Provided by: verilator_4.038-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       Verilator - Translate and simulate SystemVerilog code using C++/SystemC

SYNOPSIS

           verilator --help
           verilator --version
           verilator --cc [options] [source_files.v]... [opt_c_files.cpp/c/cc/a/o/so]
           verilator --sc [options] [source_files.v]... [opt_c_files.cpp/c/cc/a/o/so]
           verilator --lint-only -Wall [source_files.v]...

DESCRIPTION

       The "Verilator" package converts all synthesizable, and many behavioral, Verilog and
       SystemVerilog designs into a C++ or SystemC model that after compiling can be executed.
       Verilator is not a traditional simulator, but a compiler.

       Verilator is typically used as follows:

       1. The "verilator" executable is invoked with parameters similar to GCC, Cadence
       Verilog-XL/NC-Verilog, or Synopsys VCS.  "verilator" reads the specified user's
       SystemVerilog code, lints it, optionally adds coverage and waveform tracing support, and
       compiles the design into a source level C++ or SystemC "model".  The resulting model's C++
       or SystemC code is output as .cpp and .h files. This is referred to as "verilating" and
       the process is "to verilate"; the output is a "verilated" model.

       2. For simulation, a small user written C++ wrapper file is required, the "wrapper".  This
       wrapper defines the C++ function `main()` which instantiates the Verilated model as a
       C++/SystemC object.

       3. The user main wrapper, the files created by Verilator, a "runtime library" provided by
       Verilator, and if applicable the SystemC libraries are then compiled using a C++ compiler
       to create a simulation executable.

       4. The resulting executable will perform the actual simulation, during "simulation
       runtime".

       To get started, jump down to the "EXAMPLE C++ EXECUTION" section.

ARGUMENT SUMMARY

       This is a short summary of the arguments to the "verilator" executable.  See "VERILATION
       ARGUMENTS" for the detailed descriptions of these arguments.

           {file.v}                    Verilog package, module and top module filenames
           {file.c/cc/cpp}             Optional C++ files to compile in
           {file.a/o/so}               Optional C++ files to link in

            +1364-1995ext+<ext>        Use Verilog 1995 with file extension <ext>
            +1364-2001ext+<ext>        Use Verilog 2001 with file extension <ext>
            +1364-2005ext+<ext>        Use Verilog 2005 with file extension <ext>
            +1800-2005ext+<ext>        Use SystemVerilog 2005 with file extension <ext>
            +1800-2009ext+<ext>        Use SystemVerilog 2009 with file extension <ext>
            +1800-2012ext+<ext>        Use SystemVerilog 2012 with file extension <ext>
            +1800-2017ext+<ext>        Use SystemVerilog 2017 with file extension <ext>
           --assert                    Enable all assertions
           --autoflush                 Flush streams after all $displays
           --bbox-sys                  Blackbox unknown $system calls
           --bbox-unsup                Blackbox unsupported language features
           --bin <filename>            Override Verilator binary
           --build                     Build model executable/library after Verilation
            -CFLAGS <flags>            C++ compiler flags for makefile
           --cc                        Create C++ output
           --cdc                       Clock domain crossing analysis
           --clk <signal-name>         Mark specified signal as clock
           --make <build-tool>         Generate scripts for specified build tool
           --compiler <compiler-name>  Tune for specified C++ compiler
           --converge-limit <loops>    Tune convergence settle time
           --coverage                  Enable all coverage
           --coverage-line             Enable line coverage
           --coverage-toggle           Enable toggle coverage
           --coverage-user             Enable SVL user coverage
           --coverage-underscore       Enable coverage of _signals
            -D<var>[=<value>]          Set preprocessor define
           --debug                     Enable debugging
           --debug-check               Enable debugging assertions
           --no-debug-leak             Disable leaking memory in --debug mode
           --debugi <level>            Enable debugging at a specified level
           --debugi-<srcfile> <level>  Enable debugging a source file at a level
           --default-language <lang>   Default language to parse
            +define+<var>=<value>      Set preprocessor define
           --dpi-hdr-only              Only produce the DPI header file
           --dump-defines              Show preprocessor defines with -E
           --dump-tree                 Enable dumping .tree files
           --dump-treei <level>        Enable dumping .tree files at a level
           --dump-treei-<srcfile> <level>  Enable dumping .tree file at a source file at a level
           --dump-tree-addrids         Use short identifiers instead of addresses
            -E                         Preprocess, but do not compile
           --error-limit <value>       Abort after this number of errors
           --exe                       Link to create executable
            -F <file>                  Parse options from a file, relatively
            -f <file>                  Parse options from a file
            -FI <file>                 Force include of a file
           --flatten                   Force inlining of all modules, tasks and functions
            -G<name>=<value>           Overwrite top-level parameter
           --gdb                       Run Verilator under GDB interactively
           --gdbbt                     Run Verilator under GDB for backtrace
           --generate-key              Create random key for --protect-key
           --getenv <var>              Get environment variable with defaults
           --help                      Display this help
            -I<dir>                    Directory to search for includes
            -j <jobs>                  Parallelism for --build
           --gate-stmts <value>        Tune gate optimizer depth
           --if-depth <value>          Tune IFDEPTH warning
            +incdir+<dir>              Directory to search for includes
           --inhibit-sim               Create function to turn off sim
           --inline-mult <value>       Tune module inlining
            -LDFLAGS <flags>           Linker pre-object flags for makefile
           --l2-name <value>           Verilog scope name of the top module
           --language <lang>           Default language standard to parse
            +libext+<ext>+[ext]...     Extensions for finding modules
           --lint-only                 Lint, but do not make output
            -MAKEFLAGS <flags>         Options to make during --build
           --max-num-width <value>     Maximum number width (default: 64K)
           --MMD                       Create .d dependency files
           --MP                        Create phony dependency targets
           --Mdir <directory>          Name of output object directory
           --mod-prefix <topname>      Name to prepend to lower classes
           --no-clk <signal-name>      Prevent marking specified signal as clock
           --no-decoration             Disable comments and symbol decorations
           --no-pins64                 Don't use vluint64_t's for 33-64 bit sigs
           --no-skip-identical         Disable skipping identical output
            +notimingchecks            Ignored
            -O0                        Disable optimizations
            -O3                        High performance optimizations
            -O<optimization-letter>    Selectable optimizations
            -o <executable>            Name of final executable
           --no-order-clock-delay      Disable ordering clock enable assignments
           --no-verilate               Skip verilation and just compile previously Verilated code.
           --output-split <statements>          Split .cpp files into pieces
           --output-split-cfuncs <statements>   Split model functions
           --output-split-ctrace <statements>   Split tracing functions
            -P                         Disable line numbers and blanks with -E
           --pins-bv <bits>            Specify types for top level ports
           --pins-sc-uint              Specify types for top level ports
           --pins-sc-biguint           Specify types for top level ports
           --pins-uint8                Specify types for top level ports
           --pipe-filter <command>     Filter all input through a script
           --pp-comments               Show preprocessor comments with -E
           --prefix <topname>          Name of top level class
           --prof-cfuncs               Name functions for profiling
           --prof-threads              Enable generating gantt chart data for threads
           --protect-key <key>         Key for symbol protection
           --protect-ids               Hash identifier names for obscurity
           --protect-lib <name>        Create a DPI protected library
           --private                   Debugging; see docs
           --public                    Debugging; see docs
           --public-flat-rw            Mark all variables, etc as public_flat_rw
            -pvalue+<name>=<value>     Overwrite toplevel parameter
           --quiet-exit                Don't print the command on failure
           --relative-includes         Resolve includes relative to current file
           --no-relative-cfuncs        Disallow 'this->' in generated functions
           --report-unoptflat          Extra diagnostics for UNOPTFLAT
           --rr                        Run Verilator and record with rr
           --savable                   Enable model save-restore
           --sc                        Create SystemC output
           --stats                     Create statistics file
           --stats-vars                Provide statistics on variables
            -sv                        Enable SystemVerilog parsing
            +systemverilogext+<ext>    Synonym for +1800-2017ext+<ext>
           --threads <threads>         Enable multithreading
           --threads-dpi <mode>        Enable multithreaded DPI
           --threads-max-mtasks <mtasks>  Tune maximum mtask partitioning
           --timescale <timescale>     Sets default timescale
           --timescale-override <timescale>  Overrides all timescales
           --top-module <topname>      Name of top level input module
           --trace                     Enable waveform creation
           --trace-coverage            Enable tracing of coverage
           --trace-depth <levels>      Depth of tracing
           --trace-fst                 Enable FST waveform creation
           --trace-max-array <depth>   Maximum bit width for tracing
           --trace-max-width <width>   Maximum array depth for tracing
           --trace-params              Enable tracing of parameters
           --trace-structs             Enable tracing structure names
           --trace-threads <threads>   Enable waveform creation on separate threads
           --trace-underscore          Enable tracing of _signals
            -U<var>                    Undefine preprocessor define
           --unroll-count <loops>      Tune maximum loop iterations
           --unroll-stmts <stmts>      Tune maximum loop body size
           --unused-regexp <regexp>    Tune UNUSED lint signals
            -V                         Verbose version and config
            -v <filename>              Verilog library
            +verilog1995ext+<ext>      Synonym for +1364-1995ext+<ext>
            +verilog2001ext+<ext>      Synonym for +1364-2001ext+<ext>
           --version                   Displays program version and exits
           --vpi                       Enable VPI compiles
           --waiver-output <filename>  Create a waiver file based on the linter warnings
            -Wall                      Enable all style warnings
            -Werror-<message>          Convert warnings to errors
            -Wfuture-<message>         Disable unknown message warnings
            -Wno-<message>             Disable warning
            -Wno-context               Disable source context on warnings
            -Wno-fatal                 Disable fatal exit on warnings
            -Wno-lint                  Disable all lint warnings
            -Wno-style                 Disable all style warnings
            -Wpedantic                 Warn on compliance-test issues
           --x-assign <mode>           Assign non-initial Xs to this value
           --x-initial <mode>          Assign initial Xs to this value
           --x-initial-edge            Enable initial X->0 and X->1 edge triggers
           --xml-only                  Create XML parser output
           --xml-output                XML output filename
            -y <dir>                   Directory to search for modules

       This is a short summary of the simulation runtime arguments, i.e. for the final Verilated
       simulation runtime models.  See "SIMULATION RUNTIME ARGUMENTS" for the detailed
       description of these arguments.

            +verilator+debug                  Enable debugging
            +verilator+debugi+<value>         Enable debugging at a level
            +verilator+help                   Display help
            +verilator+prof+threads+file+I<filename>  Set profile filename
            +verilator+prof+threads+start+I<value>    Set profile starting point
            +verilator+prof+threads+window+I<value>   Set profile duration
            +verilator+rand+reset+I<value>    Set random reset technique
            +verilator+seed+I<value>          Set random seed
            +verilator+noassert               Disable assert checking
            +verilator+V                      Verbose version and config
            +verilator+version                Show version and exit

VERILATION ARGUMENTS

       The following are the arguments that may be passed to the "verilator" executable.

       {file.v}
           Specifies the Verilog file containing the top module to be Verilated.

       {file.c/.cc/.cpp/.cxx}
           Used with --exe to specify optional C++ files to be linked in with the Verilog code.
           The file path should either be absolute, or relative to where the make will be
           executed from, or add to your makefile's VPATH the appropriate directory to find the
           file.

           See also the -CFLAGS and -LDFLAGS options, which are useful when the C++ files need
           special compiler flags.

       {file.a/.o/.so}
           Specifies optional object or library files to be linked in with the Verilog code, as a
           shorthand for -LDFLAGS "<file>". The file path should either be absolute, or relative
           to where the make will be executed from, or add to your makefile's VPATH the
           appropriate directory to find the file.

           If any files are specified in this way, Verilator will include a make rule that uses
           these files when linking the module executable.  This generally is only useful when
           used with the --exe option.

       +1364-1995ext+ext
       +1364-2001ext+ext
       +1364-2005ext+ext
       +1800-2005ext+ext
       +1800-2009ext+ext
       +1800-2012ext+ext
       +1800-2017ext+ext
           Specifies the language standard to be used with a specific filename extension, ext.

           For compatibility with other simulators, see also the synonyms "+verilog1995ext+"ext,
           "+verilog2001ext+"ext, and "+systemverilogext+"ext.

           For any source file, the language specified by these options takes precedence over any
           language specified by the "--default-language" or "--language" options.

           These options take effect in the order they are encountered. Thus the following would
           use Verilog 1995 for "a.v" and Verilog 2001 for "b.v".

               verilator ... +1364-1995ext+v a.v +1364-2001ext+v b.v

           These flags are only recommended for legacy mixed language designs, as the preferable
           option is to edit the code to repair new keywords, or add appropriate
           "`begin_keywords".

           Note "`begin_keywords" is a SystemVerilog construct, which specifies only the set of
           keywords to be recognized. This also controls some error messages that vary between
           language standards.  Note at present Verilator tends to be overly permissive, e.g. it
           will accept many grammar and other semantic extensions which might not be legal when
           set to an older standard.

       --assert
           Enable all assertions.

       --autoflush
           After every $display or $fdisplay, flush the output stream.  This ensures that
           messages will appear immediately but may reduce performance. For best performance call
           "fflush(stdout)" occasionally in the C++ main loop.  Defaults to off, which will
           buffer output as provided by the normal C/C++ standard library IO.

       --bbox-sys
           Black box any unknown $system task or function calls.  System tasks will simply become
           no-operations, and system functions will be replaced with unsized zero.  Arguments to
           such functions will be parsed, but not otherwise checked.  This prevents errors when
           linting in the presence of company specific PLI calls.

           Using this argument will likely cause incorrect simulation.

       --bbox-unsup
           Black box some unsupported language features, currently UDP tables, the cmos and tran
           gate primitives, deassign statements, and mixed edge errors.  This may enable linting
           the rest of the design even when unsupported constructs are present.

           Using this argument will likely cause incorrect simulation.

       --bin filename
           Rarely needed.  Override the default filename for Verilator itself.  When a dependency
           (.d) file is created, this filename will become a source dependency, such that a
           change in this binary will have make rebuild the output files.

       --build
           After generating the SystemC/C++ code, Verilator will invoke the toolchain to build
           the model library (and executable when "--exe" is also used). Verilator manages the
           build itself, and for this --build requires GNU Make to be available on the platform.

       -CFLAGS flags
           Add specified C compiler flag to the generated makefiles. For multiple flags either
           pass them as a single argument with space separators quoted in the shell ("-CFLAGS "-a
           -b""), or use multiple -CFLAGS arguments ("-CFLAGS -a -CFLAGS -b").

           When make is run on the generated makefile these will be passed to the C++ compiler
           (g++/clang++/msvc++).

       --cc
           Specifies C++ without SystemC output mode; see also --sc.

       --cdc
           Permanently experimental.  Perform some clock domain crossing checks and issue related
           warnings (CDCRSTLOGIC) and then exit; if warnings other than CDC warnings are needed
           make a second run with --lint-only.  Additional warning information is also written to
           the file {prefix}__cdc.txt.

           Currently only checks some items that other CDC tools missed; if you have interest in
           adding more traditional CDC checks, please contact the authors.

       --clk signal-name
           Sometimes it is quite difficult for Verilator to distinguish clock signals from other
           data signals. Occasionally the clock signals can end up in the checking list of
           signals which determines if further evaluation is needed. This will heavily degrade
           the performance of a Verilated model.

           With --clk <signal-name>, user can specified root clock into the model, then Verilator
           will mark the signal as clocker and propagate the clocker attribute automatically to
           other signals derived from that. In this way, Verilator will try to avoid taking the
           clocker signal into checking list.

           Note signal-name is specified by the RTL hierarchy path. For example, v.foo.bar.  If
           the signal is the input to top-module, the directly the signal name. If you find it
           difficult to find the exact name, try to use "/*verilator clocker*/" in RTL file to
           mark the signal directly.

           If clock signals are assigned to vectors and then later used individually, Verilator
           will attempt to decompose the vector and connect the single-bit clock signals
           directly.  This should be transparent to the user.

       --make build-tool
           Generates a script for the specified build tool.

           Supported values are "gmake" for GNU Make and "cmake" for CMake.  Both can be
           specified together.  If no build tool is specified, gmake is assumed.  The executable
           of gmake can be configured via environment variable "MAKE".

           When using --build Verilator takes over the responsibility of building the model
           library/executable.  For this reason --make cannot be specified when using --build.

       --compiler compiler-name
           Enables workarounds for the specified C++ compiler, either "clang", "gcc", or "msvc".
           Currently this does not change any performance tuning flags, but it may in the future.

           clang
               Tune for clang.  This may reduce execution speed as it enables several workarounds
               to avoid silly hard-coded limits in clang.  This includes breaking deep structures
               as for msvc as described below.

           gcc Tune for GNU C++, although generated code should work on almost any compliant C++
               compiler.  Currently the default.

           msvc
               Tune for Microsoft Visual C++.  This may reduce execution speed as it enables
               several workarounds to avoid silly hard-coded limits in MSVC++.  This includes
               breaking deeply nested parenthesized expressions into sub-expressions to avoid
               error C1009, and breaking deep blocks into functions to avoid error C1061.

       --converge-limit loops
           Rarely needed.  Specifies the maximum number of runtime iterations before creating a
           model failed to converge error.  Defaults to 100.

       --coverage
           Enables all forms of coverage, alias for "--coverage-line --coverage-toggle
           --coverage-user".

       --coverage-line
           Specifies basic block line coverage analysis code should be inserted.

           Coverage analysis adds statements at each code flow change point (e.g. at branches).
           At each such branch a unique counter is incremented.  At the end of a test, the
           counters along with the filename and line number corresponding to each counter are
           written into logs/coverage.dat.

           Verilator automatically disables coverage of branches that have a $stop in them, as it
           is assumed $stop branches contain an error check that should not occur.  A /*verilator
           coverage_block_off*/ comment will perform a similar function on any code in that block
           or below, or /*verilator coverage_on/coverage_off*/ will disable coverage around lines
           of code.

           Note Verilator may over-count combinatorial (non-clocked) blocks when those blocks
           receive signals which have had the UNOPTFLAT warning disabled; for most accurate
           results do not disable this warning when using coverage.

       --coverage-toggle
           Specifies signal toggle coverage analysis code should be inserted.

