/kactus2dev

Kactus2 is a graphical EDA tool based on the IP-XACT standard.

Primary LanguageC++GNU General Public License v2.0GPL-2.0

                            README : Kactus2
			   Copyright (c) 2012-2019 Tampere University
                        http://funbase.cs.tut.fi

Summary

Kactus2 logo

Kactus2 is a toolset for designing embedded products, especially FPGA-based MP-SoCs. The aim is easier IP reusability and integration for both hardware and software. The tool is based on IEEE 1685-2014 "IP-XACT" standard.

Windows installer and tar-package for Linux are available in SourceForge

Guidelines for issue reporting and contributing are given in CONTRIBUTING.md. Other support is provided by email: kactus2@cs.tut.fi

What you can do with Kactus2

Package IPs for reuse and exchange

  • Import your existing IPs as IP-XACT components
  • Create new IP-XACT components and generate their HDL module headers
  • Reuse IP-XACT files from any standard compatible vendor
  • Reuse the IPs in your designs and connect them with wires and busses

Create HW designs with hierarchy

  • Create multilevel hierarchies, where a design has multiple sub-designs
  • Configure component instances in designs, including the sub-designs
  • Use generator plugins to create HDL with wiring and parameterization

Integrate HW and SW

  • Use memory designer to preview memory maps and address spaces in your hierarchy
  • Package software to IP-XACT components and map them to hardware
  • Generate makefiles that build executables with rules defined in IP-XACT components

What you cannot do with Kactus2

  • Behavioral logic: Neither Kactus2 nor IP-XACT handles module implementations
  • Synthesis or simulation: These require tools that are specificly created for the purpose

Examples and tutorials

Example IPs are available in GitHub here.

Video tutorials are available in Youtube.

Windows install

An installer (link above) will guide you through the installation on Windows platforms.

If you want to build Kactus2 on Windows, see separate instructions in our project management site: https://kactus2.cs.tut.fi

Linux build and run

1. Install Qt5

To build and run Kactus2, Qt5 must be installed on your system. If you already have Qt installed, you can skip to step 2. Otherwise, select installing Qt with either using a package manager (option a) or manually (option b):

a) Install Qt5 packages using a package manager (requires admin privileges). The following packages are required (on Ubuntu):

  • qt5-default
  • qttools5-private-dev
  • qttools5-dev-tools
  • libqt5svg5-dev

Example:

sudo apt-get install qt5-default qttools5-private-dev qttools5-dev-tools libqt5svg5-dev

b) Manually download and install from https://www.qt.io/download/

When using manually installed Qt5, you need to make sure that Kactus2 install is configured accordingly: Open the file configure in the Kactus2 root directory and set the path to Qt5 binaries in the variable QTBIN_PATH.

Example:

QTBIN_PATH="~/Qt/5.7/gcc_64/bin/"

Please do note the slash at the end of the path.

2. Build the sources

First, get the Kactus2 source files. We recommend using the release tar-package (link above) which has all Windows-specific files removed. Extract the files and navigate to the Kactus2 root directory.

Example:

mkdir ~/kactus2
tar -xvf kactus2-3.4.0.tar.gz -C ~/kactus2
cd ~/kactus2

Select installation either for all users (option a) or customized target (option b) below:

a) Default installation for all users (requires admin privileges).

Open file .qmake.conf and check that the paths are compatible with your Linux distribution. The defaults should work with Ubuntu 64-bit, Debian and CentOS 7 64-bit, but on some systems you may have to change lib_path from /usr/lib to /usr/lib64.

Now run following commands:

./configure
make
sudo make install

After the installation, skip to section 3.

b) Customized installation target. This option can be used for a local installation for the current user (e.g. in ~/kactus2) as well as shared installation in a specific directory (e.g. /opt/edatools/kactus2).

Open file .qmake.conf and set the installation directory in variable LOCAL_INSTALL_DIR.

Example:

LOCAL_INSTALL_DIR="~/kactus2"

By default, the shared libraries are installed in the same directory, but can be configured by setting the lib_path on line 44.

Now run the following commands:

./configure
make
make install

Run sudo make install, if the current user has no write permissions to the target directory (e.g. /opt/edatools/kactus2).

Finally, make sure the shared libraries can be found by the program loader. If the installation is shared between multiple users, consider listing the libraries in /etc/ld.so.conf. For example, create the file /etc/ld.so.conf.d/kactus2-3.4.0.conf and in it add a single line that contains the path to the installation directory (e.g. /opt/edatools/kactus2). Run ldconfig to update the paths in the loader.

Please note, if you do ./configure with wrong Qt binaries, you will have to delete the generated makefiles before configuring again. The easiest way to do this, is to run command make distclean.

3a. Run Kactus2 GUI

There are three ways to run Kactus2 depending on your system and installation setup.

a) A default installation shared between users. Run:

/usr/bin/kactus2

b) A local installation from the installation directory. Run:

LD_LIBRARY_PATH=. ./kactus2

If the library paths are set in /etc/ld.so.conf, the binary can be run directly. Example:

/opt/edatools/kactus2

c) In some systems, a link to the executable is created, if Kactus2 was installed for all users. Run:

kactus2

Please note a recent change to lower-case binary name i.e. kactus2, not Kactus2.

3b. Run Kactus2 command-line (experimental)

Some tasks may be run in the command-line without the GUI. Currently only Verilog and VHDL generators supports this feature and can be executed with command generate_verilog and generate_vhdl. Additional options are required as detailed below.

Example:

kactus2 generate_verilog -c tut.fi:cpu.logic:alu:1.0 -w structural_verilog -o ./rtl_out

This will generate structural Verilog for the -c component tut.fi:cpu.logic:alu:1.0 and its sub-component hierarchy defined in -w view structural_verilog into -o directory ./rtl_out.

Kactus2 supports the following general command-line options:

  • -h, --help: Show the application usage help and exit.
  • -v, --version: Show the application version and exit.

Please note that the command-line interface is an experimental feature and very likely subject to changes in the near future.

Settings and configurations

Kactus2 uses a settings file for storing user-specific tool settings. The file default location is ~/.config/TUT/Kactus2.ini in Linux and C:\Users<username>\AppData\Roaming\TUT\Kactus2.ini in Windows. The location can be checked on the general settings page in Kactus2.

A system wide default settings file is located in /etc/xdg and C:\ProgramData, respectively. This will be used as a base for any new user-specific settings and a fallback mechanism, if the user's file is missing a requested value.

Modifying the settings files manually is not recommended and should be done only by advanced users. Most of the time all required changes can be applied in the Kactus2 GUI.

In addition, Kactus2 uses the file configure.cfg for updating the users' settings when new setting options are introduced in the tool. Please do not modify this file as it will break the compatibility with earlier versions.

Community Guidelines & Contributions

Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for details.

Contributors

Antti Kamppi, Joni-Matti Määttä, Lauri Matilainen, Timo D. Hämäläinen, Mikko Teuho, Juho Järvinen, Esko Pekkarinen, Janne Virtanen

Kactus2 is linked with Qt 5.10.1, copyright Digia Plc. (LGPL).

Kactus2 uses Icons8 provided by Icons8 LLC

Licencing

This software is licenced under the GPL2 General Public License.

Kactus2 is also available for dual licencing. Please contact kactus2@cs.tut.fi to purchase a commercial licence.