Generated help messages and documentation ========================================= All Yosys commands and built-in cell types should include help text, documenting their functionality for users. This help text is made available through the `help` command, and online via `ReadtheDocs`_ as part of the :doc:`/cmd_ref` and :doc:`/cell_index` documentation. When running locally, any commands provided by loaded plugins (either from the command line when calling ``yosys``, or dynamically with the `plugin` command) will also be available to the `help` command. .. _ReadtheDocs: https://about.readthedocs.com/ .. note:: Since help text for commands is generated from compiled code, the online help may differ from that produced by `help`. Some commands, like `abc`, may be completely unavailable depending on compile flags; while others may limit specific features, such as whether the `synth` script pass uses ABC. Command help ------------ The first stop for command help text is the ``Pass::short_help``. This is a short sentence describing the pass, and is set in the ``Pass`` constructor with the name of the pass, as demonstrated here with `chformal`. .. literalinclude:: /generated/chformal.cc :language: c++ :start-at: public Pass { :end-at: ChformalPass() :caption: ``ChformalPass()`` from :file:`passes/cmds/chformal.cc` :append: // ... } ChformalPass; All currently available commands are listed with their ``short_help`` string when calling `help` without arguments, and is more or less the same as the unlisted :ref:`command index `. The string is also used when hovering over links to commands in the documentation, and in section headings like :ref:`chformal autocmd`. The next section shows the complete help text for the `chformal` command. This can be displayed locally by using ``help `` (or ``yosys -h `` from the command line). The general format is to show each usage signature (how the command is called), followed by a paragraph describing what the pass does, and a list of options or flags available. Additional arguments in the signature or option may use square brackets (``[]``) to indicate optional parts, and angle brackets (``<>``) for required parts. The pipe character ``|`` may be used to indicate mutually exclusive arguments. .. note:: Remember that when using ``Frontend`` and ``Backend`` the pass name will be be prefixed with ``read_`` or ``write_`` respectively. Usage signatures must match the pass name available in commands/scripts, which is available as ``Pass::pass_name``. .. todo:: decide on a formatting style for pass options .. _chformal autocmd: .. autocmd:: chformal :noindex: The ``Pass::help()`` method ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Overriding this method is the original way to provide help text, and as of this writing is still the most common. The ``log()`` function should be called directly to print and format the help text, and each line should be limited to 80 (printed) characters. While it is possible to provide arbitrary formatting, it is preferred to follow the guidelines here to maintain consistency with other passes and to assist in correct parsing and formatting during RST generation (i.e. these docs). The first and last lines should always be blank (usually ``log("\n");``), followed by the primary usage signature for the command. Each usage signature should be indented with 4 spaces, and followed by a blank line. Each option or flag should start on a new line indented with 4 spaces, followed by a description of the option which is indented by a further 4 spaces, and then a blank line. Option descriptions typically start with lower case, and may forgo a trailing period (``.``). Where multiple options share a description the blank line between options should be omitted. .. note:: `Dumping to json`_ has more on how formatting in ``help()`` gets parsed. The ``Pass::formatted_help()`` method ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The ``formatted_help`` method serves two purposes in help generation, both of which are optional. In both cases, any pass which uses the method should ``#include "kernel/log_help.h"``, and begin the method by calling ``auto *help = PrettyHelp::get_current();``. The method finishes by returning a boolean value. ``true`` means help content has been added to the current ``PrettyHelp``, while ``false`` indicates that ``Pass::help()`` should be called instead. Setting a command group ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Command groups are used when `Dumping to json`_, so that related commands can be presented together in documentation. For example, all of the formal commands (which `chformal` is one of) are listed under :doc:`/cmd/index_formal`, by using the ``autocmdgroup`` directive in :file:`docs/source/cmd/index_formal.rst`. By default, commands are grouped by their source location, such