           Every bit of every signal in a module has a counter inserted.  The counter will
           increment on every edge change of the corresponding bit.

           Signals that are part of tasks or begin/end blocks are considered local variables and
           are not covered.  Signals that begin with underscores, are integers, or are very wide
           (>256 bits total storage across all dimensions) are also not covered.

           Hierarchy is compressed, such that if a module is instantiated multiple times,
           coverage will be summed for that bit across ALL instantiations of that module with the
           same parameter set.  A module instantiated with different parameter values is
           considered a different module, and will get counted separately.

           Verilator makes a minimally-intelligent decision about what clock domain the signal
           goes to, and only looks for edges in that clock domain.  This means that edges may be
           ignored if it is known that the edge could never be seen by the receiving logic.  This
           algorithm may improve in the future.  The net result is coverage may be lower than
           what would be seen by looking at traces, but the coverage is a more accurate
           representation of the quality of stimulus into the design.

           There may be edges counted near time zero while the model stabilizes.  It's a good
           practice to zero all coverage just before releasing reset to prevent counting such
           behavior.

           A /*verilator coverage_off/on */ comment pair can be used around signals that do not
           need toggle analysis, such as RAMs and register files.

       --coverage-underscore
           Enable coverage of signals that start with an underscore. Normally, these signals are
           not covered.  See also --trace-underscore.

       --coverage-user
           Enables user inserted functional coverage.  Currently, all functional coverage points
           are specified using SVA which must be separately enabled with --assert.

           For example, the following statement will add a coverage point, with the comment
           "DefaultClock":

              DefaultClock: cover property (@(posedge clk) cyc==3);

       -Dvar=value
           Defines the given preprocessor symbol.  Similar to +define, but does not allow
           multiple definitions with a single option using plus signs.  +define is fairly
           standard across Verilog tools while -D is similar to GCC.

       --debug
           Select the debug executable of Verilator (if available), and enable more internal
           assertions (equivalent to "--debug-check"), debugging messages (equivalent to
           "--debugi 4"), and intermediate form dump files (equivalent to "--dump-treei 3").

       --debug-check
           Rarely needed.  Enable internal debugging assertion checks, without changing debug
           verbosity.  Enabled automatically when --debug specified.

       --no-debug-leak
           In --debug mode, by default Verilator intentionally leaks AstNode instances instead of
           freeing them, so that each node pointer is unique in the resulting tree files and dot
           files.

           This option disables the leak. This may avoid out-of-memory errors when Verilating
           large models in --debug mode.

           Outside of --debug mode, AstNode instances should never be leaked and this option has
           no effect.

       --debugi level
       --debugi-srcfile level
           Rarely needed - for developer use.  Set internal debugging level globally to the
           specified debug level (1-10) or set the specified Verilator source file to the
           specified level (e.g. "--debugi-V3Width 9"). Higher levels produce more detailed
           messages.

       --default-language value
           Select the language to be used by default when first processing each Verilog file.
           The language value must be "1364-1995", "1364-2001", "1364-2005", "1800-2005",
           "1800-2009", "1800-2012" or "1800-2017".

           Any language associated with a particular file extension (see the various +langext+
           options) will be used in preference to the language specified by --default-language.

           The --default-language flag is only recommended for legacy code using the same
           language in all source files, as the preferable option is to edit the code to repair
           new keywords, or add appropriate "`begin_keywords". For legacy mixed language designs,
           the various +langext+ options should be used.

           If no language is specified, either by this flag or +langext+ options, then the latest
           SystemVerilog language (IEEE 1800-2017) is used.

       +define+var=value
       +define+var=value+var2=value2...
           Defines the given preprocessor symbol, or multiple symbols if separated by plus signs.
           Similar to -D; +define is fairly standard across Verilog tools while -D is similar to
           GCC.

       --dpi-hdr-only
           Only generate the DPI header file.  This option has no effect on the name or location
           of the emitted DPI header file, it is output in "--Mdir" as it would be without this
           option.

       --dump-defines
           With -E, suppress normal output, and instead print a list of all defines existing at
           the end of pre-processing the input files. Similar to GCC "-dM" option. This also
           gives you a way of finding out what is predefined in Verilator using the command:

              touch foo.v ; verilator -E --dump-defines foo.v

       --dump-tree
           Rarely needed.  Enable writing .tree debug files with dumping level 3, which dumps the
           standard critical stages.  For details on the format see the Verilator Internals
           manual.  --dump-tree is enabled automatically with --debug, so "--debug
           --no-dump-tree" may be useful if the dump files are large and not desired.

       --dump-treei level
       --dump-treei-srcfile level
           Rarely needed - for developer use.  Set internal tree dumping level globally to a
           specific dumping level or set the specified Verilator source file to the specified
           tree dumping level (e.g. "--dump-treei-V3Order 9").  Level 0 disables dumps and is
           equivalent to "--no-dump-tree".  Level 9 enables dumping of every stage.

       --dump-tree-addrids
           Rarely needed - for developer use.  Replace AST node addresses with short identifiers
           in tree dumps to enhance readability.  Each unique pointer value is mapped to a unique
           identifier, but note that this is not necessarily unique per node instance as an
           address might get reused by a newly allocated node after a node with the same address
           has been dumped then freed.

       -E  Preprocess the source code, but do not compile, as with 'gcc -E'.  Output is written
           to standard out.  Beware of enabling debugging messages, as they will also go to
           standard out.

       --error-limit value
           After this number of errors are encountered during Verilator run, exit.  Warnings are
           not counted in this limit.  Defaults to 50.

           Does not affect simulation runtime errors, for those see +verilator+error+limit.

       --exe
           Generate an executable.  You will also need to pass additional .cpp files on the
           command line that implement the main loop for your simulation.

       -F file
           Read the specified file, and act as if all text inside it was specified as command
           line parameters.  Any relative paths are relative to the directory containing the
           specified file.  See also -f. Note -F is fairly standard across Verilog tools.

       -f file
           Read the specified file, and act as if all text inside it was specified as command
           line parameters.  Any relative paths are relative to the current directory.  See also
           -F. Note -f is fairly standard across Verilog tools.

           The file may contain // comments which are ignored to the end of the line.  Any $VAR,
           $(VAR), or ${VAR} will be replaced with the specified environment variable.

       -FI file
           Force include of the specified C++ header file.  All generated C++ files will insert a
           #include of the specified file before any other includes. The specified file might be
           used to contain define prototypes of custom VL_VPRINTF functions, and may need to
           include verilatedos.h as this file is included before any other standard includes.

       --flatten
           Force flattening of the design's hierarchy, with all modules, tasks and functions
           inlined. Typically used with "--xml-only". Note flattening large designs may require
           significant CPU time, memory and storage.

       -Gname=value
           Overwrites the given parameter of the toplevel module. The value is limited to basic
           data literals:

           Verilog integer literals
               The standard Verilog integer literals are supported, so values like 32'h8, 2'b00,
               4 etc. are allowed. Care must be taken that the single quote (I') is properly
               escaped in an interactive shell, e.g., as -GWIDTH=8\'hx.

           C integer literals
               It is also possible to use C integer notation, including hexadecimal (0x..), octal
               (0..) or binary (0b..) notation.

           Double literals
               Double literals must be one of the following styles:
                 - contains a dot (.) (e.g. 1.23)
                 - contains an exponent (e/E) (e.g. 12e3)
                 - contains p/P for hexadecimal floating point in C99 (e.g. 0x123.ABCp1)

           Strings
               Strings must be in double quotes (""). They must be escaped properly on the
               command line, e.g. as -GSTR="\"My String\"" or -GSTR='"My String"'.

       --gate-stmts value
           Rarely needed.  Set the maximum number of statements that may be present in an
           equation for the gate substitution optimization to inline that equation.

       --gdb
           Run Verilator underneath an interactive GDB (or VERILATOR_GDB environment variable
           value) session.  See also --gdbbt.

       --gdbbt
           If --debug is specified, run Verilator underneath a GDB process and print a backtrace
           on exit, then exit GDB immediately.  Without --debug or if GDB doesn't seem to work,
           this flag is ignored.  Intended for easy creation of backtraces by users; otherwise
           see the --gdb flag.

       --generate-key
           Generate a true-random key suitable for use with --protect-key, print it, and exit
           immediately.

       --getenv variable
           If the variable is declared in the environment, print it and exit immediately.
           Otherwise, if it's built into Verilator (e.g. VERILATOR_ROOT), print that and exit
           immediately. Otherwise, print a newline and exit immediately. This can be useful in
           makefiles. See also -V, and the various *.mk files.

       --help
           Displays this message and program version and exits.

       -Idir
           See -y.

       --if-depth value
           Rarely needed.  Set the depth at which the IFDEPTH warning will fire, defaults to 0
           which disables this warning.

       +incdir+dir
           See -y.

       --inhibit-sim
           Rarely needed.  Create a "inhibitSim(bool)" function to enable and disable evaluation.
           This allows an upper level testbench to disable modules that are not important in a
           given simulation, without needing to recompile or change the SystemC modules
           instantiated.

       --inline-mult value
           Tune the inlining of modules.  The default value of 2000 specifies that up to 2000 new
           operations may be added to the model by inlining, if more than this number of
           operations would result, the module is not inlined.  Larger values, or a value < 1
           will inline everything, will lead to longer compile times, but potentially faster
           simulation speed.  This setting is ignored for very small modules; they will always be
           inlined, if allowed.

       -j <value>
           Specify the level of parallelism for --build. <value> must be a positive integer
           specifying the maximum number of parallel build jobs, or can be omitted. When <value>
           is omitted, the build will not try to limit the number of parallel build jobs but
           attempt to execute all independent build steps in parallel.

       -LDFLAGS flags
           Add specified C linker flags to the generated makefiles.  For multiple flags either
           pass them as a single argument with space separators quoted in the shell ("-LDFLAGS
           "-a -b""), or use multiple -LDFLAGS arguments ("-LDFLAGS -a -LDFLAGS -b").

           When make is run on the generated makefile these will be passed to the C++ linker (ld)
           *after* the primary file being linked.  This flag is called -LDFLAGS as that's the
           traditional name in simulators; it's would have been better called LDLIBS as that's
           the Makefile variable it controls.  (In Make, LDFLAGS is before the first object,
           LDLIBS after.  -L libraries need to be in the Make variable LDLIBS, not LDFLAGS.)

       --l2-name value
           Instead of using the module name when showing Verilog scope, use the name provided.
           This allows simplifying some Verilator-embedded modeling methodologies. Default is an
           l2-name matching the top module. The default before 3.884 was "--l2-name v"

           For example, the program "module t; initial $display("%m"); endmodule" will show by
           default "t". With "--l2-name v" it will print "v".

       --language value
           A synonym for "--default-language", for compatibility with other tools and earlier
           versions of Verilator.

       +libext+ext+ext...
           Specify the extensions that should be used for finding modules.  If for example module
           x is referenced, look in x.ext.  Note +libext+ is fairly standard across Verilog
           tools.  Defaults to .v and .sv.

       --lint-only
           Check the files for lint violations only, do not create any other output.

           You may also want the -Wall option to enable messages that are considered stylistic
           and not enabled by default.

           If the design is not to be completely Verilated see also the --bbox-sys and
           --bbox-unsup options.

       -MAKEFLAGS <string>
           When using --build, add the specified flag to the invoked make command line.  For
           multiple flags either pass them as a single argument with space separators quoted in
           the shell (e.g. "-MAKEFLAGS "-a -b""), or use multiple -MAKEFLAGS arguments (e.g.
           "-MAKEFLAGS -l -MAKEFLAGS -k"). Use of this option should not be required for simple
           builds using the host toolchain.

       --max-num-width value
           Set the maximum number literal width (e.g. in 1024'd22 this it the 1024).  Defaults to
           64K.

       --MMD =item --no-MMD
           Enable/disable creation of .d dependency files, used for make dependency detection,
           similar to gcc -MMD option.  By default this option is enabled for --cc or --sc modes.

       --MP
           When creating .d dependency files with --MMD, make phony targets.  Similar to gcc -MP
           option.

       --Mdir directory
           Specifies the name of the Make object directory.  All generated files will be placed
           in this directory.  If not specified, "obj_dir" is used.  The directory is created if
           it does not exist and the parent directories exist; otherwise manually create the Mdir
           before calling Verilator.

       --mod-prefix topname
           Specifies the name to prepend to all lower level classes.  Defaults to the same as
           --prefix.

       --no-clk signal-name
           Prevent the specified signal from being marked as clock. See "--clk".

       --no-decoration
           When creating output Verilated code, minimize comments, white space, symbol names and
           other decorative items, at the cost of greatly reduced readability. This may assist
           C++ compile times. This will not typically change the ultimate model's performance,
           but may in some cases.

       --no-pins64
           Backward compatible alias for "--pins-bv 33".

       --no-relative-cfuncs
           Disable 'this->' references in generated functions, and instead Verilator will
           generate absolute references starting from 'vlTOPp->'.  This prevents V3Combine from
           merging functions from multiple instances of the same module, so it can grow the
           instruction stream.

           This is a work around for old compilers. Don't set this if your C++ compiler supports
           __restrict__ properly, as GCC 4.5.x and newer do.  For older compilers, test if this
           switch gives you better performance or not.

           Compilers which don't honor __restrict__ will suspect that 'this->' references and
           'vlTOPp->' references may alias, and may write slow code with extra loads and stores
           to handle the (imaginary) aliasing. Using only 'vlTOPp->' references allows these old
           compilers to produce tight code.

       --no-skip-identical =item --skip-identical
           Rarely needed.  Disables or enables skipping execution of Verilator if all source
           files are identical, and all output files exist with newer dates.  By default this
           option is enabled for --cc or --sc modes only.

       +notimingchecks
           Ignored for compatibility with other simulators.

       -O0 Disables optimization of the model.

       -O3 Enables slow optimizations for the code Verilator itself generates (as opposed to
           "-CFLAGS -O3" which effects the C compiler's optimization.  -O3 may improve simulation
           performance at the cost of compile time.  This currently sets --inline-mult -1.

       -Ooptimization-letter
           Rarely needed.  Enables or disables a specific optimizations, with the optimization
           selected based on the letter passed.  A lowercase letter disables an optimization, an
           upper case letter enables it.  This is intended for debugging use only; see the source
           code for version-dependent mappings of optimizations to -O letters.

       -o executable
           Specify the name for the final executable built if using --exe.  Defaults to the
           --prefix if not specified.

       --no-order-clock-delay
           Rarely needed.  Disables a bug fix for ordering of clock enables with delayed
           assignments.  This flag should only be used when suggested by the developers.

       --output-split statements
           Enables splitting the output .cpp files into multiple outputs.  When a C++ file
           exceeds the specified number of operations, a new file will be created at the next
           function boundary.  In addition, if the total output code size exceeds the specified
           value, VM_PARALLEL_BUILDS will be set to 1 by default in the generated make files,
           making parallel compilation possible. Using --output-split should have only a trivial
           impact on model performance. But can greatly improve C++ compilation speed. The use of
           ccache (set for you if present at configure time) is also more effective with this
           option.

           This option is on by default with a value of 20000. To disable, pass with a value of
           0.

       --output-split-cfuncs statements
           Enables splitting functions in the output .cpp files into multiple functions.  When a
           generated function exceeds the specified number of operations, a new function will be
           created.  With --output-split, this will enable the C++ compiler to compile faster, at
           a small loss in performance that gets worse with decreasing split values.  Note that
           this option is stronger than --output-split in the sense that --output-split will not
           split inside a function.

           Defaults to the value of --output-split, unless explicitly specified.

       --output-split-ctrace statements
           Similar to --output-split-cfuncs, enables splitting trace functions in the output .cpp
           files into multiple functions.

           Defaults to the value of --output-split, unless explicitly specified.

       -P  With -E, disable generation of `line markers and blank lines, similar to GCC -P flag.

       --pins64
           Backward compatible alias for "--pins-bv 65".  Note that's a 65, not a 64.

       --pins-bv width
           Specifies SystemC inputs/outputs of greater than or equal to width bits wide should
           use sc_bv's instead of uint32/vluint64_t's.  The default is "--pins-bv 65", and the
           value must be less than or equal to 65.  Versions before Verilator 3.671 defaulted to
           "--pins-bv 33".  The more sc_bv is used, the worse for performance.  Use the
           "/*verilator sc_bv*/" attribute to select specific ports to be sc_bv.

       --pins-sc-uint
           Specifies SystemC inputs/outputs of greater than 2 bits wide should use sc_uint
           between 2 and 64.  When combined with the "--pins-sc-biguint" combination, it results
           in sc_uint being used between 2 and 64 and sc_biguint being used between 65 and 512.

       --pins-sc-biguint
           Specifies SystemC inputs/outputs of greater than 65 bits wide should use sc_biguint
           between 65 and 512, and sc_bv from 513 upwards.  When combined with the
           "--pins-sc-uint" combination, it results in sc_uint being used between 2 and 64 and
           sc_biguint being used between 65 and 512.

       --pins-uint8
           Specifies SystemC inputs/outputs that are smaller than the --pins-bv setting and 8
           bits or less should use uint8_t instead of uint32_t.  Likewise pins of width 9-16 will
           use uint16_t instead of uint32_t.

       --pipe-filter command
           Rarely needed.  Verilator will spawn the specified command as a subprocess pipe, to
           allow the command to perform custom edits on the Verilog code before it reaches
           Verilator.

           Before reading each Verilog file, Verilator will pass the file name to the subprocess'
           stdin with 'read "<filename>"'.  The filter may then read the file and perform any
           filtering it desires, and feeds the new file contents back to Verilator on stdout by
           first emitting a line defining the length in bytes of the filtered output
           'Content-Length: <bytes>', followed by the new filtered contents. Output to stderr
           from the filter feeds through to Verilator's stdout and if the filter exits with non-
           zero status Verilator terminates.  See the t/t_pipe_filter test for an example.

           To debug the output of the filter, try using the -E option to see preprocessed output.

       --pp-comments
           With -E, show comments in preprocessor output.

       --prefix topname
           Specifies the name of the top level class and makefile.  Defaults to V prepended to
           the name of the --top-module switch, or V prepended to the first Verilog filename
           passed on the command line.

