Quartus® Prime Pro Edition User Guide: Design Compilation

ID 683236
Date 9/30/2024
Public
Document Table of Contents

1.2.2. Using the RTL Analyzer

You can open the RTL Analyzer after running Analysis & Elaboration by clicking on the first magnifier icon in the Compilation Dashboard. For details about checkpoints, refer to the Design Analysis & Elaboration.

The RTL Analyzer allows you to visualize and analyze the components of your design RTL in the following GUIs:

Figure 6. RTL Analyzer GUI


Note:

Before exploring your design in the RTL Analyzer, select a viewing mode in the Display settings by navigating to View > Display Settings menu. The Auto zoom to current selection and Auto expand to current selection modes are enabled by default in the Display settings. You can disable one or both of these modes. In the enabled mode, the object you select in the hierarchy browser gets automatically highlighted in the schematic viewer. The schematic viewer and hierarchy browser expands the current selected object's hierarchy and adjusts the view to ensure the object is visible. Disable both modes if you do not want your current view to change in the hierarchy browser and schematic viewer.

Figure 7. Display Settings


Note: RTL Analyzer automatically saves the last view of your design when you close it. So, when you relaunch the RTL Analyzer, the last view is restored, including the highlighted objects and nodes, and you can continue your work from where you left it previously. However, in the event you change your RTL design and recompile the project after exiting the RTL Analyzer, the saved view is invalidated and not restored.

Design Hierarchy Browser

The design hierarchy browser renders the design netlist five-box data model. The core elements of this data model are modules, instances, ports, instance ports, and nets. For more information about this data model, refer to DNI Netlist Five-Box Data Model.

All objects in the hierarchy are organized by the object type. For example, I/Os are grouped based on the direction.

Various GUI elements of the RTL analyzer are synchronized and respond to the objects within the Objects pane. For example, for the currently selected object in the hierarchy browser, the schematic viewer brings the object into focus with a highlight, the Tcl Console emits an equivalent Tcl command, and the Properties viewer provides relevant information about the object. You can cross-probe from selected objects in the netlist to the source where they were defined by right-clicking on an object and selecting Locate Node > Locate in Design File option in the context-sensitive menu. The source file displays in the Quartus main window showing the line that instantiates the object.

Figure 8. Cross-probing Selected Objects in the Netlist


Schematic Viewer

The schematic viewer represents the design elements, such as modules, instances, ports, instance ports, and nets, schematically within the viewer. The viewer reacts and updates to bring different objects into focus as you navigate through the netlist.

Properties Viewer

The Property pane provides information about assignments and SDC constraints attached to the selected object in the hierarchy browser. You can cross-probe to the definition of the assignment in the source file.

Figure 9. Property Viewer Showing Constraints


Tcl Console

The Tcl Console provides a robust scripting interface that reports issues and displays relevant Tcl commands for GUI actions. It allows you to traverse and analyze your design. As you type the Tcl commands, notice how the schematic viewer and the hierarchy browser respond accordingly.

Object Finder

The object finder helps in locating an object in the design netlist. You can refine your search based on the object type (instance, instance bus, inst_port, port, port_bus, net, and net_bus) and modules. For complicated designs, you can further use filters to refine your search.

The RTL Analyzer provides the following tools and functionality: