagi git@github.com:sutajiokousagi/litex.git
$ cd -

Then, make changes to deps/litex as needed.

When you want to merge changes upstream, go into deps/litex/ and push the branch to your remote:

$ cd deps/litex
$ git push kosagi new-feature
$ cd -

Then you can go and open a Pull Request on Github.

Fetching Source Code Updates

Dependencies are designed to be independent, and you should update them as needed. To update a particular dependency, go into that dependency’s subdirectory and run git pull. You may also find it easier to pull updates from a particular dependency and merge them. For example, if you’re working on the new-feature branch of litex and want to pull changes from upstream, run:

$ cd deps/litex
$ git fetch origin
$ git merge master
$ cd -

This will merge all changes from upstream onto your own branch.

Rationale

NeTV2 uses Migen for its HDL, and uses many components from the LiteX project. These are primarily written in Python, which has a large number of options available for configuring installs, ranging from global installs, virutlalenv, conda, as well as several others. Everyone has an opinion on what’s right.

These instructions ignore all of that, in favor of simplicity. You likely already have a copy of make and python, and you probably have a compiler installed for other projects. It’s also more challenging to work on submodules when they’re combined together in a site-packages repository and outside of version control.

lxbuildenv takes a different approach in that it doubles-down on using native components and simply modifies several magical environment variables to make it all work. As a bonus, it works on platforms where Conda doesn’t, such as platforms where packages might not be available.

Support programs

There is a wrapper script in this repo to run support programs such as litex_server and litex_term. These may be invoked either with python (python bin/litex_server udp) or on shebang-aware systems they may be executed directly (./bin/litex_server udp).

Xilinx PATH

If your Xilinx install is in the default path (C:\\Xilinx on Windows, /opt/Xilinx on Linux), then the build system should be able to automatically find Xilinx.

If not, you can add the Xilinx bin directory to your PATH.

PyCharm integration

To use PyCharm, open this directory as a Project by going to the File menu and selecting Open…​. Make sure you open the entire directory, and not just a single file in this directory.

When you first open this project, you’ll see lots of red squiggly lines indicating errors. PyCharm needs to know about the dependency structure in order to allow you to drill down into modules and auto-complete statements.

Open this directory in PyCharm and expand the deps/ directory. Then hold down Shift and select all subdirectories under deps/. This will include litedram, liteeth, and so on.

Then, right-click and select Mark directory as…​ and select Sources Root. The red squiggly lines should go away, and PyCharm should now be configured.

When running your module from within PyCharm, you may find it useful to set environment variables. You can use the --lx-print-env command. For example: ./netv2mvp.py --lx-print-env > pycharm.env to create a .env-compatible file. There are several PyCharm plugins that can make use of this file.

Visual Studio Code integration

Visual Studio Code needs to know where modules are. These are specified in environment variables, which are automatically read from a .env file in your project root. Create this file to enable pylint and debugging in Visual Studio Code:

$ python ./netv2mvp.py --lx-print-env > .env

Production scripts

There’s a number of scripts used to assist with integration into the Raspberry Pi runtime environment. They are all located in https://github.com/alphamaxmedia/netv2mvp-scripts/. In this location, you’ll find the scripts that do the one-click update, openocd manipulation of bitstream and SPI ROM, publishing of status info to JSON feed, and Magic Mirror config info. This repository is just for the FPGA design.

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Quickstart for building FPGA code for NeTV2


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