       --prof-cfuncs
           Modify the created C++ functions to support profiling.  The functions will be
           minimized to contain one "basic" statement, generally a single always block or wire
           statement.  (Note this will slow down the executable by ~5%.)  Furthermore, the
           function name will be suffixed with the basename of the Verilog module and line number
           the statement came from.  This allows gprof or oprofile reports to be correlated with
           the original Verilog source statements. See also verilator_profcfunc.

       --prof-threads
           Enable gantt chart data collection for threaded builds.

           Verilator will record the start and end time of each macro-task across a number of
           calls to eval. (What is a macro-task? See the Verilator internals document.)

           When profiling is enabled, the simulation runtime will emit a blurb of profiling data
           in non-human-friendly form. The "verilator_gantt" script will transform this into a
           nicer visual format and produce some related statistics.

       --protect-key key
           Specifies the private key for --protect-ids. For best security this key should be 16
           or more random bytes, a reasonable secure choice is the output of "verilator
           --generate-key". Typically, a key would be created by the user once for a given
           protected design library, then every Verilator run for subsequent versions of that
           library would be passed the same --protect-key. Thus, if the input Verilog is similar
           between library versions (Verilator runs), the Verilated code will likewise be mostly
           similar.

           If --protect-key is not specified and a key is needed, Verilator will generate a new
           key for every Verilator run. As the key is not saved, this is best for security, but
           means every Verilator run will give vastly different output even for identical input,
           perhaps harming compile times (and certainly thrashing any ccache).

       --protect-ids
           Hash any private identifiers (variable, module, and assertion block names that are not
           on the top level) into hashed random-looking identifiers, resulting after compilation
           in protected library binaries that expose less design information.  This hashing uses
           the provided or default --protect-key, see important details there.

           Verilator will also create a {prefix}__idmap.xml file which contains the mapping from
           the hashed identifiers back to the original identifiers. This idmap file is to be kept
           private, and is to assist mapping any simulation runtime design assertions, coverage,
           or trace information, which will report the hashed identifiers, back to the original
           design's identifier names.

           Using DPI imports/exports is allowed and generally relatively safe in terms of
           information disclosed, which is limited to the DPI function prototyptes.  Use of the
           VPI is not recommended as many design details may be exposed, and an INSECURE warning
           will be issued.

       --protect-lib name
           Produces C++, Verilog wrappers and a Makefile which can in turn produce a DPI library
           which can be used by Verilator or other simulators along with the corresponding
           Verilog wrapper.  The Makefile will build both a static and dynamic version of the
           library named libname.a and libname.so respectively.  This is done because some
           simulators require a dynamic library, but the static library is arguably easier to use
           if possible.  --protect-lib implies --protect-ids.

           This allows for the secure delivery of sensitive IP without the need for encrypted RTL
           (i.e. IEEE P1735).  See examples/make_protect_lib in the distribution for a
           demonstration of how to build and use the DPI library.

           When using --protect-lib it is advised to also use "--timescale-override /1fs" to
           ensure the model has a time resolution that is always compatible with the time
           precision of the upper instantiating module.

       --private
           Opposite of --public.  Is the default; this option exists for backwards compatibility.

       --public
           This is only for historical debug use.  Using it may result in mis-simulation of
           generated clocks.

           Declares all signals and modules public.  This will turn off signal optimizations as
           if all signals had a /*verilator public*/ comments and inlining.  This will also turn
           off inlining as if all modules had a /*verilator public_module*/, unless the module
           specifically enabled it with /*verilator inline_module*/.

       --public-flat-rw
           Declares all variables, ports and wires public as if they had /*verilator
           public_flat_rw @ (<variable's_source_process_edge>)*/ comments.  This will make them
           VPI accessible by their flat name, but not turn off module inlining.  This is
           particularly useful in combination with --vpi. This may also in some rare cases result
           in mis-simulation of generated clocks.  Instead of this global switch, marking only
           those signals that need public_flat_rw is typically significantly better performing.

       -pvalue+name=value
           Overwrites the given parameter(s) of the toplevel module. See -G for a detailed
           description.

       --quiet-exit
           When exiting due to an error, do not display the "Exiting due to Errors" nor "Command
           Failed" messages.

       --relative-includes
           When a file references an include file, resolve the filename relative to the path of
           the referencing file, instead of relative to the current directory.

       --report-unoptflat
           Extra diagnostics for UNOPTFLAT warnings. This includes for each loop, the 10 widest
           variables in the loop, and the 10 most fanned out variables in the loop. These are
           candidates for splitting into multiple variables to break the loop.

           In addition produces a GraphViz DOT file of the entire strongly connected components
           within the source associated with each loop. This is produced irrespective of whether
           --dump-tree is set. Such graphs may help in analyzing the problem, but can be very
           large indeed.

           Various commands exist for viewing and manipulating DOT files. For example the dot
           command can be used to convert a DOT file to a PDF for printing. For example:

               dot -Tpdf -O Vt_unoptflat_simple_2_35_unoptflat.dot

           will generate a PDF Vt_unoptflat_simple_2_35_unoptflat.dot.pdf from the DOT file.

           As an alternative, the xdot command can be used to view DOT files interactively:

               xdot Vt_unoptflat_simple_2_35_unoptflat.dot

       --rr
           Run Verilator and record with rr.  See: rr-project.org.

       --savable
           Enable including save and restore functions in the generated model.

           The user code must create a VerilatedSerialize or VerilatedDeserialze object then
           calling the << or >> operators on the generated model and any other data the process
           needs saved/restored.  These functions are not thread safe, and are typically called
           only by a main thread.

           For example:

               void save_model(const char* filenamep) {
                   VerilatedSave os;
                   os.open(filenamep);
                   os << main_time;  // user code must save the timestamp, etc
                   os << *topp;
               }
               void restore_model(const char* filenamep) {
                   VerilatedRestore os;
                   os.open(filenamep);
                   os >> main_time;
                   os >> *topp;
               }

       --sc
           Specifies SystemC output mode; see also --cc.

       --stats
           Creates a dump file with statistics on the design in {prefix}__stats.txt.

       --stats-vars
           Creates more detailed statistics, including a list of all the variables by size (plain
           --stats just gives a count).  See --stats, which is implied by this.

       --structs-packed
           Converts all unpacked structures to packed structures and issues a UNPACKED warning.
           Currently this is the default and --no-structs-packed will not work.  Specifying this
           option allows for forward compatibility when a future version of Verilator no longer
           always packs unpacked structures.

       -sv Specifies SystemVerilog language features should be enabled; equivalent to "--language
           1800-2005".  This option is selected by default, it exists for compatibility with
           other simulators.

       +systemverilogext+ext
           A synonym for "+1800-2017ext+"ext.

       --threads threads
       --no-threads
           With --threads 0 or --no-threads, the default, the generated model is not thread safe.
           With --threads 1, the generated model is single threaded but may run in a
           multithreaded environment. With --threads N, where N >= 2, the model is generated to
           run multithreaded on up to N threads. See "MULTITHREADING".

       --threads-dpi all
       --threads-dpi none
       --threads-dpi pure
           When using --threads, controls which DPI imported tasks and functions are considered
           thread safe.

           With --threads-dpi all, enable Verilator to assume all DPI imports are threadsafe, and
           to use thread-local storage for communication with DPI, potentially improving
           performance. Any DPI libraries need appropriate mutexes to avoid undefined behavior.

           With --threads-dpi none, Verilator assume DPI imports are not thread safe, and
           Verilator will serialize calls to DPI imports by default, potentially harming
           performance.

           With --threads-dpi pure, the default, Verilator assumes DPI pure imports are
           threadsafe, but non-pure DPI imports are not.

       --threads-max-mtasks value
           Rarely needed.  When using --threads, specify the number of mtasks the model is to be
           partitioned into. If unspecified, Verilator approximates a good value.

       --timescale timeunit/timeprecision
           Sets default timescale, timeunit and timeprecision for when `timescale does not occur
           in sources.  Default is "1ps/1ps" (to match SystemC).  This is overridden by
           "--timescale-override".

       --timescale-override timeunit/timeprecision
       --timescale-override /timeprecision
           Overrides all `timescales in sources. The timeunit may be left empty to specify only
           to override the timeprecision, e.g. "/1fs".

           The time precision must be consistent with SystemC's sc_set_time_resolution, or the
           C++ code instantiating the Verilated module.  As 1fs is the finest time precision it
           may be desirable to always use a precision of 1fs.

       --top-module topname
           When the input Verilog contains more than one top level module, specifies the name of
           the Verilog module to become the top level module, and sets the default for --prefix
           if not explicitly specified.  This is not needed with standard designs with only one
           top.  See also the MULTITOP warning section.

       --trace
           Adds waveform tracing code to the model using VCD format. This overrides
           "--trace-fst".

           Verilator will generate additional {prefix}__Trace*.cpp files that will need to be
           compiled.  In addition verilated_vcd_sc.cpp (for SystemC traces) or
           verilated_vcd_c.cpp (for both) must be compiled and linked in.  If using the Verilator
           generated Makefiles, these files will be added to the source file lists for you.  If
           you are not using the Verilator Makefiles, you will need to add these to your Makefile
           manually.

           Having tracing compiled in may result in some small performance losses, even when
           tracing is not turned on during model execution.

           See also "--trace-threads".

       --trace-coverage
           With --trace and --coverage-*, enable tracing to include a traced signal for every
           --coverage-line or --coverage-user inserted coverage point, to assist in debugging
           coverage items.  Note --coverage-toggle does not get additional signals added, as the
           original signals being toggle-analyzed are already visible.

           The added signal will be a 32-bit value which will increment on each coverage
           occurrence. Due to this, this option may greatly increase trace file sizes and reduce
           simulation speed.

       --trace-depth levels
           Specify the number of levels deep to enable tracing, for example --trace-level 1 to
           only see the top level's signals.  Defaults to the entire model.  Using a small number
           will decrease visibility, but greatly improve simulation performance and trace file
           size.

       --trace-fst
           Enable FST waveform tracing in the model. This overrides "--trace".  See also
           "--trace-threads".

       --trace-max-array depth
           Rarely needed.  Specify the maximum array depth of a signal that may be traced.
           Defaults to 32, as tracing large arrays may greatly slow traced simulations.

       --trace-max-width width
           Rarely needed.  Specify the maximum bit width of a signal that may be traced.
           Defaults to 256, as tracing large vectors may greatly slow traced simulations.

       --no-trace-params
           Disable tracing of parameters.

       --trace-structs
           Enable tracing to show the name of packed structure, union, and packed array fields,
           rather than a single combined packed bus.  Due to VCD file format constraints this may
           result in significantly slower trace times and larger trace files.

       --trace-threads threads
           Enable waveform tracing using separate threads. This is typically faster in simulation
           runtime but uses more total compute. This option is independent of, and works with,
           both "--trace" and "--trace-fst". Different trace formats can take advantage of more
           trace threads to varying degrees. Currently VCD tracing can utilize at most
           --trace-threads 1, and FST tracing can utilize at most --trace-threads 2. This
           overrides "--no-threads".

       --trace-underscore
           Enable tracing of signals that start with an underscore. Normally, these signals are
           not output during tracing.  See also --coverage-underscore.

       -Uvar
           Undefines the given preprocessor symbol.

       --unroll-count loops
           Rarely needed.  Specifies the maximum number of loop iterations that may be unrolled.
           See also BLKLOOPINIT warning.

       --unroll-stmts statements
           Rarely needed.  Specifies the maximum number of statements in a loop for that loop to
           be unrolled. See also BLKLOOPINIT warning.

       --unused-regexp regexp
           Rarely needed.  Specifies a simple regexp with * and ? that if a signal name matches
           will suppress the UNUSED warning.  Defaults to "*unused*".  Setting it to "" disables
           matching.

       -V  Shows the verbose version, including configuration information compiled into
           Verilator.  (Similar to perl -V.)  See also --getenv.

       -v filename
           Read the filename as a Verilog library.  Any modules in the file may be used to
           resolve cell instantiations in the top level module, else ignored.  Note -v is fairly
           standard across Verilog tools.

       --no-verilate
           When using --build, disable generation of C++/SystemC code, and execute only the
           build. This can be useful for rebuilding Verilated code produced by a previous
           invocation of Verilator.

       +verilog1995ext+ext
       +verilog2001ext+ext
           Synonyms for "+1364-1995ext+"ext and "+1364-2001ext+"ext respectively

       --version
           Displays program version and exits.

       --vpi
           Enable use of VPI and linking against the verilated_vpi.cpp files.

       --waiver-output <filename>
           Generate a waiver file which contains all waiver statements to suppress the warnings
           emitted during this Verilator run. This in particular is useful as a starting point
           for solving linter warnings or suppressing them systematically.

           The generated file is in the Verilator Configuration format, see "CONFIGURATION
           FILES", and can directly be consumed by Verilator. The standard file extension is
           .vlt.

       -Wall
           Enable all code style warnings, including code style warnings that are normally
           disabled by default. Equivalent to "-Wwarn-lint -Wwarn-style".  Excludes some
           specialty warnings, i.e. IMPERFECTSCH.

       -Werror-message
           Promote the specified warning message into an error message.  This is generally to
           discourage users from violating important site-wide rules, for example
           "-Werror-NOUNOPTFLAT".

       -Wfuture-message
           Rarely needed.  Suppress unknown Verilator comments or warning messages with the given
           message code.  This is used to allow code written with pragmas for a later version of
           Verilator to run under a older version; add -Wfuture- arguments for each message code
           or comment that the new version supports which the older version does not support.

       -Wno-message
           Disable the specified warning/error message.  This will override any lint_on
           directives in the source, i.e. the warning will still not be printed.

       -Wno-context
           Disable showing the suspected context of the warning message by quoting the source
           text at the suspected location.  This can be used to appease tools which process the
           warning messages but may get confused by lines from the original source.

       -Wno-fatal
           When warnings are detected, print them, but do not terminate Verilator.

           Having warning messages in builds is sloppy.  It is strongly recommended you cleanup
           your code, use inline lint_off, or use -Wno-... flags rather than using this option.

       -Wno-lint
           Disable all lint related warning messages, and all style warnings.  This is equivalent
           to "-Wno-ALWCOMBORDER -Wno-BSSPACE -Wno-CASEINCOMPLETE -Wno-CASEOVERLAP -Wno-CASEX
           -Wno-CASEWITHX -Wno-CMPCONST -Wno-COLONPLUS -Wno-ENDLABEL -Wno-IMPLICIT -Wno-LITENDIAN
           -Wno-PINCONNECTEMPTY -Wno-PINMISSING -Wno-SYNCASYNCNET -Wno-UNDRIVEN -Wno-UNSIGNED
           -Wno-UNUSED -Wno-WIDTH" plus the list shown for Wno-style.

           It is strongly recommended you cleanup your code rather than using this option, it is
           only intended to be use when running test-cases of code received from third parties.

       -Wno-style
           Disable all code style related warning messages (note by default they are already
           disabled).  This is equivalent to "-Wno-DECLFILENAME -Wno-DEFPARAM -Wno-IMPORTSTAR
           -Wno-INCABSPATH -Wno-PINCONNECTEMPTY -Wno-PINNOCONNECT -Wno-SYNCASYNCNET -Wno-UNDRIVEN
           -Wno-UNUSED -Wno-VARHIDDEN".

       -Wpedantic
           Warn on any construct demanded by IEEE, and disable all Verilator extensions that may
           interfere with IEEE compliance to the standard defined with --default-language (etc).
           Similar to GCC's -Wpedantic.  Rarely used, and intended only for strict compliance
           tests.

       -Wwarn-message
           Enables the specified warning message.

       -Wwarn-lint
           Enable all lint related warning messages (note by default they are already enabled),
           but do not affect style messages.  This is equivalent to "-Wwarn-ALWCOMBORDER
           -Wwarn-BSSPACE -Wwarn-CASEINCOMPLETE -Wwarn-CASEOVERLAP -Wwarn-CASEX -Wwarn-CASEWITHX
           -Wwarn-CMPCONST -Wwarn-COLONPLUS -Wwarn-ENDLABEL -Wwarn-IMPLICIT -Wwarn-LITENDIAN
           -Wwarn-PINMISSING -Wwarn-REALCVT -Wwarn-UNSIGNED -Wwarn-WIDTH".

       -Wwarn-style
           Enable all code style related warning messages.  This is equivalent to "-Wwarn
           ASSIGNDLY -Wwarn-DECLFILENAME -Wwarn-DEFPARAM -Wwarn-INCABSPATH -Wwarn-PINNOCONNECT
           -Wwarn-SYNCASYNCNET -Wwarn-UNDRIVEN -Wwarn-UNUSED -Wwarn-VARHIDDEN".

       --x-assign 0
       --x-assign 1
       --x-assign fast (default)
       --x-assign unique
           Controls the two-state value that is substituted when an explicit X value is
           encountered in the source. "--x-assign fast", the default, converts all Xs to whatever
           is best for performance.  "--x-assign 0" converts all Xs to 0s, and is also fast.
           "--x-assign 1" converts all Xs to 1s, this is nearly as fast as 0, but more likely to
           find reset bugs as active high logic will fire. Using "--x-assign unique" will result
           in all explicit Xs being replaced by a constant value determined at runtime. The value
           is determined by calling a function at initialization time. This enables randomization
           of Xs with different seeds on different executions. This method is the slowest, but
           safest for finding reset bugs.

           If using --x-assign unique, you may want to seed your random number generator such
           that each regression run gets a different randomization sequence. The simplest is to
           use the +verilator+seed runtime option.  Alternatively use the system's srand48() or
           for Windows srand() function to do this.  You'll probably also want to print any seeds
           selected, and code to enable rerunning with that same seed so you can reproduce bugs.

           Note. This option applies only to values which are explicitly written as X in the
           Verilog source code. Initial values of clocks are set to 0 unless --x-initial-edge is
           specified. Initial values of all other state holding variables are controlled with
           --x-initial.

       --x-initial 0
       --x-initial fast
       --x-initial unique (default)
           Controls the two-state value that is used to initialize variables that are not
           otherwise initialized.

           "--x-initial 0", initializes all otherwise uninitialized variables to zero.

           "--x-initial unique", the default, initializes variables using a function, which
           determines the value to use each initialization. This gives greatest flexibility and
           allows finding reset bugs.  See "Unknown states".