that the group is the same as the path to the source file. .. note:: Source location tracking requires :makevar:`ENABLE_HELP_SOURCE` to be set in the makefile. Some passes, like the ``opt_*`` family, are able to be grouped by the name of the pass; but most will be assigned the ``unknown`` group. For frontends and backends, source code is structured such that different formats are located in different folders. Default behavior is to instead group all of these passes as :doc:`/cmd/index_frontends` and :doc:`/cmd/index_backends` respectively. Without location tracking, the fallback is to look for passes that start with ``read_`` or ``write_``. It is possible to set the group of a command explicitly with the ``PrettyHelp::set_group()`` method. This allows grouping of commands which may not share a common source location, as well as ensuring that commands are still grouped when location tracking is disabled. Because ``Pass::formatted_help()`` returns if it produced help content, it is completely valid to override the method, get the current instance of ``PrettyHelp``, set the command group, and then return ``false``. .. warning:: There is currently no warning available for groups that do not have a corresponding ``autocmdgroup``. If you add a new command group, make sure that it has a corresponding index page. Rich help text ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The second purpose of ``Pass::formatted_help`` is to provide richer help content which is able to take advantage of the reStructuredText formatting used here in the web docs. It also provides a more fluid way of writing help text, without getting caught up in the terminal-first spacing requirements of writing for ``Pass::help()``. Help content is a list of ``ContentListing`` nodes on a root node, which can be found by calling ``PrettyHelp::get_root()``. Each node has a type, a body, and its own list of children ``ContentListing``\ s. Adding content is done with the ``ContentListing::{usage, option, codeblock, paragraph}`` methods, which each add a new child node with a type set to the calling method. Let's take a look at the source code for `chformal`. .. literalinclude:: /generated/chformal.cc :language: c++ :start-at: bool formatted_help() :end-before: void execute :caption: ``ChformalPass::formatted_help()`` from :file:`passes/cmds/chformal.cc` We can see that each of the ``ContentListing`` methods have the body of the new node as the first argument. For a ``usage`` node, this is how to call the command (i.e. its usage signature). ``paragraph`` nodes contain a paragraph of text with line breaks added automatically; the argument itself should contain any line breaks, but the string can be broken across multiple lines as shown. The body of a ``paragraph`` node is treated as raw RST, allowing for inline formatting and references as if it were written in the RST file itself. As shown in the example (and the :ref:`formatted output above `), this includes using single backticks for linking to cells or commands, and double backticks for raw code. The ``option`` method lists a single option for the command, usually starting with a dash (``-``). An optional second argument can be provided with adds a paragraph node as a child of the option, and is used for describing the option. Where multiple options share a description, it should be added to the last option. .. note:: To add multiple paragraphs to an option's description, ``ContentListing::open_option()`` should be used instead. This method returns the option node, which can then be used to call ``ContentList::paragraph()`` multiple times. ``codeblock`` content is displayed verbatim, and content should include line breaks as desired. No extra formatting will be applied to the text, and it will be rendered with a monospace font; making it perfect for code sections or ASCII art diagrams which render the same on the web as they do in the terminal. An optional second argument is available for specifying the language in RST output for code syntax highlighting (use ``yoscrypt`` for yosys script syntax highlighting). .. not recommended since it (currently) doesn't render in the terminal The final method available is ``ContentListing::open_usage``. As with ``open_option`` creates and returns a new node which can have additional content added to it directly. For the usage node, this can be used for example to add text/options specific to a given usage of the command. In the web documentation any content added in this way will be indented under the usage signature. Command line rendering ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rendering text for the command line is done by the ``Pass::help`` method. When this method is not overridden, the default behavior is to call ``Pass::formatted_help()``. If this method is also left unimplemented, or the return