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Ixiasoft
1.1. Benefits of Command-Line Executables
1.2. Introductory Example
1.3. Command-Line Scripting Help
1.4. Project Settings with Command-Line Options
1.5. Compilation with quartus_sh --flow
1.6. Text-Based Report Files
1.7. Using Command-Line Executables in Scripts
1.8. Common Scripting Examples
1.9. The QFlow Script
1.10. Document Revision History
1.8.1. Create a Project and Apply Constraints
1.8.2. Check Design File Syntax
1.8.3. Create a Project and Synthesize a Netlist Using Netlist Optimizations
1.8.4. Archive and Restore Projects
1.8.5. Perform I/O Assignment Analysis
1.8.6. Update Memory Contents Without Recompiling
1.8.7. Create a Compressed Configuration File
1.8.8. Fit a Design as Quickly as Possible
1.8.9. Fit a Design Using Multiple Seeds
2.1. Tool Command Language
2.2. Intel® Quartus® Prime Tcl Packages
2.3. Intel® Quartus® Prime Tcl API Help
2.4. End-to-End Design Flows
2.5. Creating Projects and Making Assignments
2.6. Compiling Designs
2.7. Reporting
2.8. Timing Analysis
2.9. Automating Script Execution
2.10. Other Scripting Features
2.11. The Intel® Quartus® Prime Tcl Shell in Interactive Mode Example
2.12. The tclsh Shell
2.13. Tcl Scripting Basics
2.14. Tcl Scripting Revision History
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Ixiasoft
2.3.1.1. Run a Tcl Script
Running an executable with the -t option runs the specified Tcl script. You can also specify arguments to the script. Access the arguments through the argv variable, or use a package such as cmdline, which supports arguments of the following form:
-<argument name> <argument value>
The cmdline package is included in the < Intel® Quartus® Prime directory>/common/tcl/packages directory.
For example, to run a script called myscript.tcl with one argument, Stratix® , type the following command at a system command prompt:
quartus_sh -t myscript.tcl
Stratix®