           "--x-initial fast", is best for performance, and initializes all variables to a state
           Verilator determines is optimal.  This may allow further code optimizations, but will
           likely hide any code bugs relating to missing resets.

           Note. This option applies only to initial values of variables. Initial values of
           clocks are set to 0 unless --x-initial-edge is specified.

       --x-initial-edge
           Enables emulation of event driven simulators which generally trigger an edge on a
           transition from X to 1 ("posedge") or X to 0 ("negedge"). Thus the following code,
           where "rst_n" is uninitialized would set "res_n" to "1'b1" when "rst_n" is first set
           to zero:

               reg  res_n = 1'b0;

               always @(negedge rst_n) begin
                  if (rst_n == 1'b0) begin
                     res_n <= 1'b1;
                  end
               end

           In Verilator, by default, uninitialized clocks are given a value of zero, so the above
           "always" block would not trigger.

           While it is not good practice, there are some designs that rely on X X 0 triggering a
           "negedge", particularly in reset sequences. Using --x-initial-edge with Verilator will
           replicate this behavior. It will also ensure that X X 1 triggers a "posedge".

           Note. Some users have reported that using this option can affect convergence, and that
           it may be necessary to use --converge-limit to increase the number of convergence
           iterations. This may be another indication of problems with the modeled design that
           should be addressed.

       --xml-only
           Create XML output only, do not create any other output.

           The XML format is intended to be used to leverage Verilator's parser and elaboration
           to feed to other downstream tools. Be aware that the XML format is still evolving;
           there will be some changes in future versions.

       --xml-output filename
           Filename for XML output file. Using this option automatically sets --xml-only.

       -y dir
           Add the directory to the list of directories that should be searched for include files
           or libraries.  The three flags -y, +incdir and -I have similar effect; +incdir and +y
           are fairly standard across Verilog tools while -I is used by many C++ compilers.

           Verilator defaults to the current directory ("-y .") and any specified --Mdir, though
           these default paths are used after any user specified directories.  This allows '-y
           "$(pwd)"' to be used if absolute filenames are desired for error messages instead of
           relative filenames.

SIMULATION RUNTIME ARGUMENTS

       The following are the arguments that may be passed to a Verilated executable, provided
       that executable calls Verilated::commandArgs().

       All simulation runtime arguments begin with +verilator, so that the user's executable may
       skip over all +verilator arguments when parsing its command line.

       +verilator+debug
           Enable simulation runtime debugging.  Equivalent to +verilator+debugi+4.

       +verilator+debugi+value
           Enable simulation runtime debugging at the provided level.

       +verilator+error+limit+value
           Set number of non-fatal errors (e.g. assertion failures) before exiting simulation
           runtime. Also affects number of $stop calls needed before exit. Defaults to 1.

       +verilator+help
           Display help and exit.

       +verilator+prof+threads+file+filename
           When a model was Verilated using --prof-threads, sets the simulation runtime filename
           to dump to.  Defaults to "profile_threads.dat".

       +verilator+prof+threads+start+value
           When a model was Verilated using --prof-threads, the simulation runtime will wait
           until $time is at this value (expressed in units of the time precision), then start
           the profiling warmup, then capturing. Generally this should be set to some time that
           is well within the normal operation of the simulation, i.e. outside of reset. If 0,
           the dump is disabled. Defaults to 1.

       +verilator+prof+threads+window+value
           When a model was Verilated using --prof-threads, after $time reaches
           +verilator+prof+threads+start, Verilator will warm up the profiling for this number of
           eval() calls, then will capture the profiling of this number of eval() calls.
           Defaults to 2, which makes sense for a single-clock-domain module where it's typical
           to want to capture one posedge eval() and one negedge eval().

       +verilator+rand+reset+value
           When a model was Verilated using "-x-initial unique", sets the simulation runtime
           initialization technique.  0 = Reset to zeros. 1 = Reset to all-ones.  2 = Randomize.
           See "Unknown states".

       +verilator+seed+value
           For $random and "-x-initial unique", set the simulation runtime random seed value.  If
           zero or not specified picks a value from the system random number generator.

       +verilator+noassert
           Disable assert checking per runtime argument. This is the same as calling
           "Verilated::assertOn(false)" in the model.

       +verilator+V
           Shows the verbose version, including configuration information.

       +verilator+version
           Displays program version and exits.

EXAMPLE C++ EXECUTION

       We'll compile this example into C++.

           mkdir test_our
           cd test_our

           cat >our.v <<'EOF'
             module our;
                initial begin $display("Hello World"); $finish; end
             endmodule
           EOF

           cat >sim_main.cpp <<'EOF'
             #include "Vour.h"
             #include "verilated.h"
             int main(int argc, char** argv, char** env) {
                 Verilated::commandArgs(argc, argv);
                 Vour* top = new Vour;
                 while (!Verilated::gotFinish()) { top->eval(); }
                 delete top;
                 exit(0);
             }
           EOF

       See the README in the source kit for various ways to install or point to Verilator
       binaries.  In brief, if you installed Verilator using the package manager of your
       operating system, or did a "make install" to place Verilator into your default path, you
       do not need anything special in your environment, and should not have VERILATOR_ROOT set.
       However, if you installed Verilator from sources and want to run Verilator out of where
       you compiled Verilator, you need to point to the kit:

           # See above; don't do this if using an OS-distributed Verilator
           export VERILATOR_ROOT=/path/to/where/verilator/was/installed
           export PATH=$VERILATOR_ROOT/bin:$PATH

       Now we run Verilator on our little example.

           verilator -Wall --cc our.v --exe --build sim_main.cpp

       We can see the source code under the "obj_dir" directory.  See the FILES section below for
       descriptions of some of the files that were created.

           ls -l obj_dir

       (Verilator included a default compile rule and link rule, since we used --exe and passed a
       .cpp file on the Verilator command line.  Verilator also then used "make" to build a final
       executable.  You can also write your own compile rules, and run make yourself as we'll
       show in the SYSTEMC section.)

       And now we run it

           obj_dir/Vour

       And we get as output

           Hello World
           - our.v:2: Verilog $finish

       Really, you're better off writing a Makefile to do all this for you.  Then, when your
       source changes it will automatically run all of these steps; to aid this Verilator can
       create a makefile dependency file.  See the examples directory in the distribution.

EXAMPLE SYSTEMC EXECUTION

       This is an example similar to the above, but using SystemC.

           mkdir test_our_sc
           cd test_our_sc

           cat >our.v <<'EOF'
             module our (clk);
                input clk;  // Clock is required to get initial activation
                always @ (posedge clk)
                   begin $display("Hello World"); $finish; end
             endmodule
           EOF

           cat >sc_main.cpp <<'EOF'
             #include "Vour.h"
             int sc_main(int argc, char** argv) {
                 Verilated::commandArgs(argc, argv);
                 sc_clock clk ("clk", 10, 0.5, 3, true);
                 Vour* top;
                 top = new Vour("top");
                 top->clk(clk);
                 while (!Verilated::gotFinish()) { sc_start(1, SC_NS); }
                 delete top;
                 exit(0);
             }
           EOF

       See the README in the source kit for various ways to install or point to Verilator
       binaries.  In brief, if you installed Verilator using the package manager of your
       operating system, or did a "make install" to place Verilator into your default path, you
       do not need anything special in your environment, and should not have VERILATOR_ROOT set.
       However, if you installed Verilator from sources and want to run Verilator out of where
       you compiled Verilator, you need to point to the kit:

           # See above; don't do this if using an OS-distributed Verilator
           export VERILATOR_ROOT=/path/to/where/verilator/was/installed
           export PATH=$VERILATOR_ROOT/bin:$PATH

       Now we run Verilator on our little example.

           verilator -Wall --sc our.v

       We then can compile it

           make -j -C obj_dir -f Vour.mk Vour__ALL.a
           make -j -C obj_dir -f Vour.mk ../sc_main.o verilated.o

       And link with SystemC.  Note your path to the libraries may vary, depending on the
       operating system.

           cd obj_dir
           export SYSTEMC_LIBDIR=/path/to/where/libsystemc.a/exists
           export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$SYSTEMC_LIBDIR:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
           # Might be needed if SystemC 2.3.0
           export SYSTEMC_CXX_FLAGS=-pthread

           g++ -L$SYSTEMC_LIBDIR ../sc_main.o Vour__ALL.a verilated.o \
                     -o Vour -lsystemc

       And now we run it

           cd ..
           obj_dir/Vour

       And we get the same output as the C++ example:

           Hello World
           - our.v:2: Verilog $finish

       Really, you're better off using a Makefile to do all this for you.  Then, when your source
       changes it will automatically run all of these steps.  See the examples directory in the
       distribution.

EVALUATION LOOP

       When using SystemC, evaluation of the Verilated model is managed by the SystemC kernel,
       and for the most part can be ignored.  When using C++, the user must call eval(), or
       eval_step() and eval_end_step().

       1. When there is a single design instantiated at the C++ level that needs to evaluate,
       just call designp->eval().

       2. When there are multiple designs instantiated at the C++ level that need to evaluate,
       call first_designp->eval_step() then ->eval_step() on all other designs.  Then call
       ->eval_end_step() on the first design then all other designs.  If there is only a single
       design, you would call eval_step() then eval_end_step(); in fact eval() described above is
       just a wrapper which calls these two functions.

       When eval() is called Verilator looks for changes in clock signals and evaluates related
       sequential always blocks, such as computing always_ff @ (posedge...) outputs.  Then
       Verilator evaluates combinatorial logic.

       Note combinatorial logic is not computed before sequential always blocks are computed (for
       speed reasons). Therefore it is best to set any non-clock inputs up with a separate eval()
       call before changing clocks.

       Alternatively, if all always_ff statements use only the posedge of clocks, or all inputs
       go directly to always_ff statements, as is typical, then you can change non-clock inputs
       on the negative edge of the input clock, which will be faster as there will be fewer
       eval() calls.

       For more information on evaluation, see docs/internals.adoc in the distribution.

BENCHMARKING & OPTIMIZATION

       For best performance, run Verilator with the "-O3 --x-assign fast --x-initial fast
       --noassert" flags.  The -O3 flag will require longer time to run Verilator, and
       "--x-assign fast --x-initial fast" may increase the risk of reset bugs in trade for
       performance; see the above documentation for these flags.

       If using Verilated multithreaded, use "numactl" to ensure you are using non-conflicting
       hardware resources. See "MULTITHREADING".

       Minor Verilog code changes can also give big wins.  You should not have any UNOPTFLAT
       warnings from Verilator.  Fixing these warnings can result in huge improvements; one user
       fixed their one UNOPTFLAT warning by making a simple change to a clock latch used to gate
       clocks and gained a 60% performance improvement.

       Beyond that, the performance of a Verilated model depends mostly on your C++ compiler and
       size of your CPU's caches. Experience shows that large models are often limited by the
       size of the instruction cache, and as such reducing code size if possible can be
       beneficial.

       The supplied $VERILATOR_ROOT/include/verilated.mk file uses the OPT, OPT_FAST, OPT_SLOW
       and OPT_GLOBAL variables to control optimization. You can set these when compiling the
       output of Verilator with Make, for example:

           make OPT_FAST="-Os -march=native" -f Vour.mk Vour__ALL.a

       OPT_FAST specifies optimization flags for those parts of the model that are on the fast
       path. This is mostly code that is executed every cycle. OPT_SLOW applies to slow-path
       code, which executes rarely, often only once at the beginning or end of simulation. Note
       that OPT_SLOW is ignored if VM_PARALLEL_BUILDS is not 1, in which case all generated code
       will be compiled in a single compilation unit using OPT_FAST. See also the
       "--output-split" option. The OPT_GLOBAL variable applies to common code in the runtime
       library used by Verilated models (shipped in $VERILATOR_ROOT/include). Additional C++
       files passed on the verilator command line use OPT_FAST. The OPT variable applies to all
       compilation units in addition to the specific OPT_* variables described above.

       You can also use the -CFLAGS and/or -LDFLAGS options on the verilator command line to pass
       flags directly to the compiler or linker.

       The default values of the OPT_* variables are chosen to yield good simulation speed with
       reasonable C++ compilation times. To this end, OPT_FAST is set to "-Os" by default. Higher
       optimization such as "-O2" or "-O3" may help (though often they provide only a very small
       performance benefit), but compile times may be excessively large even with medium sized
       designs. Compilation times can be improved at the expense of simulation speed by reducing
       optimization, for example with OPT_FAST="-O0". Often good simulation speed can be achieved
       with OPT_FAST="-O1 -fstrict-aliasing" but with improved compilation times. Files
       controlled by OPT_SLOW have little effect on performance and therefore OPT_SLOW is empty
       by default (equivalent to "-O0") for improved compilation speed. In common use-cases there
       should be little benefit in changing OPT_SLOW.  OPT_GLOBAL is set to "-Os" by default and
       there should rarely be a need to change it. As the runtime library is small in comparison
       to a lot of Verilated models, disabling optimization on the runtime library should not
       have a serious effect on overall compilation time, but may have detrimental effect on
       simulation speed, especially with tracing. In addition to the above, for best results use
       OPT="-march=native", the latest Clang compiler (about 10% faster than GCC), and link
       statically.

       Generally the answer to which optimization level gives the best user experience depends on
       the use case and some experimentation can pay dividends. For a speedy debug cycle during
       development, especially on large designs where C++ compilation speed can dominate,
       consider using lower optimization to get to an executable faster. For throughput oriented
       use cases, for example regressions, it is usually worth spending extra compilation time to
       reduce total CPU time.

       If you will be running many simulations on a single model, you can investigate profile
       guided optimization. With GCC, using -fprofile-arcs, then -fbranch-probabilities will
       yield another 15% or so.

       Modern compilers also support link-time optimization (LTO), which can help especially if
       you link in DPI code. To enable LTO on GCC, pass "-flto" in both compilation and link.
       Note LTO may cause excessive compile times on large designs.

       Unfortunately, using the optimizer with SystemC files can result in compilation taking
       several minutes. (The SystemC libraries have many little inlined functions that drive the
       compiler nuts.)

       If you are using your own makefiles, you may want to compile the Verilated code with
       -DVL_INLINE_OPT=inline. This will inline functions, however this requires that all cpp
       files be compiled in a single compiler run.

       You may uncover further tuning possibilities by profiling the Verilog code.  Use
       Verilator's --prof-cfuncs, then GCC's -g -pg.  You can then run either oprofile or gprof
       to see where in the C++ code the time is spent.  Run the gprof output through
       verilator_profcfunc and it will tell you what Verilog line numbers on which most of the
       time is being spent.

       When done, please let the author know the results.  We like to keep tabs on how Verilator
       compares, and may be able to suggest additional improvements.

FILES

       All output files are placed in the output directory specified with the "--Mdir" option, or
       "obj_dir" if not specified.

       Verilator creates the following files in the output directory:

       For --make gmake, it creates:

           {prefix}.mk                         // Make include file for compiling
           {prefix}_classes.mk                 // Make include file with class names

       For --make cmake, it creates:

           {prefix}.cmake                      // CMake include script for compiling

       For -cc and -sc mode, it also creates:

           {prefix}.cpp                        // Top level C++ file
           {prefix}.h                          // Top level header
           {prefix}__Slow{__n}.cpp             // Constructors and infrequent cold routines
           {prefix}{__n}.cpp                   // Additional top C++ files (--output-split)
           {prefix}{each_verilog_module}.cpp   // Lower level internal C++ files
           {prefix}{each_verilog_module}.h     // Lower level internal header files
           {prefix}{each_verilog_module}{__n}.cpp   // Additional lower C++ files (--output-split)

       In certain debug and other modes, it also creates:

           {prefix}.xml                        // XML tree information (--xml)
           {prefix}__Dpi.cpp                   // DPI import and export wrappers
           {prefix}__Dpi.h                     // DPI import and export declarations
           {prefix}__Inlines.h                 // Inline support functions
           {prefix}__Syms.cpp                  // Global symbol table C++
           {prefix}__Syms.h                    // Global symbol table header
           {prefix}__Trace__Slow{__n}.cpp      // Wave file generation code (--trace)
           {prefix}__Trace{__n}.cpp            // Wave file generation code (--trace)
           {prefix}__cdc.txt                   // Clock Domain Crossing checks (--cdc)
           {prefix}__stats.txt                 // Statistics (--stats)
           {prefix}__idmap.txt                 // Symbol demangling (--protect-ids)

       It also creates internal files that can be mostly ignored:

           {mod_prefix}_{each_verilog_module}{__n}.vpp  // Pre-processed verilog
           {prefix}__ver.d                     // Make dependencies (-MMD)
           {prefix}__verFiles.dat              // Timestamps for skip-identical
           {prefix}{misc}.dot                  // Debugging graph files (--debug)
           {prefix}{misc}.tree                 // Debugging files (--debug)

       After running Make, the C++ compiler may produce the following:

           verilated{misc}.d                   // Intermediate dependencies
           verilated{misc}.o                   // Intermediate objects
           {mod_prefix}{misc}.d                // Intermediate dependencies
           {mod_prefix}{misc}.o                // Intermediate objects
           {prefix}                            // Final executable (w/--exe argument)
           {prefix}__ALL.a                     // Library of all Verilated objects
           {prefix}__ALL.cpp                   // Include of all code for single compile
           {prefix}{misc}.d                    // Intermediate dependencies
           {prefix}{misc}.o                    // Intermediate objects

ENVIRONMENT

       LD_LIBRARY_PATH
           A generic Linux/OS variable specifying what directories have shared object (.so)
           files.  This path should include SystemC and any other shared objects needed at
           simulation runtime.

       MAKE
           Names the executable of the make command invoked when using the --build option.  Some
           operating systems may require "gmake" to this variable to launch GNU make.  If this
           variable is not specified, "make" is used.

       OBJCACHE
           Optionally specifies a caching or distribution program to place in front of all runs
           of the C++ compiler.  For example, "ccache".  If using distcc or icecc/icecream, they
           would generally be run under cache; see the documentation for those programs.  If
           OBJCACHE is not set, and at configure time ccache was present, ccache will be used as
           a default.

       SYSTEMC
           Deprecated.  Used only if SYSTEMC_INCLUDE or SYSTEMC_LIBDIR is not set.  If set,
           specifies the directory containing the SystemC distribution.  If not specified, it
           will come from a default optionally specified at configure time (before Verilator was
           compiled).