value is explicitly false, then a default message about missing help text for the command is displayed. Returning true, however, will then call ``PrettyHelp::log_help()`` to convert the formatted help content into plain text. Rendering rich help text as plain text is done by traversing over all the ``ContentListing`` nodes and printing the body text. ``usage`` nodes are preceded by an empty line and indented one level (4 spaces). ``option`` nodes are also indented one level, while their children are indented an extra level (8 spaces). Each section of body text is broken into words separated by spaces. If a word would cause the line to exceed 80 characters (controlled by ``MAX_LINE_LEN`` in :file:`kernel/log_help.cc`), then the word will instead be placed on a new line, with the same level of indentation. Special handling is included for words that begin and end with a backtick (`````) so that these are stripped when printing to the command line. Compare :ref:`chformal_help` below with the :ref:`chformal autocmd` above. The content is still the same, but for the command line it uses a fixed width. .. todo:: spaces in backticks (``assert(...)`` vs ````assert(s_eventually ...)````) .. literalinclude:: /generated/chformal.log :lines: 2- :name: chformal_help :caption: Command line output for `help chformal` Cell help --------- - :file:`techlibs/common/simcells.v` and :file:`techlibs/common/simlib.v` - parsed by :file:`techlibs/common/cellhelp.py` + unlike commands, cell help text is generated at compile time + only formatting occurs at run time + no support for custom cells in plugins - comments preceding cell type converted to a ``SimHelper`` struct, defined in :file:`kernel/register.cc` - ``#include``\ d in :file:`kernel/register.cc`, creating a map of cell types to their ``SimHelper`` struct. - ``help -cells`` - lists all cells with their input/output ports - again an unlisted :ref:`cell index ` - ``help `` - prints help message for ```` - constructed from ``SimHelper`` content depending on version - ``help +`` - prints verilog code for ```` v1 (default) ~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Legacy format - Expects formatting as follows: .. code-block:: verilog //- //- $ () //* group //- //- //- module \$ (); // ... endmodule - ``//* group`` line is generally after the cell signature, but can appear anywhere in the comment block - determines where the cell is included in sphinx - check :file:`docs/source/cell` for current groups - a missing group will raise an error - assigning an unused group will result in the cell not being included in the sphinx docs - the port signature line (``//- $ ()``) must start with (at least) 4 spaces (not tabs) - the empty lines (``//-``) before/after the signature are required - cell description can be multiple lines, but each line must start with ``//-`` and a space - description should have a trailing empty line - line breaks are preserved in `help` calls but will be rendered as text in sphinx docs, with empty lines being required between paragraphs - cells in :file:`techlibs/common/simcells.v` can have optional truth table at the end of the cell description which is rendered in sphinx docs as a literal code block - e.g. `$_NOT_`: .. code-block:: verilog //- //- $_NOT_ (A, Y) //* group comb_simple //- //- An inverter gate. //- //- Truth table: A | Y //- ---+--- //- 0 | 1 //- 1 | 0 //- v2 (more expressive) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - each field of the ``SimHelper`` struct can be assigned with: .. code-block:: verilog //* - ``ver`` must be explicitly set as ``2`` - optional fields ``title`` and ``tags`` - title used for better displaying of cell - tags is a space-separated list of :doc:`/cell/properties` - the port signature is automatically generated from the ``module`` definition - cell description is the same as v1 - can link to commands or passes using backticks (`````) - e.g. `$nex`: .. code-block:: verilog //* ver 2 //* title Case inequality //* group binary //* tags x-aware //- This corresponds to the Verilog '!==' operator. //- //- Refer to `$eqx` for more details. //- - code blocks can be included as following: .. code-block:: verilog //- text //- :: //- //- monospaced text //- //- indentation and line length will be preserved, giving a scroll bar if necessary for the browser window //- //- more text - the empty line after the ``::`` and before the text continues are required - the ``::`` line will be ignored in the `help` call while sphinx docs will treat everything that follows as a literal block until the next unindented line: text :: monospaced text indentation and line length will be preserved, giving a scroll bar if necessary for the browser window more text Dumping to json --------------- - `help -dump-cmds-json cmds.json` + generates a ``ContentListing`` for each command registered