Calling `throw dst_end_of_data_exception()` when the desired number of cycles has been reached means that the fst reader can't tidy up after itself and leads to memory leaks.
This doesn't happen when the `-stop` flag is used because the `Yosys::FstData` struct tracks the end time and skips the outer callback if the simulation has gone past the desired end time.
Move cycle checking into the inner callback along with the time checking means that the outer callback no longer needs to throw an exception in order to stop checking further values, while still allowing the fst reader to finish reading and deallocate memory.
The lexer for liberty files was using istream's `get` and `unget` which
are notorious for bad performance and that showed up during profiling.
This replaces the direct `istream` use with a custom LibertyInputStream
that does its own buffering to provide `get` and `unget` that behave the
same way but are implemented with a fast path that is easy to inline and
optimize.
Instead, change the default `Design::selected_modules()` to match the behaviour (i.e. `selected_unboxed_modules_warn()`) because it's a lot of files to touch and they don't really _need_ to be updated.
Also change `Design::selected_whole_modules()` users over to `Design::selected_unboxed_whole_modules()`, except `attrmap` because I'm not convinced it should be ignoring boxes. So instead, leave the deprecation warning for that one use and come back to the pass another time.
Used to select all modules including boxes, set when both `full` and `boxes` are true in the constructor, pulling down `full_selection`.
Add `Selection::selects_all()` method as short hand for `full_selection || complete_selection`.
Update selection operations to account for complete selections.
Add static methods to `Selection` for creating a new empty/full/complete selection to make it clearer to users when doing so.
Use said static methods to replace most instances of the `Selection` constructor.
Update `Selection::optimize` to use
New methods on Design to push/pop selection instead of accessing the selection stack directly. Includes methods for pushing a full/complete/empty selection.
Also helper methods on modules to check `is_selected` and `is_selected_whole`.
Now uses two enums, one to control whether or not to include partially selected
modules (and what to do if they are encountered), and one to control whether or
not to include boxed modules (and what to do if they are encountered).
Mark Design::selected{modules, whole_modules}() deprecated and make them
provide warnings on boxes. There are a lot of places that use them and I can't
always tell which ones support boxed modules and which don't.