       SYSTEMC_ARCH
           Deprecated.  Used only if SYSTEMC_LIBDIR is not set.  Specifies the architecture name
           used by the SystemC kit.  This is the part after the dash in the lib-{...} directory
           name created by a 'make' in the SystemC distribution.  If not set, Verilator will try
           to intuit the proper setting, or use the default optionally specified at configure
           time (before Verilator was compiled).

       SYSTEMC_CXX_FLAGS
           Specifies additional flags that are required to be passed to GCC when building the
           SystemC model.  System 2.3.0 may need this set to "-pthread".

       SYSTEMC_INCLUDE
           If set, specifies the directory containing the systemc.h header file. If not
           specified, it will come from a default optionally specified at configure time (before
           Verilator was compiled), or computed from SYSTEMC/include.

       SYSTEMC_LIBDIR
           If set, specifies the directory containing the libsystemc.a library. If not specified,
           it will come from a default optionally specified at configure time (before Verilator
           was compiled), or computed from SYSTEMC/lib-SYSTEMC_ARCH.

       VERILATOR_BIN
           If set, specifies an alternative name of the "verilator" binary.  May be used for
           debugging and selecting between multiple operating system builds.

       VERILATOR_COVERAGE_BIN
           If set, specifies an alternative name of the "verilator_coverage binary".  May be used
           for debugging and selecting between multiple operating system builds.

       VERILATOR_GDB
           If set, the command to run when using the --gdb option, such as "ddd".  If not
           specified, it will use "gdb".

       VERILATOR_ROOT
           Specifies the directory containing the distribution kit.  This is used to find the
           executable, Perl library, and include files.  If not specified, it will come from a
           default optionally specified at configure time (before Verilator was compiled).  It
           should not be specified if using a pre-compiled Verilator package as the hard-coded
           value should be correct.

CONNECTING TO C++

       Verilator creates a prefix.h and prefix.cpp file for the top level module, together with
       additional .h and .cpp files for internals. See the examples directory in the kit for
       examples.

       After the model is created, there will be a prefix.mk file that may be used with Make to
       produce a prefix__ALL.a file with all required objects in it.  This is then linked with
       the user's C++ main loop to create the simulation executable.

       The user must write the C++ main loop of the simulation.  Here is a simple example:

               #include <verilated.h>          // Defines common routines
               #include <iostream>             // Need std::cout
               #include "Vtop.h"               // From Verilating "top.v"

               Vtop *top;                      // Instantiation of module

               vluint64_t main_time = 0;       // Current simulation time
               // This is a 64-bit integer to reduce wrap over issues and
               // allow modulus.  This is in units of the timeprecision
               // used in Verilog (or from --timescale-override)

               double sc_time_stamp () {       // Called by $time in Verilog
                   return main_time;           // converts to double, to match
                                               // what SystemC does
               }

               int main(int argc, char** argv) {
                   Verilated::commandArgs(argc, argv);   // Remember args

                   top = new Vtop;             // Create instance

                   top->reset_l = 0;           // Set some inputs

                   while (!Verilated::gotFinish()) {
                       if (main_time > 10) {
                           top->reset_l = 1;   // Deassert reset
                       }
                       if ((main_time % 10) == 1) {
                           top->clk = 1;       // Toggle clock
                       }
                       if ((main_time % 10) == 6) {
                           top->clk = 0;
                       }
                       top->eval();            // Evaluate model
                       cout << top->out << endl;       // Read a output
                       main_time++;            // Time passes...
                   }

                   top->final();               // Done simulating
                   //    // (Though this example doesn't get here)
                   delete top;
               }

       Note signals are read and written as member variables of the model.  You call the eval()
       method to evaluate the model.  When the simulation is complete call the final() method to
       execute any SystemVerilog final blocks, and complete any assertions. See "EVALUATION
       LOOP".

CONNECTING TO SYSTEMC

       Verilator will convert the top level module to a SC_MODULE.  This module will plug
       directly into a SystemC netlist.

       The SC_MODULE gets the same pinout as the Verilog module, with the following type
       conversions: Pins of a single bit become bool.  Pins 2-32 bits wide become uint32_t's.
       Pins 33-64 bits wide become sc_bv's or vluint64_t's depending on the --no-pins64 switch.
       Wider pins become sc_bv's.  (Uints simulate the fastest so are used where possible.)

       Lower modules are not pure SystemC code.  This is a feature, as using the SystemC pin
       interconnect scheme everywhere would reduce performance by an order of magnitude.

DIRECT PROGRAMMING INTERFACE (DPI)

       Verilator supports SystemVerilog Direct Programming Interface import and export
       statements.  Only the SystemVerilog form ("DPI-C") is supported, not the original
       Synopsys-only DPI.

   DPI Example
       In the SYSTEMC example above, if you wanted to import C++ functions into Verilog, put in
       our.v:

          import "DPI-C" function int add (input int a, input int b);

          initial begin
             $display("%x + %x = %x", 1, 2, add(1,2));
          endtask

       Then after Verilating, Verilator will create a file Vour__Dpi.h with the prototype to call
       this function:

           extern int add (int a, int b);

       From the sc_main.cpp file (or another .cpp file passed to the Verilator command line, or
       the link), you'd then:

           #include "svdpi.h"
           #include "Vour__Dpi.h"
           int add(int a, int b) { return a+b; }

   DPI System Task/Functions
       Verilator extends the DPI format to allow using the same scheme to efficiently add system
       functions.  Simply use a dollar-sign prefixed system function name for the import, but
       note it must be escaped.

          export "DPI-C" function integer \$myRand;

          initial $display("myRand=%d", $myRand());

       Going the other direction, you can export Verilog tasks so they can be called from C++:

          export "DPI-C" task publicSetBool;

          task publicSetBool;
             input bit in_bool;
             var_bool = in_bool;
          endtask

       Then after Verilating, Verilator will create a file Vour__Dpi.h with the prototype to call
       this function:

           extern void publicSetBool(svBit in_bool);

       From the sc_main.cpp file, you'd then:

           #include "Vour__Dpi.h"
           publicSetBool(value);

       Or, alternatively, call the function under the design class.  This isn't DPI compatible
       but is easier to read and better supports multiple designs.

           #include "Vour__Dpi.h"
           Vour::publicSetBool(value);
           // or top->publicSetBool(value);

       Note that if the DPI task or function accesses any register or net within the RTL, it will
       require a scope to be set. This can be done using the standard functions within svdpi.h,
       after the module is instantiated, but before the task(s) and/or function(s) are called.

       For example, if the top level module is instantiated with the name "dut" and the name
       references within tasks are all hierarchical (dotted) names with respect to that top level
       module, then the scope could be set with

           #include "svdpi.h"
           ...
           svSetScope(svGetScopeFromName("TOP.dut"));

       (Remember that Verilator adds a "TOP" to the top of the module hierarchy.)

       Scope can also be set from within a DPI imported C function that has been called from
       Verilog by querying the scope of that function. See the sections on DPI Context Functions
       and DPI Header Isolation below and the comments within the svdpi.h header for more
       information.

   DPI Display Functions
       Verilator allows writing $display like functions using this syntax:

          import "DPI-C" function void
                \$my_display(input string formatted /*verilator sformat*/ );

       The /*verilator sformat*/ indicates that this function accepts a $display like format
       specifier followed by any number of arguments to satisfy the format.

   DPI Context Functions
       Verilator supports IEEE DPI Context Functions.  Context imports pass the simulator
       context, including calling scope name, and filename and line number to the C code.  For
       example, in Verilog:

          import "DPI-C" context function int dpic_line();
          initial $display("This is line %d, again, line %d\n", `line, dpic_line());

       This will call C++ code which may then use the svGet* functions to read information, in
       this case the line number of the Verilog statement that invoked the dpic_line function:

          int dpic_line() {
              // Get a scope:  svScope scope = svGetScope();

              const char* scopenamep = svGetNameFromScope(scope);
              assert(scopenamep);

              const char* filenamep = "";
              int lineno = 0;
              if (svGetCallerInfo(&filenamep, &lineno)) {
                  printf("dpic_line called from scope %s on line %d\n",
                     scopenamep, lineno);
                  return lineno;
              } else {
                  return 0;
              }
          }

       See the IEEE Standard for more information.

   DPI Header Isolation
       Verilator places the IEEE standard header files such as svdpi.h into a separate include
       directory, vltstd (VeriLaTor STandarD).  When compiling most applications
       $VERILATOR_ROOT/include/vltstd would be in the include path along with the normal
       $VERILATOR_ROOT/include.  However, when compiling Verilated models into other simulators
       which have their own svdpi.h and similar standard files with different contents, the
       vltstd directory should not be included to prevent picking up incompatible definitions.

   Public Functions
       Instead of DPI exporting, there's also Verilator public functions, which are slightly
       faster, but less compatible.

VERIFICATION PROCEDURAL INTERFACE (VPI)

       Verilator supports a very limited subset of the VPI.  This subset allows inspection,
       examination, value change callbacks, and depositing of values to public signals only.

       VPI is enabled with the verilator --vpi switch.

       To access signals via the VPI, Verilator must be told exactly which signals are to be
       accessed.  This is done using the Verilator public pragmas documented below.

       Verilator has an important difference from an event based simulator; signal values that
       are changed by the VPI will not immediately propagate their values, instead the top level
       header file's eval() method must be called.  Normally this would be part of the normal
       evaluation (i.e. the next clock edge), not as part of the value change.  This makes the
       performance of VPI routines extremely fast compared to event based simulators, but can
       confuse some test-benches that expect immediate propagation.

       Note the VPI by its specified implementation will always be much slower than accessing the
       Verilator values by direct reference (structure->module->signame), as the VPI accessors
       perform lookup in functions at simulation runtime requiring at best hundreds of
       instructions, while the direct references are evaluated by the compiler and result in only
       a couple of instructions.

       For signal callbacks to work the main loop of the program must call
       VerilatedVpi::callValueCbs().

   VPI Example
       In the below example, we have readme marked read-only, and writeme which if written from
       outside the model will have the same semantics as if it changed on the specified clock
       edge.

           cat >our.v <<'EOF'
             module our (input clk);
                reg readme   /*verilator public_flat_rd*/;
                reg writeme  /*verilator public_flat_rw @(posedge clk) */;
                initial $finish;
             endmodule
           EOF

       There are many online tutorials and books on the VPI, but an example that accesses the
       above signal "readme" would be:

           cat >sim_main.cpp <<'<<EOF'
             #include "Vour.h"
             #include "verilated.h"
             #include "verilated_vpi.h"  // Required to get definitions

             vluint64_t main_time = 0;   // See comments in first example
             double sc_time_stamp() { return main_time; }

             void read_and_check() {
                 vpiHandle vh1 = vpi_handle_by_name((PLI_BYTE8*)"TOP.our.readme", NULL);
                 if (!vh1) { vl_fatal(__FILE__, __LINE__, "sim_main", "No handle found"); }
                 const char* name = vpi_get_str(vpiName, vh1);
                 printf("Module name: %s\n", name);  // Prints "readme"

                 s_vpi_value v;
                 v.format = vpiIntVal;
                 vpi_get_value(vh1, &v);
                 printf("Value of v: %d\n", v.value.integer);  // Prints "readme"
             }

             int main(int argc, char** argv, char** env) {
                 Verilated::commandArgs(argc, argv);
                 Vour* top = new Vour;
                 Verilated::internalsDump();  // See scopes to help debug
                 while (!Verilated::gotFinish()) {
                     top->eval();
                     VerilatedVpi::callValueCbs();  // For signal callbacks
                     read_and_check();
                 }
                 delete top;
                 exit(0);
             }
           EOF

CROSS COMPILATION

       Verilator supports cross-compiling Verilated code.  This is generally used to run
       Verilator on a Linux system and produce C++ code that is then compiled on Windows.

       Cross compilation involves up to three different OSes.  The build system is where you
       configured and compiled Verilator, the host system where you run Verilator, and the target
       system where you compile the Verilated code and run the simulation.

       Currently, Verilator requires the build and host system type to be the same, though the
       target system type may be different.  To support this, ./configure and make Verilator on
       the build system.  Then, run Verilator on the host system.  Finally, the output of
       Verilator may be compiled on the different target system.

       To support this, none of the files that Verilator produces will reference any configure
       generated build-system specific files, such as config.h (which is renamed in Verilator to
       config_build.h to reduce confusion.)  The disadvantage of this approach is that
       include/verilatedos.h must self-detect the requirements of the target system, rather than
       using configure.

       The target system may also require edits to the Makefiles, the simple Makefiles produced
       by Verilator presume the target system is the same type as the build system.

   CMake
       Verilator can be run using CMake, which takes care of both running Verilator and compiling
       the output. There is a CMake example in the examples/ directory. The following is a
       minimal CMakeLists.txt that would build the code listed in "EXAMPLE C++ EXECUTION":

           project(cmake_example)
           find_package(verilator HINTS $ENV{VERILATOR_ROOT})
           add_executable(Vour sim_main.cpp)
           verilate(Vour SOURCES our.v)

       find_package will automatically find an installed copy of Verilator, or use a local build
       if VERILATOR_ROOT is set.

       It is recommended to use CMake >= 3.12 and the Ninja generator, though other combinations
       should work. To build with CMake, change to the folder containing CMakeLists.txt and run:

           mkdir build
           cd build
           cmake -GNinja ..
           ninja

       Or to build with your system default generator:

           mkdir build
           cd build
           cmake ..
           cmake --build .

       If you're building the example you should have an executable to run:

           ./Vour

       The package sets the CMake variables verilator_FOUND, VERILATOR_ROOT and VERILATOR_BIN to
       the appropriate values, and also creates a verilate() function. verilate() will
       automatically create custom commands to run Verilator and add the generated C++ sources to
       the target specified.

           verilate(target SOURCES source ... [TOP_MODULE top] [PREFIX name]
                    [TRACE] [TRACE_FST] [SYSTEMC] [COVERAGE]
                    [INCLUDE_DIRS dir ...] [OPT_SLOW ...] [OPT_FAST ...]
                    [OPT_GLOBAL ..] [DIRECTORY dir] [VERILATOR_ARGS ...])

       Lowercase and ... should be replaced with arguments, the uppercase parts delimit the
       arguments and can be passed in any order, or left out entirely if optional.

       verilate(target ...) can be called multiple times to add other verilog modules to an
       executable or library target.

       When generating Verilated SystemC sources, you should also include the SystemC include
       directories and link to the SystemC libraries.

       Verilator's CMake support provides a convenience function to automatically find and link
       to the SystemC library.  It can be used as:

           verilator_link_systemc(target)

       where target is the name of your target.

       The search paths can be configured by setting some variables:

       - The variables SYSTEMC_INCLUDE and SYSTEMC_LIBDIR to give a direct path to the SystemC
       include an library path.

       - SYSTEMC_ROOT to set the installation prefix of an installed SystemC
         library.

       - SYSTEMC to set the installation prefix of an installed SystemC library
         (same as above).

       - When using Accellera's SystemC with CMake support, a CMake target is available that
       simplifies the above steps. This will only work if the SystemC installation can be found
       by CMake. This can be configured by setting the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH variable during CMake
       configuration.

       Don't forget to set the same C++ standard for the Verilated sources as the SystemC
       library. This can be specified using the SYSTEMC_CXX_FLAGS environment variable.

       target
           Name of a target created by add_executable or add_library.

       SOURCES
           List of Verilog files to Verilate. Must have at least one file.

       PREFIX
           Optional. Sets the Verilator output prefix. Defaults to the name of the first source
           file with a "V" prepended. Must be unique in each call to verilate(), so this is
           necessary if you build a module multiple times with different parameters. Must be a
           valid C++ identifier, i.e. contains no white space and only characters A-Z, a-z, 0-9
           or _.

       TOP_MODULE
           Optional. Sets the name of the top module. Defaults to the name of the first file in
           the SOURCES array.

       TRACE
           Optional. Enables VCD tracing if present, equivalent to "VERILATOR_ARGS --trace".

       TRACE_FST
           Optional. Enables FST tracing if present, equivalent to "VERILATOR_ARGS --trace-fst".

       SYSTEMC
           Optional. Enables SystemC mode, defaults to C++ if not specified.

       COVERAGE
           Optional. Enables coverage if present, equivalent to "VERILATOR_ARGS --coverage"

       INCLUDE_DIRS
           Optional. Sets directories that Verilator searches (same as -y).

       OPT_SLOW
           Optional. Set compiler flags for the slow path. You may want to reduce the
           optimization level to improve compile times with large designs.

       OPT_FAST
           Optional. Set compiler flags for the fast path.

       OPT_GLOBAL
           Optional. Set compiler flags for the common runtime library used by Verilated models.

       DIRECTORY
           Optional. Set the verilator output directory. It is preferable to use the default,
           which will avoid collisions with other files.

       VERILATOR_ARGS
           Optional. Extra arguments to Verilator. Do not specify --Mdir or --prefix here, use
           DIRECTORY or PREFIX.

MULTITHREADING

       Verilator supports multithreaded simulation models.

       With --no-threads, the default, the model is not thread safe, and any use of more than one
       thread calling into one or even different Verilated models may result in unpredictable
       behavior. This gives the highest single thread performance.

       With --threads 1, the generated model is single threaded, however the support libraries
       are multithread safe. This allows different instantiations of model(s) to potentially each
       be run under a different thread. All threading is the responsibility of the user's C++
       testbench.

       With --threads N, where N is at least 2, the generated model will be designed to run in
       parallel on N threads. The thread calling eval() provides one of those threads, and the
       generated model will create and manage the other N-1 threads. It's the client's
       responsibility not to oversubscribe the available CPU cores. Under CPU oversubscription,
       the Verilated model should not livelock nor deadlock, however, you can expect performance
       to be far worse than it would be with proper ratio of threads and CPU cores.

       The remainder of this section describe behavior with --threads 1 or --threads N (not
       --no-threads).

       VL_THREADED is defined when compiling a threaded Verilated module, causing the Verilated
       support classes become threadsafe.

       The thread used for constructing a model must be the same thread that calls eval() into
       the model, this is called the "eval thread". The thread used to perform certain global
       operations such as saving and tracing must be done by a "main thread". In most cases the
       eval thread and main thread are the same thread (i.e. the user's top C++ testbench runs on
       a single thread), but this is not required.