in Yosys + tries to parse unformatted ``Pass::help()`` output if ``Pass::formatted_help()`` is unimplemented or returns false * if a line starts with four spaces followed by the name of the command then a space, it is parsed as a signature (usage node) * if a line is indented and starts with a dash (``-``), it is parsed as an option * anything else is parsed as a codeblock and added to either the root node or the current option depending on the indentation + dictionary of command name to ``ContentListing`` * uses ``ContentListing::to_json()`` recursively for each node in root * root node used for source location of class definition * includes flags set during pass constructor (e.g. ``experimental_flag`` set by ``Pass::experimental()``) * also title (``short_help`` argument in ``Pass::Pass``), group, and class name + dictionary of group name to list of commands in that group - used by sphinx autodoc to generate help content .. literalinclude:: /generated/cmds.json :language: json :start-at: "chformal": { :end-before: "chparam": { :caption: `chformal` in generated :file:`cmds.json` .. note:: Synthesis command scripts are special cased If the final block of help output starts with the string ``"The following commands are executed by this synthesis command:\n"``, then the rest of the code block is formatted as ``yoscrypt`` (e.g. `synth_ice40`). The caveat here is that if the ``script()`` calls ``run()`` on any commands *prior* to the first ``check_label`` then the auto detection will break and revert to unformatted code (e.g. `synth_fabulous`). Cells and commands in Sphinx ---------------------------- To support the rich documentation of commands and cells in Yosys, we use two custom `Sphinx Domains`_. .. _Sphinx Domains: https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/domains/index.html - ``yoscrypt`` role allows inline code to have yosys script syntax highlighting - default role of ``autoref`` + any text in single backticks without an explicit role will be assigned this one + will convert to ``cell:ref`` if it begins with ``$``, otherwise ``cmd:ref`` + to attempt linking there must be no spaces, and it must not begin with a dash (``-``) + ```chformal``` (or ``:autoref:`chformal```) -> ``:cmd:ref:`chformal``` -> `chformal` + also works with two words, if the first one is ``help`` + ```help $add``` -> ``:cell:ref:`help $add <$add>``` -> `help $add` + fallback to formatting as inline yoscrypt + ```-remove``` -> `-remove` + ```chformal -remove``` -> ``:yoscrypt:`chformal -remove``` -> `chformal -remove` Using autodoc ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - below is the raw RST output from ``autocmd`` (``YosysCmdDocumenter`` class in :file:`docs/util/cmd_documenter.py`) for `chformal` command - heading will be rendered as a subheading of the most recent heading (see `chformal autocmd`_ above rendered under `Command help`_) - ``.. cmd:def:: `` line is indexed for cross references with ``:cmd:ref:`` directive (`chformal autocmd`_ above uses ``:noindex:`` option so that `chformal` still links to the correct location) + ``:title:`` option controls text that appears when hovering over the `chformal` link - commands with warning flags (experimental or internal) add a ``.. warning`` block before any of the help content - if a command has no ``source_location`` the ``.. note`` at the bottom will instead link to :doc:`/cmd/index_other` .. _showing autocmd generated rst: .. autocmd_rst:: chformal - command groups documented with ``autocmdgroup `` + with ``:members:`` option this is the same as calling ``autocmd`` for each member of the group - ``autocell`` and ``autocellgroup`` + very similar to ``autocmd`` and ``autocmdgroup`` but for cells instead of commands (``YosysCellDocumenter`` in :file:`docs/util/cell_documenter.py`) + optionally includes verilog source for cell(s) with ``:source:`` option (plus ``:linenos:``) + cell definitions do not include titles + cells can have properties (:ref:`propindex`) - bonus ``autocmd_rst``, used exclusively on this page for `showing autocmd generated rst`_ Our custom Sphinx domains ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - ``cmd`` and ``cell`` - Directives + ``cmd:def`` provide command definition + ``cmd:usage`` used by ``autocmd`` for command usage signatures + ``cell:def`` provide cell definition + ``cell:defprop`` provide cell property definition (used in :doc:`/cell/properties`) + ``cell:source`` used by ``autocell`` for simulation models - Roles + ``cmd:ref`` link to a ``cmd:def`` with the same name + ``cmd:title`` same as ``cmd:ref``, but includes the short help in the text - ``:cmd:title:`chformal``` -> :cmd:title:`chformal` + ``cell:ref`` link to a ``cell:def`` with the same name + ``cell:title`` - ``:cell:title:`$nex``` -> :cell:title:`$nex` + ``cell:prop`` link to a ``cell:defprop`` of the same name