       The --trace-threads options can be used to produce trace dumps using multiple threads. If
       --trace-threads is set without --threads, then --trace-threads will imply --threads 1,
       i.e.: the support libraries will be thread safe.

       With --trace-threads 0, trace dumps are produced on the main thread. This again gives the
       highest single thread performance.

       With --trace-threads N, where N is at least 1, N additional threads will be created and
       managed by the trace files (e.g.: VerilatedVcdC or VerilatedFstC), to generate the trace
       dump. The main thread will be released to proceed with execution as soon as possible,
       though some blocking of the main thread is still necessary while capturing the trace.
       Different trace formats can utilize a various number of threads. See the --trace-threads
       option.

       When running a multithreaded model, the default Linux task scheduler often works against
       the model, by assuming threads are short lived, and thus often schedules threads using
       multiple hyperthreads within the same physical core. For best performance use the
       "numactl" program to (when the threading count fits) select unique physical cores on the
       same socket. The same applies for --trace-threads as well.

       As an example, if a model was Verilated with "--threads 4", we consult

          egrep 'processor|physical id|core id' /proc/cpuinfo

       To select cores 0, 1, 2, and 3 that are all located on the same socket (0) but different
       physical cores.  (Also useful is "numactl --hardware", or "lscpu" but those doesn't show
       Hyperthreading cores.) Then we execute

          numactl -m 0 -C 0,1,2,3 -- verilated_executable_name

       This will limit memory to socket 0, and threads to cores 0, 1, 2, 3, (presumably on socket
       0) optimizing performance.  Of course this must be adjusted if you want another simulator
       using e.g. socket 1, or if you Verilated with a different number of threads.  To see what
       CPUs are actually used, use --prof-threads.

   Multithreaded Verilog and Library Support
       $display/$stop/$finish are delayed until the end of an eval() call in order to maintain
       ordering between threads. This may result in additional tasks completing after the $stop
       or $finish.

           If using --coverage, the coverage routines are fully thread safe.

           If using --dpi, Verilator assumes pure DPI imports are thread safe, balancing
           performance versus safety. See --threads-dpi.

           If using --savable, the save/restore classes are not multithreaded and must be called
           only by the eval thread.

           If using --sc, the SystemC kernel is not thread safe, therefore the eval thread and
           main thread must be the same.

           If using --trace, the tracing classes must be constructed and called from the main
           thread.

           If using --vpi, since SystemVerilog VPI was not architected by IEEE to be
           multithreaded, Verilator requires all VPI calls are only made from the main thread.

CONFIGURATION FILES

       In addition to the command line, warnings and other features may be controlled by
       configuration files, typically named with the .vlt extension. An example:

         `verilator_config
         lint_off -rule WIDTH
         lint_off -rule CASEX  -file "silly_vendor_code.v"

       This disables WIDTH warnings globally, and CASEX for a specific file.

       Configuration files are fed through the normal Verilog preprocessor prior to parsing, so
       `ifdefs, `defines, and comments may be used as if it were normal Verilog code.

       Note that file or line-specific configuration only applies to files read after the
       configuration file. It is therefore recommended to pass the configuration file to
       Verilator as the first file.

       The grammar of configuration commands is as follows:

       `verilator_config
           Take remaining text and treat it as Verilator configuration commands.

       coverage_on  [-file "<filename>" [-lines <line> [ - <line> ]]]
       coverage_off [-file "<filename>" [-lines <line> [ - <line> ]]]
           Enable/disable coverage for the specified filename (or wildcard with '*' or '?', or
           all files if omitted) and range of line numbers (or all lines if omitted).  Often used
           to ignore an entire module for coverage analysis purposes.

       lint_on  [-rule <message>] [-file "<filename>" [-lines <line> [ - <line>]]]
       lint_off [-rule <message>] [-file "<filename>" [-lines <line> [ - <line>]]]
       lint_off [-rule <message>] [-file "<filename>"] [-match "<string>"]
           Enable/disables the specified lint warning, in the specified filename (or wildcard
           with '*' or '?', or all files if omitted) and range of line numbers (or all lines if
           omitted).

           With lint_off using '*' will override any lint_on directives in the source, i.e. the
           warning will still not be printed.

           If the -rule is omitted, all lint warnings (see list in -Wno-lint) are
           enabled/disabled.  This will override all later lint warning enables for the specified
           region.

           If -match is set the linter warnings are matched against this (wildcard) string and
           are waived in case they match and iff rule and file (with wildcard) also match.

           In previous versions -rule was named -msg. The latter is deprecated, but still works
           with a deprecation info, it may be removed in future versions.

       tracing_on  [-file "<filename>" [-lines <line> [ - <line> ]]]
       tracing_off [-file "<filename>" [-lines <line> [ - <line> ]]]
           Enable/disable waveform tracing for all future signals declared in the specified
           filename (or wildcard with '*' or '?', or all files if omitted) and range of line
           numbers (or all lines if omitted).

           For tracing_off, cells below any module in the files/ranges specified will also not be
           traced.

       clock_enable -module "<modulename>" -var "<signame>"
           Indicate the signal is used to gate a clock, and the user takes responsibility for
           insuring there are no races related to it.

           Same as /*verilator clock_enable*/, see "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more information and
           an example.

       clocker -module "<modulename>" [-task "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       clocker -module "<modulename>" [-function "<funcname>"] -var "<signame>"
       no_clocker -module "<modulename>" [-task "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       no_clocker -module "<modulename>" [-function "<funcname>"] -var "<signame>"
           Indicate the signal is used as clock or not. This information is used by Verilator to
           mark the signal as clocker and propagate the clocker attribute automatically to
           derived signals. See "--clk" for more information.

           Same as /*verilator clocker*/, see "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more information.

       coverage_block_off -module "<modulename>" -block "<blockname>"
       coverage_block_off -file "<filename>" -line <lineno>
           Specifies the entire begin/end block should be ignored for coverage analysis purposes.
           Can either be specified as a named block or as a filename and line number.

           Same as /*verilator coverage_block_off*/, see "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more
           information.

       full_case -file "<filename>" -lines <lineno>
       parallel_case -file "<filename>" -lines <lineno>
           Same as "//synopsys full_case" and "//synopsys parallel_case". When these synthesis
           directives are discovered, Verilator will either formally prove the directive to be
           true, or failing that, will insert the appropriate code to detect failing cases at
           simulation runtime and print an "Assertion failed" error message.

       inline -module "<modulename>"
           Specifies the module may be inlined into any modules that use this module.  Same as
           /*verilator inline_module*/, and see that under "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more
           information.

       isolate_assignments -module "<modulename>" [-task "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       isolate_assignments -module "<modulename>" [-function "<funcname>"] -var "<signame>"
       isolate_assignments -module "<modulename>" -function "<fname>"
           Used to indicate the assignments to this signal in any blocks should be isolated into
           new blocks.  When there is a large combinatorial block that is resulting in a
           UNOPTFLAT warning, attaching this to the signal causing a false loop may clear up the
           problem.

           Same as /* verilator isolate_assignments */, see "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more
           information.

       no_inline -module "<modulename>"
           Specifies the module should not be inlined into any modules that use this module.
           Same as /*verilator no_inline_module*/, and see that under "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for
           more information.

       no_inline [-module "<modulename>"] -task "<taskname>"
       no_inline [-module "<modulename>"] -function "<funcname>"
           Specify the function or task should not be inlined into where it is used.  This may
           reduce the size of the final executable when a task is used a very large number of
           times.  For this flag to work, the task and tasks below it must be pure; they cannot
           reference any variables outside the task itself.

           Same as /*verilator no_inline_task*/, see "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more information.

       public [-module "<modulename>"] [-task/-function "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       public_flat [-module "<modulename>"] [-task/-function "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       public_flat_rd [-module "<modulename>"] [-task/-function "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       public_flat_rw [-module "<modulename>"] [-task/-function "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       "@(edge)"
           Sets the variable to be public.  Same as /*verilator public*/ or /*verilator
           public_flat*/ etc, see those under "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more information.

       sc_bv -module "<modulename>" [-task "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       sc_bv -module "<modulename>" [-function "<funcname>"] -var "<signame>"
           Sets the port to be of sc_bv<width> type, instead of bool, vluint32_t or vluint64_t.
           Same as /*verilator sc_bv*/, see that under "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more
           information.

       sformat [-module "<modulename>"] [-task "<taskname>"] -var "<signame>"
       sformat [-module "<modulename>"] [-function "<funcname>"] -var "<signame>"
           Must be applied to the final argument of type "input string" of a function or task to
           indicate the function or task should pass all remaining arguments through $sformatf.
           This allows creation of DPI functions with $display like behavior.  See the
           test_regress/t/t_dpi_display.v file for an example.

           Same as /*verilator sformat*/, see "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more information.

       split_var [-module "<modulename>"] [-task "<taskname>"] -var "<varname>"
       split_var [-module "<modulename>"] [-function "<funcname>"] -var "<varname>"
           Break the variable into multiple pieces typically to resolve UNOPTFLAT performance
           issues. Typically the variables to attach this to are recommended by Verilator itself,
           see UNOPTFLAT.

           Same as /*verilator split_var*/, see "LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS" for more information.

LANGUAGE STANDARD SUPPORT

   Verilog 2001 (IEEE 1364-2001) Support
       Verilator supports most Verilog 2001 language features.  This includes signed numbers,
       "always @*", generate statements, multidimensional arrays, localparam, and C-style
       declarations inside port lists.

   Verilog 2005 (IEEE 1364-2005) Support
       Verilator supports most Verilog 2005 language features.  This includes the `begin_keywords
       and `end_keywords compiler directives, $clog2, and the uwire keyword.

   SystemVerilog 2005 (IEEE 1800-2005) Support
       Verilator supports ==? and !=? operators, ++ and -- in some contexts, $bits, $countbits,
       $countones, $error, $fatal, $info, $isunknown, $onehot, $onehot0, $unit, $warning,
       always_comb, always_ff, always_latch, bit, byte, chandle, const, do-while, enum, export,
       final, import, int, interface, logic, longint, modport, package, program, shortint,
       struct, time, typedef, union, var, void, priority case/if, and unique case/if.

       It also supports .name and .* interconnection.

       Verilator partially supports concurrent assert and cover statements; see the enclosed
       coverage tests for the syntax which is allowed.

   SystemVerilog 2012 (IEEE 1800-2012) Support
       Verilator implements a full SystemVerilog 2012 preprocessor, including function call-like
       preprocessor defines, default define arguments, `__FILE__, `__LINE__ and `undefineall.

       Verilator currently has some support for SystemVerilog synthesis constructs. As
       SystemVerilog features enter common usage they are added; please file a bug if a feature
       you need is missing.

   SystemVerilog 2017 (IEEE 1800-2017) Support
       Verilator supports the 2017 "for" loop constructs, and several minor cleanups made in
       1800-2017.

   Verilog AMS Support
       Verilator implements a very small subset of Verilog AMS (Verilog Analog and Mixed-Signal
       Extensions) with the subset corresponding to those VMS keywords with near equivalents in
       the Verilog 2005 or SystemVerilog 2009 languages.

       AMS parsing is enabled with "--language VAMS" or "--language 1800+VAMS".

       At present Verilator implements ceil, exp, floor, ln, log, pow, sqrt, string, and wreal.

   Synthesis Directive Assertion Support
       With the --assert switch, Verilator reads any "//synopsys full_case" or "//synopsys
       parallel_case" directives.  The same applies to any "//ambit synthesis", "//cadence" or
       "//pragma" directives of the same form.

       When these synthesis directives are discovered, Verilator will either formally prove the
       directive to be true, or failing that, will insert the appropriate code to detect failing
       cases at simulation runtime and print an "Assertion failed" error message.

       Verilator likewise also asserts any "unique" or "priority" SystemVerilog keywords on case
       statement, as well as "unique" on if statements.  However, "priority if" is currently
       simply ignored.

LANGUAGE EXTENSIONS

       The following additional constructs are the extensions Verilator supports on top of
       standard Verilog code.  Using these features outside of comments or `ifdef's may break
       other tools.

       `__FILE__
           The __FILE__ define expands to the current filename as a string, like C++'s __FILE__.
           This was incorporated into to the 1800-2009 standard (but supported by Verilator since
           2006!)

       `__LINE__
           The __LINE__ define expands to the current filename as a string, like C++'s __LINE__.
           This was incorporated into to the 1800-2009 standard (but supported by Verilator since
           2006!)

       `error string
           This will report an error when encountered, like C++'s #error.

       $c(string, ...);
           The string will be embedded directly in the output C++ code at the point where the
           surrounding Verilog code is compiled.  It may either be a standalone statement (with a
           trailing ; in the string), or a function that returns up to a 32-bit number (without a
           trailing ;). This can be used to call C++ functions from your Verilog code.

           String arguments will be put directly into the output C++ code.  Expression arguments
           will have the code to evaluate the expression inserted.  Thus to call a C++ function,
           $c("func(",a,")") will result in 'func(a)' in the output C++ code.  For input
           arguments, rather than hard-coding variable names in the string $c("func(a)"), instead
           pass the variable as an expression $c("func(",a,")").  This will allow the call to
           work inside Verilog functions where the variable is flattened out, and also enable
           other optimizations.

           If you will be reading or writing any Verilog variables inside the C++ functions, the
           Verilog signals must be declared with /*verilator public*/.

           You may also append an arbitrary number to $c, generally the width of the output.
           [signal_32_bits = $c32("...");] This allows for compatibility with other simulators
           which require a differently named PLI function name for each different output width.

       $display, $write, $fdisplay, $fwrite, $sformat, $swrite
           Format arguments may use C fprintf sizes after the % escape.  Per the Verilog
           standard, %x prints a number with the natural width, and %0x prints a number with
           minimum width.  Verilator extends this so %5x prints 5 digits per the C standard (this
           is unspecified in Verilog, but was incorporated into the 1800-2009).

       `coverage_block_off
           Specifies the entire begin/end block should be ignored for coverage analysis.  Must be
           inside a code block, e.g. within a begin/end pair.  Same as /* verilator
           coverage_block_off */ and "coverage_block_off" in "CONFIGURATION FILES".

       `systemc_header
           Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and place it
           verbatim into the output .h file's header.  Must be placed as a module item, e.g.
           directly inside a module/endmodule pair. Despite the name of this macro, this also
           works in pure C++ code.

       `systemc_ctor
           Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and place it
           verbatim into the C++ class constructor.  Must be placed as a module item, e.g.
           directly inside a module/endmodule pair. Despite the name of this macro, this also
           works in pure C++ code.

       `systemc_dtor
           Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and place it
           verbatim into the C++ class destructor.  Must be placed as a module item, e.g.
           directly inside a module/endmodule pair. Despite the name of this macro, this also
           works in pure C++ code.

       `systemc_interface
           Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and place it
           verbatim into the C++ class interface.  Must be placed as a module item, e.g. directly
           inside a module/endmodule pair. Despite the name of this macro, this also works in
           pure C++ code.

       `systemc_imp_header
           Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and place it
           verbatim into the header of all files for this C++ class implementation.  Must be
           placed as a module item, e.g. directly inside a module/endmodule pair. Despite the
           name of this macro, this also works in pure C++ code.

       `systemc_implementation
           Take remaining text up to the next `verilog or `systemc_... mode switch and place it
           verbatim into a single file of the C++ class implementation.  Must be placed as a
           module item, e.g. directly inside a module/endmodule pair. Despite the name of this
           macro, this also works in pure C++ code.

           If you will be reading or writing any Verilog variables in the C++ functions, the
           Verilog signals must be declared with /*verilator public*/.  See also the public task
           feature; writing an accessor may result in cleaner code.

       `SYSTEMVERILOG
           The SYSTEMVERILOG, SV_COV_START and related standard defines are set by default when
           --language is 1800-*.

       `VERILATOR
       `verilator
       `verilator3
           The VERILATOR, verilator and verilator3 defines are set by default so you may `ifdef
           around tool specific constructs.

       `verilator_config
           Take remaining text up to the next `verilog mode switch and treat it as Verilator
           configuration commands.

       `verilog
           Switch back to processing Verilog code after a `systemc_... mode switch.  The Verilog
           code returns to the last language mode specified with `begin_keywords, or
           SystemVerilog if none was specified.

       /*verilator clock_enable*/
           Used after a signal declaration to indicate the signal is used to gate a clock, and
           the user takes responsibility for insuring there are no races related to it.
           (Typically by adding a latch, and running static timing analysis.) For example:

              reg enable_r /*verilator clock_enable*/;
              wire gated_clk = clk & enable_r;
              always_ff @ (posedge clk)
                 enable_r <= enable_early;

           The clock_enable attribute will cause the clock gate to be ignored in the scheduling
           algorithm, sometimes required for correct clock behavior, and always improving
           performance.  It's also a good idea to enable the IMPERFECTSCH warning, to ensure all
           clock enables are properly recognized.

           Same as "clock_enable" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator clocker*/
       /*verilator no_clocker*/
           Used after a signal declaration to indicate the signal is used as clock or not. This
           information is used by Verilator to mark the signal as clocker and propagate the
           clocker attribute automatically to derived signals. See "--clk" for more information.

           Same as "clocker" and "no_clocker" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES"
           for more information.

       /*verilator coverage_block_off*/
           Specifies the entire begin/end block should be ignored for coverage analysis purposes.

           Same as "coverage_block_off" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for
           more information.

       /*verilator coverage_off*/
           Specifies that following lines of code should have coverage disabled.  Often used to
           ignore an entire module for coverage analysis purposes.

       /*verilator coverage_on*/
           Specifies that following lines of code should have coverage re-enabled (if appropriate
           --coverage flags are passed) after being disabled earlier with /*verilator
           coverage_off*/.

       /*verilator inline_module*/
           Specifies the module the comment appears in may be inlined into any modules that use
           this module.  This is useful to speed up simulation runtime.  Note if using "--public"
           that signals under inlined submodules will be named submodule__DOT__subsignal as C++
           does not allow "." in signal names.

           Same as "inline" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator isolate_assignments*/
           Used after a signal declaration to indicate the assignments to this signal in any
           blocks should be isolated into new blocks.  When there is a large combinatorial block
           that is resulting in a UNOPTFLAT warning, attaching this to the signal causing a false
           loop may clear up the problem.

           IE, with the following

               reg splitme /* verilator isolate_assignments*/;
               // Note the placement of the semicolon above
               always @* begin
                 if (....) begin
                    splitme = ....;
                    other assignments
                 end
               end

           Verilator will internally split the block that assigns to "splitme" into two blocks:

           It would then internally break it into (sort of):

               // All assignments excluding those to splitme
               always @* begin
                 if (....) begin
                    other assignments
                 end
               end
               // All assignments to splitme
               always @* begin
                 if (....) begin
                    splitme = ....;
                 end
               end

           Same as "isolate_assignments" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for
           more information.

       /*verilator lint_off msg*/
           Disable the specified warning message for any warnings following the comment.

       /*verilator lint_on msg*/
           Re-enable the specified warning message for any warnings following the comment.

       /*verilator lint_restore*/
           After a /*verilator lint_save*/, pop the stack containing lint message state.  Often
           this is useful at the bottom of include files.

       /*verilator lint_save*/
           Push the current state of what lint messages are turned on or turned off to a stack.
           Later meta-comments may then lint_on or lint_off specific messages, then return to the
           earlier message state by using /*verilator lint_restore*/.  For example:

               // verilator lint_save
               // verilator lint_off SOME_WARNING
               ...  // code needing SOME_WARNING turned off
               // verilator lint_restore

           If SOME_WARNING was on before the lint_off, it will now be restored to on, and if it
           was off before the lint_off it will remain off.

       /*verilator no_inline_module*/
           Specifies the module the comment appears in should not be inlined into any modules
           that use this module.

           Same as "no_inline" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator no_inline_task*/
           Used in a function or task variable definition section to specify the function or task
           should not be inlined into where it is used.  This may reduce the size of the final
           executable when a task is used a very large number of times.  For this flag to work,
           the task and tasks below it must be pure; they cannot reference any variables outside
           the task itself.

           Same as "no_inline" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator public*/ (parameter)
           Used after a parameter declaration to indicate the emitted C code should have the
           parameter values visible. Due to C++ language restrictions, this may only be used on
           64-bit or narrower integral enumerations.

               parameter [2:0] PARAM /*verilator public*/ = 2'b0;

       /*verilator public*/ (typedef enum)
           Used after an enum typedef declaration to indicate the emitted C code should have the
           enum values visible. Due to C++ language restrictions, this may only be used on 64-bit
           or narrower integral enumerations.

               typedef enum logic [2:0] { ZERO = 3'b0 } pub_t /*verilator public*/;

       /*verilator public*/ (variable)
           Used after an input, output, register, or wire declaration to indicate the signal
           should be declared so that C code may read or write the value of the signal.  This
           will also declare this module public, otherwise use /*verilator public_flat*/.

           Instead of using public variables, consider instead making a DPI or public function
           that accesses the variable.  This is nicer as it provides an obvious entry point that
           is also compatible across simulators.

           Same as "public" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator public*/ (task/function)
           Used inside the declaration section of a function or task declaration to indicate the
           function or task should be made into a C++ function, public to outside callers.
           Public tasks will be declared as a void C++ function, public functions will get the
           appropriate non-void (bool, uint32_t, etc) return type.  Any input arguments will
           become C++ arguments to the function.  Any output arguments will become C++ reference
           arguments.  Any local registers/integers will become function automatic variables on
           the stack.

           Wide variables over 64 bits cannot be function returns, to avoid exposing
           complexities.  However, wide variables can be input/outputs; they will be passed as
           references to an array of 32-bit numbers.

           Generally, only the values of stored state (flops) should be written, as the model
           will NOT notice changes made to variables in these functions.  (Same as when a signal
           is declared public.)

           You may want to use DPI exports instead, as it's compatible with other simulators.

           Same as "public" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator public_flat*/ (variable)
           Used after an input, output, register, or wire declaration to indicate the signal
           should be declared so that C code may read or write the value of the signal.  This
           will not declare this module public, which means the name of the signal or path to it
           may change based upon the module inlining which takes place.

           Same as "public_flat" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator public_flat_rd*/ (variable)
           Used after an input, output, register, or wire declaration to indicate the signal
           should be declared public_flat (see above), but read-only.

           Same as "public_flat_rd" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator public_flat_rw @(<edge_list>) */ (variable)
           Used after an input, output, register, or wire declaration to indicate the signal
           should be declared public_flat_rd (see above), and also writable, where writes should
           be considered to have the timing specified by the given sensitivity edge list.  Set
           for all variables, ports and wires using the --public-flat-rw switch.

           Same as "public_flat_rw" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator public_module*/
           Used after a module statement to indicate the module should not be inlined (unless
           specifically requested) so that C code may access the module.  Verilator automatically
           sets this attribute when the module contains any public signals or `systemc_
           directives.  Also set for all modules when using the --public switch.

           Same as "public" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator sc_clock*/
           Deprecated.  Used after an input declaration to indicate the signal should be declared
           in SystemC as a sc_clock instead of a bool.  This was needed in SystemC 1.1 and 1.2
           only; versions 2.0 and later do not require clock pins to be sc_clocks and this is no
           longer needed.

       /*verilator sc_bv*/
           Used after a port declaration.  It sets the port to be of sc_bv<width> type, instead
           of bool, vluint32_t or vluint64_t.  This may be useful if the port width is
           parameterized and the instantiating C++ code wants to always have a sc_bv so it can
           accept any width.  In general you should avoid using this attribute when not necessary
           as with increasing usage of sc_bv the performance decreases significantly.

           Same as "sc_bv" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator sformat*/
           Attached to the final argument of type "input string" of a function or task to
           indicate the function or task should pass all remaining arguments through $sformatf.
           This allows creation of DPI functions with $display like behavior.  See the
           test_regress/t/t_dpi_display.v file for an example.

           Same as "sformat" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator split_var*/
           Attached to a variable or a net declaration to break the variable into multiple pieces
           typically to resolve UNOPTFLAT performance issues.  Typically the variables to attach
           this to are recommended by Verilator itself, see UNOPTFLAT below.

           For example, Verilator will internally convert a variable with the metacomment such
           as:

               logic [7:0] x [0:1]  /*verilator split_var*/;

           To:

               logic [7:0] x__BRA__0__KET__ /*verilator split_var*/;
               logic [7:0] x__BRA__1__KET__ /*verilator split_var*/;

           Note that the generated packed variables retain the split_var metacomment because they
           may be split into further smaller pieces according to the access patterns.

           This only supports unpacked arrays, packed arrays, and packed structs of integer types
           (reg, logic, bit, byte, int...); otherwise if a split was requested but cannot occur a
           SPLITVAR warning is issued.  Splitting large arrays may slow down the Verilation
           speed, so use this only on variables that require it.

           Same as "split_var" in configuration files, see "CONFIGURATION FILES" for more
           information.

       /*verilator tag <text...>*/
           Attached after a variable or structure member to indicate opaque (to Verilator) text
           that should be passed through to the XML output as a tag, for use by downstream
           applications.

       /*verilator tracing_off*/
           Disable waveform tracing for all future signals that are declared in this module, or
           cells below this module.  Often this is placed just after a primitive's module
           statement, so that the entire module and cells below it are not traced.

       /*verilator tracing_on*/
           Re-enable waveform tracing for all future signals or cells that are declared.

LANGUAGE LIMITATIONS

       There are some limitations and lack of features relative to the major closed-source
       simulators, by intent.

   Synthesis Subset
       Verilator supports the Synthesis subset with other verification constructs being added
       over time. Verilator also simulates events as Synopsys's Design Compiler would; namely
       given a block of the form:

               always @ (x)   y = x & z;

       This will recompute y when there is even a potential for change in x or a change in z,
       that is when the flops computing x or z evaluate (which is what Design Compiler will
       synthesize.)  A compliant simulator would only calculate y if x changes.  We recommend
       using always_comb to make the code run the same everywhere.  Also avoid putting $displays
       in combo blocks, as they may print multiple times when not desired, even on compliant
       simulators as event ordering is not specified.

   Signal Naming
       To avoid conflicts with C symbol naming, any character in a signal name that is not
       alphanumeric nor a single underscore will be replaced by __0hh where hh is the hex code of
       the character. To avoid conflicts with Verilator's internal symbols, any double underscore
       are replaced with ___05F (5F is the hex code of an underscore.)

   Bind
       Verilator only supports "bind" to a target module name, not an instance path.

   Class
       Verilator class support is limited but in active development.  Verilator supports members,
       and methods. Verilator does not support class static members, class extend, or class
       parameters.

   Dotted cross-hierarchy references
       Verilator supports dotted references to variables, functions and tasks in different
       modules. The portion before the dot must have a constant value; for example a[2].b is
       acceptable, while a[x].b is generally not.

       References into generated and arrayed instances use the instance names specified in the
       Verilog standard; arrayed instances are named {cellName}[{instanceNumber}] in Verilog,
       which becomes {cellname}__BRA__{instanceNumber}__KET__ inside the generated C++ code.

   Latches
       Verilator is optimized for edge sensitive (flop based) designs.  It will attempt to do the
       correct thing for latches, but most performance optimizations will be disabled around the
       latch.

   Structures and Unions
       Presently Verilator only supports packed structs and packed unions.  Rand and randc tags
       on members are simply ignored.  All structures and unions are represented as a single
       vector, which means that generating one member of a structure from blocking, and another
       from non-blocking assignments is unsupported.

   Time
       All delays (#) are ignored, as they are in synthesis.

   Unknown states
       Verilator is mostly a two state simulator, not a four state simulator.  However, it has
       two features which uncover most initialization bugs (including many that a four state
       simulator will miss.)

       Identity comparisons (=== or !==) are converted to standard ==/!= when neither side is a
       constant.  This may make the expression yield a different result compared to a four state
       simulator.  An === comparison to X will always be false, so that Verilog code which checks
       for uninitialized logic will not fire.

       Assigning X to a variable will actually assign a constant value as determined by the
       --x-assign switch.  This allows runtime randomization, thus if the value is actually used,
       the random value should cause downstream errors.  Integers also get randomized, even
       though the Verilog 2001 specification says they initialize to zero.  Note however that
       randomization happens at initialization time and hence during a single simulation run, the
       same constant (but random) value will be used every time the assignment is executed.

       All variables, depending on --x-initial setting, are typically randomly initialized using
       a function.  By running several random simulation runs you can determine that reset is
       working correctly.  On the first run, have the function initialize variables to zero.  On
       the second, have it initialize variables to one.  On the third and following runs have it
       initialize them randomly.  If the results match, reset works.  (Note this is what the
       hardware will really do.)  In practice, just setting all variables to one at startup finds
       most problems (since typically control signals are active-high).

       --x-assign applies to variables explicitly initialized or assigned an X. Uninitialized
       clocks are initialized to zero, while all other state holding variables are initialized to
       a random value.  Event driven simulators will generally trigger an edge on a transition
       from X to 1 ("posedge") or X to 0 ("negedge"). However, by default, since clocks are
       initialized to zero, Verilator will not trigger an initial negedge. Some code
       (particularly for reset) may rely on X->0 triggering an edge. The --x-initial-edge switch
       enables this behavior. Comparing runs with and without this switch will find such
       problems.

   Tri/Inout
       Verilator converts some simple tristate structures into two state.  Pullup, pulldown,
       bufif0, bufif1, notif0, notif1, pmos, nmos, tri0 and tri1 are also supported.  Simple
       comparisons with === 1'bz are also supported.

       An assignment of the form:

           inout driver;
           wire driver = (enable) ? output_value : 1'bz;

       Will be converted to

           input driver;       // Value being driven in from "external" drivers
           output driver__en;  // True if driven from this module
           output driver__out; // Value being driven from this module

       External logic will be needed to combine these signals with any external drivers.

       Tristate drivers are not supported inside functions and tasks; an inout there will be
       considered a two state variable that is read and written instead of a four state variable.

   Functions & Tasks
       All functions and tasks will be inlined (will not become functions in C.)  The only
       support provided is for simple statements in tasks (which may affect global variables).

       Recursive functions and tasks are not supported.  All inputs and outputs are automatic, as
       if they had the Verilog 2001 "automatic" keyword prepended.  (If you don't know what this
       means, Verilator will do what you probably expect -- what C does. The default behavior of
       Verilog is different.)

   Generated Clocks
       Verilator attempts to deal with generated and gated clocks correctly, however some cases
       cause problems in the scheduling algorithm which is optimized for performance.  The safest
       option is to have all clocks as primary inputs to the model, or wires directly attached to
       primary inputs.  For proper behavior clock enables may also need the /*verilator
       clock_enable*/ attribute.

   Gate Primitives
       The 2-state gate primitives (and, buf, nand, nor, not, or, xnor, xor) are directly
       converted to behavioral equivalents.  The 3-state and MOS gate primitives are not
       supported.  Tables are not supported.

   Specify blocks
       All specify blocks and timing checks are ignored. All min:typ:max delays use the typical
       value.

   Array Initialization
       When initializing a large array, you need to use non-delayed assignments.  Verilator will
       tell you when this needs to be fixed; see the BLKLOOPINIT error for more information.

   Array Out of Bounds
       Writing a memory element that is outside the bounds specified for the array may cause a
       different memory element inside the array to be written instead.  For power-of-2 sized
       arrays, Verilator will give a width warning and the address.  For non-power-of-2-sizes
       arrays, index 0 will be written.

       Reading a memory element that is outside the bounds specified for the array will give a
       width warning and wrap around the power-of-2 size.  For non-power-of-2 sizes, it will
       return a unspecified constant of the appropriate width.

   Assertions
       Verilator is beginning to add support for assertions.  Verilator currently only converts
       assertions to simple "if (...) error" statements, and coverage statements to increment the
       line counters described in the coverage section.

       Verilator does not support SEREs yet.  All assertion and coverage statements must be
       simple expressions that complete in one cycle.

   Encrypted Verilog
       Open source simulators like Verilator are unable to use encrypted RTL (i.e. IEEE P1735).
       Talk to your IP vendor about delivering IP blocks via Verilator's --protect-lib feature.

   Language Keyword Limitations
       This section describes specific limitations for each language keyword.

       `__FILE__, `__LINE__, `begin_keywords, `begin_keywords, `begin_keywords, `begin_keywords,
       `begin_keywords, `define, `else, `elsif, `end_keywords, `endif, `error, `ifdef, `ifndef,
       `include, `line, `systemc_ctor, `systemc_dtor, `systemc_header, `systemc_imp_header,
       `systemc_implementation, `systemc_interface, `undef, `verilog
           Fully supported.

       always, always_comb, always_ff, always_latch, and, assign, begin, buf, byte, case, casex,
       casez, default, defparam, do-while, else, end, endcase, endfunction, endgenerate,
       endmodule, endspecify, endtask, final, for, function, generate, genvar, if, initial,
       inout, input, int, integer, localparam, logic, longint, macromodule, module, nand,
       negedge, nor, not, or, output, parameter, posedge, reg, scalared, shortint, signed,
       supply0, supply1, task, time, tri, typedef, var, vectored, while, wire, xnor, xor
           Generally supported.

       ++, -- operators
           Increment/decrement can only be used as standalone statements or in certain limited
           cases.

       '{} operator
           Assignment patterns with order based, default, constant integer (array) or member
           identifier (struct/union) keys are supported.  Data type keys and keys which are
           computed from a constant expression are not supported.

       `uselib
           Uselib, a vendor specific library specification method, is ignored along with anything
           following it until the end of that line.

       cast operator
           Casting is supported only between simple scalar types, signed and unsigned, not arrays
           nor structs.

       chandle
           Treated as a "longint"; does not yet warn about operations that are specified as
           illegal on chandles.

       disable
           Disable statements may be used only if the block being disabled is a block the disable
           statement itself is inside.  This was commonly used to provide loop break and continue
           functionality before SystemVerilog added the break and continue keywords.

       inside
           Inside expressions may not include unpacked array traversal or $ as an upper bound.
           Case inside and case matches are also unsupported.

       interface
           Interfaces and modports, including with generated data types are supported.  Generate
           blocks around modports are not supported, nor are virtual interfaces nor unnamed
           interfaces.

       shortreal
           Short floating point (shortreal) numbers are converted to real. Most other simulators
           either do not support float, or convert likewise.

       specify specparam
           All specify blocks and timing checks are ignored.

       uwire
           Verilator does not perform warning checking on uwires, it treats the uwire keyword as
           if it were the normal wire keyword.

       $bits, $countbits, $countones, $error, $fatal, $finish, $info, $isunknown, $onehot,
       $onehot0, $readmemb, $readmemh, $signed, $stime, $stop, $time, $unsigned, $warning.
           Generally supported.

       $dump/$dumpports and related
           $dumpfile or $dumpports will create a VCD or FST file (which is based on the --trace
           argument given when the model was Verilated). This will take effect starting at the
           next eval() call.  If you have multiple Verilated designs under the same C model, then
           this will dump signals only from the design containing the $dumpvars.

           $dumpvars and $dumpports module identifier is ignored; the traced instances will
           always start at the top of the design. The levels argument is also ignored, use
           tracing_on/tracing_off pragmas instead.

           $dumpportson/$dumpportsoff/$dumpportsall/$dumpportslimit filename argument is ignored,
           only a single trace file may be active at once.

           $dumpall/$dumpportsall, $dumpon/$dumpportson, $dumpoff/$dumpportsoff, and
           $dumplimit/$dumpportlimit are currently ignored.

       $finish, $stop
           The rarely used optional parameter to $finish and $stop is ignored.

       $fopen, $fclose, $fdisplay, $ferror, $feof, $fflush, $fgetc, $fgets, $fscanf, $fwrite,
       $fscanf, $sscanf
           Generally supported.

       $fullskew, $hold, $nochange, $period, $recovery, $recrem, $removal, $setup, $setuphold,
       $skew, $timeskew, $width
           All specify blocks and timing checks are ignored.

       $monitor, $strobe
           Monitor and strobe are not supported, convert to always_comb $display or similar.

       $random
           $random does not support the optional argument to set the seed.  Use the srand
           function in C to accomplish this, and note there is only one random number generator
           (not one per module).

       $readmemb, $readmemh
           Read memory commands should work properly.  Note Verilator and the Verilog
           specification does not include support for readmem to multi-dimensional arrays.

       $test$plusargs, $value$plusargs
           Supported, but the instantiating C++/SystemC testbench must call

               Verilated::commandArgs(argc, argv);

           to register the command line before calling $test$plusargs or $value$plusargs.

ERRORS AND WARNINGS

       Warnings may be disabled in three ways.  First, when the warning is printed it will
       include a warning code.  Simply surround the offending line with a lint_off/lint_on pair:

               // verilator lint_off UNSIGNED
               if (`DEF_THAT_IS_EQ_ZERO <= 3) $stop;
               // verilator lint_on UNSIGNED

       Second, warnings may be disabled using a configuration file with a lint_off command.  This
       is useful when a script is suppressing warnings and the Verilog source should not be
       changed.

       Warnings may also be globally disabled by invoking Verilator with the "-Wno-warning"
       switch.  This should be avoided, as it removes all checking across the designs, and
       prevents other users from compiling your code without knowing the magic set of disables
       needed to successfully compile your design.

   Error and Warning Format
       Warnings and errors printed by Verilator always match this regular expression:

               %(Error|Warning)(-[A-Z0-9_]+)?: ((\S+):(\d+):((\d+):)? )?.*

       Errors and warning start with a percent sign (historical heritage from Digital Equipment
       Corporation).  Some errors or warning have a code attached, with meanings described below.
       Some errors also have a filename, line number and optional column number (starting at
       column 1 to match GCC).

       Following the error message, Verilator will typically show the user's source code
       corresponding to the error, prefixed by the line number and a " | ".  Following this is
       typically an arrow and ~ pointing at the error on the source line directly above.

   List of all warnings
       ALWCOMBORDER
           Warns that an always_comb block has a variable which is set after it is used.  This
           may cause simulation-synthesis mismatches, as not all simulators allow this ordering.

               always_comb begin
                  a = b;
                  b = 1;
               end

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       ASSIGNIN
           Error that an assignment is being made to an input signal.  This is almost certainly a
           mistake, though technically legal.

               input a;
               assign a = 1'b1;

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       ASSIGNDLY
           Warns that you have an assignment statement with a delayed time in front of it, for
           example:

               a <= #100 b;
               assign #100 a = b;

           Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other simulators,
           however at one point this was a common style so disabled by default as a code style
           warning.

       BLKANDNBLK
           BLKANDNBLK is an error that a variable comes from a mix of blocking and non-blocking
           assignments.  Generally, this is caused by a register driven by both combo logic and a
           flop:

                 always @ (posedge clk)  foo[0] <= ...
                 always @* foo[1] = ...

           Simply use a different register for the flop:

                 always @ (posedge clk)  foo_flopped[0] <= ...
                 always @* foo[0] = foo_flopped[0];
                 always @* foo[1] = ...

           This is not illegal in SystemVerilog, but a violation of good coding practice.
           Verilator reports this as an error, because ignoring this warning may make Verilator
           simulations differ from other simulators.

           It is generally safe to disable this error (with a "// verilator lint_off BLKANDNBLK"
           metacomment or the -Wno-BLKANDNBLK option) when one of the assignments is inside a
           public task, or when the blocking and non-blocking assignments have non-overlapping
           bits and structure members.

       BLKSEQ
           This indicates that a blocking assignment (=) is used in a sequential block.
           Generally non-blocking/delayed assignments (<=) are used in sequential blocks, to
           avoid the possibility of simulator races.  It can be reasonable to do this if the
           generated signal is used ONLY later in the same block, however this style is generally
           discouraged as it is error prone.

                 always @ (posedge clk)  foo = ...

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       BLKLOOPINIT
           This indicates that the initialization of an array needs to use non-delayed
           assignments.  This is done in the interest of speed; if delayed assignments were used,
           the simulator would have to copy large arrays every cycle.  (In smaller loops, loop
           unrolling allows the delayed assignment to work, though it's a bit slower than a non-
           delayed assignment.)  Here's an example

                   always @ (posedge clk)
                       if (~reset_l) begin
                           for (i=0; i<`ARRAY_SIZE; i++) begin
                               array[i] = 0;  // Non-delayed for verilator
                           end

           This message is only seen on large or complicated loops because Verilator generally
           unrolls small loops.  You may want to try increasing --unroll-count (and occasionally
           --unroll-stmts) which will raise the small loop bar to avoid this error.

       BOUNDED
           This indicates that bounded queues (e.g. "var name[$ : 3]") are unsupported.

           Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other simulators.

       BSSPACE
           Warns that a backslash is followed by a space then a newline. Likely the intent was to
           have a backslash directly followed by a newline (e.g. when making a `define) and
           there's accidentally white space at the end of the line.  If the space is not
           accidental, suggest removing the backslash in the code as it serves no function.

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       CASEINCOMPLETE
           Warns that inside a case statement there is a stimulus pattern for which there is no
           case item specified.  This is bad style, if a case is impossible, it's better to have
           a "default: $stop;" or just "default: ;" so that any design assumption violations will
           be discovered in simulation.

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       CASEOVERLAP
           Warns that inside a case statement you have case values which are detected to be
           overlapping.  This is bad style, as moving the order of case values will cause
           different behavior.  Generally the values can be respecified to not overlap.

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       CASEX
           Warns that it is simply better style to use casez, and "?" in place of "x"'s.  See
           <http://www.sunburst-design.com/papers/CummingsSNUG1999Boston_FullParallelCase_rev1_1.pdf>

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       CASEWITHX
           Warns that a case statement contains a constant with a "x".  Verilator is two-state so
           interpret such items as always false.  Note a common error is to use a "X" in a case
           or casez statement item; often what the user instead intended is to use a casez with
           "?".

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       CDCRSTLOGIC
           With --cdc only, warns that asynchronous flop reset terms come from other than primary
           inputs or flopped outputs, creating the potential for reset glitches.

       CLKDATA
           Warns that clock signal is mixed used with/as data signal. The checking for this
           warning is enabled only if user has explicitly marked some signal as clocker using
           command line option or in-source meta comment (see "--clk").

           The warning can be disabled without affecting the simulation result. But it is
           recommended to check the warning as this may degrade the performance of the Verilated
           model.

       CMPCONST
           Warns that you are comparing a value in a way that will always be constant.  For
           example "X > 1" will always be true when X is a single bit wide.

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       COLONPLUS
           Warns that a :+ is seen. Likely the intent was to use +: to select a range of bits. If
           the intent was a range that is explicitly positive, suggest adding a space, e.g. use
           ": +".

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       COMBDLY
           Warns that you have a delayed assignment inside of a combinatorial block.  Using
           delayed assignments in this way is considered bad form, and may lead to the simulator
           not matching synthesis.  If this message is suppressed, Verilator, like synthesis,
           will convert this to a non-delayed assignment, which may result in logic races or
           other nasties.  See
           <http://www.sunburst-design.com/papers/CummingsSNUG2000SJ_NBA_rev1_2.pdf>

           Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other simulators.

       CONTASSREG
           Error that a continuous assignment is setting a reg. According to IEEE Verilog, but
           not SystemVerilog, a wire must be used as the target of continuous assignments.

           This error is only reported when "--language 1364-1995", "--language 1364-2001", or
           "--language 1364-2005" is used.

           Ignoring this error will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       DECLFILENAME
           Warns that a module or other declaration's name doesn't match the filename with path
           and extension stripped that it is declared in.  The filename a
           modules/interfaces/programs is declared in should match the name of the module etc. so
           that -y directory searching will work.  This warning is printed for only the first
           mismatching module in any given file, and -v library files are ignored.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       DEFPARAM
           Warns that the "defparam" statement was deprecated in Verilog 2001 and all designs
           should now be using the #(...) format to specify parameters.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       DETECTARRAY
           Error when Verilator tries to deal with a combinatorial loop that could not be
           flattened, and which involves a datatype which Verilator cannot handle, such as an
           unpacked struct or a large unpacked array. This typically occurs when -Wno-UNOPTFLAT
           has been used to override an UNOPTFLAT warning (see below).

           The solution is to break the loop, as described for UNOPTFLAT.

       DIDNOTCONVERGE
           Error at simulation runtime when model did not properly settle.

           Verilator sometimes has to evaluate combinatorial logic multiple times, usually around
           code where a UNOPTFLAT warning was issued, but disabled.  For example:

              always_comb b = ~a;
              always_comb a = b

           This code will toggle forever, and thus to prevent an infinite loop, the executable
           will give the didn't converge error.

           To debug this, first review any UNOPTFLAT warnings that were ignored.  Though
           typically it is safe to ignore UNOPTFLAT (at a performance cost), at the time of
           issuing a UNOPTFLAT Verilator did not know if the logic would eventually converge and
           assumed it would.

           Next, run Verilator with --prof-cfuncs.  Run make on the generated files with
           "CPP_FLAGS=-DVL_DEBUG", to allow enabling simulation runtime debug messages.  Rerun
           the test.  Now just before the convergence error you should see additional output
           similar to this:

              CHANGE: filename.v:1: b
              CHANGE: filename.v:2: a

           This means that signal b and signal a keep changing, inspect the code that modifies
           these signals.  Note if many signals are getting printed then most likely all of them
           are oscillating.  It may also be that e.g. "a" may be oscillating, then "a" feeds
           signal "c" which then is also reported as oscillating.

           Finally, rare, more difficult cases can be debugged like a "C" program; either enter
           GDB and use its tracing facilities, or edit the generated C++ code to add appropriate
           prints to see what is going on.

       ENDLABEL
           Warns that a label attached to a "end"-something statement does not match the label
           attached to the block start.

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       GENCLK
           Deprecated and no longer used as a warning.  Used to indicate that the specified
           signal was is generated inside the model, and also being used as a clock.

       IFDEPTH
           Warns that if/if else statements have exceeded the depth specified with --if-depth, as
           they are likely to result in slow priority encoders.  Statements below unique and
           priority if statements are ignored.  Solutions include changing the code to a case
           statement, or a SystemVerilog 'unique if' or 'priority if'.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       IGNOREDRETURN
           Warns that a non-void function is being called as a task, and hence the return value
           is being ignored.

           This warning is required by IEEE. The portable way to suppress this warning (in
           SystemVerilog) is to use a void cast, e.g.

               void'(function_being_called_as_task());

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       IMPERFECTSCH
           Warns that the scheduling of the model is not absolutely perfect, and some manual code
           edits may result in faster performance.  This warning defaults to off, is not part of
           -Wall, and must be turned on explicitly before the top module statement is processed.

       IMPLICIT
           Warns that a wire is being implicitly declared (it is a single bit wide output from a
           sub-module.)  While legal in Verilog, implicit declarations only work for single bit
           wide signals (not buses), do not allow using a signal before it is implicitly declared
           by a cell, and can lead to dangling nets.  A better option is the /*AUTOWIRE*/ feature
           of Verilog-Mode for Emacs, available from <https://www.veripool.org/verilog-mode>

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       IMPORTSTAR
           Warns that an "import package::*" statement is in $unit scope. This causes the
           imported symbols to pollute the global namespace, defeating much of the purpose of
           having a package. Generally "import ::*" should only be used inside a lower scope such
           as a package or module.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       IMPURE
           Warns that a task or function that has been marked with /*verilator no_inline_task*/
           references variables that are not local to the task.  Verilator cannot schedule these
           variables correctly.

           Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other simulators.

       INCABSPATH
           Warns that an `include filename specifies an absolute path.  This means the code will
           not work on any other system with a different file system layout.  Instead of using
           absolute paths, relative paths (preferably without any directory specified whatsoever)
           should be used, and +incdir used on the command line to specify the top include source
           directories.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       INFINITELOOP
           Warns that a while or for statement has a condition that is always true.  and thus
           results in an infinite loop if the statement ever executes.

           This might be unintended behavior if the loop body contains statements that in other
           simulators would make time pass, which Verilator is ignoring due to e.g. STMTDLY
           warnings being disabled.

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly
           (i.e. hang due to the infinite loop).

       INITIALDLY
           Warns that you have a delayed assignment inside of an initial or final block.  If this
           message is suppressed, Verilator will convert this to a non-delayed assignment.  See
           also the COMBDLY warning.

           Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other simulators.

       INSECURE
           Warns that the combination of options selected may be defeating the attempt to
           protect/obscure identifiers or hide information in the model.  Correct the options
           provided, or inspect the output code to see if the information exposed is acceptable.

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       LITENDIAN
           Warns that a packed vector is declared with little endian bit numbering (i.e. [0:7]).
           Big endian bit numbering is now the overwhelming standard, and little numbering is now
           thus often due to simple oversight instead of intent.

           Also warns that a cell is declared with little endian range (i.e. [0:7] or [7]) and is
           connected to a N-wide signal. Based on IEEE the bits will likely be backwards from
           what you expect (i.e. cell [0] will connect to signal bit [N-1] not bit [0]).

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       MODDUP
           Warns that a module has multiple definitions.  Generally this indicates a coding
           error, or a mistake in a library file and it's good practice to have one module per
           file (and only put each file once on the command line) to avoid these issues.  For
           some gate level netlists duplicates are sometimes unavoidable, and MODDUP should be
           disabled.

           Ignoring this warning will cause the more recent module definition to be discarded.

       MULTIDRIVEN
           Warns that the specified signal comes from multiple always blocks.  This is often
           unsupported by synthesis tools, and is considered bad style.  It will also cause
           longer simulation runtimes due to reduced optimizations.

           Ignoring this warning will only slow simulations, it will simulate correctly.

       MULTITOP
           Warns that there are multiple top level modules, that is modules not instantiated by
           any other module, and both modules were put on the command line (not in a library).
           Three likely cases:

           1. A single module is intended to be the top. This warning then occurs because some
           low level cell is being read in, but is not really needed as part of the design.  The
           best solution for this situation is to ensure that only the top module is put on the
           command line without any flags, and all remaining library files are read in as
           libraries with -v, or are automatically resolved by having filenames that match the
           module names.

           2. A single module is intended to be the top, the name of it is known, and all other
           modules should be ignored if not part of the design.  The best solution is to use the
           --top-module option to specify the top module's name. All other modules that are not
           part of the design will be for the most part ignored (they must be clean in syntax and
           their contents will be removed as part of the Verilog module elaboration process.)

           3. Multiple modules are intended to be design tops, e.g. when linting a library file.
           As multiple modules are desired, disable the MULTITOP warning.  All input/outputs will
           go uniquely to each module, with any conflicting and identical signal names being made
           unique by adding a prefix based on the top module name followed by __02E (a Verilator-
           encoded ASCII ".').  This renaming is done even if the two modules' signals seem
           identical, e.g. multiple modules with a "clk" input.

       PINCONNECTEMPTY
           Warns that a cell instantiation has a pin which is connected to .pin_name(), e.g. not
           another signal, but with an explicit mention of the pin.  It may be desirable to
           disable PINCONNECTEMPTY, as this indicates intention to have a no-connect.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       PINMISSING
           Warns that a module has a pin which is not mentioned in a cell instantiation.  If a
           pin is not missing it should still be specified on the cell declaration with a empty
           connection, using "(.pin_name())".

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       PINNOCONNECT
           Warns that a cell instantiation has a pin which is not connected to another signal.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       PROCASSWIRE
           Error that a procedural assignment is setting a wire. According to IEEE, a var/reg
           must be used as the target of procedural assignments.

       REALCVT
           Warns that a real number is being implicitly rounded to an integer, with possible loss
           of precision.

       REDEFMACRO
           Warns that you have redefined the same macro with a different value, for example:

               `define MACRO def1
               //...
               `define MACRO otherdef

           The best solution is to use a different name for the second macro.  If this is not
           possible, add a undef to indicate the code is overriding the value:

               `define MACRO def1
               //...
               `undef MACRO
               `define MACRO otherdef

       SELRANGE
           Warns that a selection index will go out of bounds:

               wire vec[6:0];
               initial out = vec[7];  // There is no 7

           Verilator will assume zero for this value, instead of X.  Note that in some cases this
           warning may be false, when a condition upstream or downstream of the access means the
           access out of bounds will never execute or be used.

               wire vec[6:0];
               initial begin
                   seven = 7;
                   ...
                   if (seven != 7) out = vec[seven];  // Never will use vec[7]

       SHORTREAL
           Warns that Verilator does not support "shortreal" and they will be automatically
           promoted to "real".  The recommendation is to replace any "shortreal" in the code with
           "real", as "shortreal" is not widely supported across industry tools.

           Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other simulators, if
           the increased precision of real affects your model or DPI calls.

       SPLITVAR
           Warns that a variable with a "split_var" metacomment was not split.  Some possible
           reasons for this are:

           * The datatype of the variable is not supported for splitting. (e.g. is a real).

           * The access pattern of the variable can not be determined statically. (e.g. is
           accessed as a memory).

           * The index of the array exceeds the array size.

           * The variable is accessed from outside using dotted reference.  (e.g.
           top.instance0.variable0 = 1).

           * The variable is not declared in a module, but in a package or an interface.

           * The variable is a parameter, localparam, genvar, or queue.

           * The variable is tristate or bidirectional. (e.g. inout or ref).

       STMTDLY
           Warns that you have a statement with a delayed time in front of it, for example:

               #100 $finish;

           Ignoring this warning may make Verilator simulations differ from other simulators.

       SYMRSVDWORD
           Warning that a symbol matches a C++ reserved word and using this as a symbol name
           would result in odd C++ compiler errors.  You may disable this warning, but the symbol
           will be renamed by Verilator to avoid the conflict.

       SYNCASYNCNET
           Warns that the specified net is used in at least two different always statements with
           posedge/negedges (i.e. a flop).  One usage has the signal in the sensitivity list and
           body, probably as an async reset, and the other usage has the signal only in the body,
           probably as a sync reset.  Mixing sync and async resets is usually a mistake.  The
           warning may be disabled with a lint_off pragma around the net, or either flopped
           block.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       TASKNSVAR
           Error when a call to a task or function has a output from that task tied to a non-
           simple signal.  Instead connect the task output to a temporary signal of the
           appropriate width, and use that signal to set the appropriate expression as the next
           statement.  For example:

                 task foo; output sig; ... endtask
                 always @* begin
                      foo(bus_we_select_from[2]);  // Will get TASKNSVAR error
                 end

           Change this to:

                 reg foo_temp_out;
                 always @* begin
                      foo(foo_temp_out);
                      bus_we_select_from[2] = foo_temp_out;
                 end

           Verilator doesn't do this conversion for you, as some more complicated cases would
           result in simulator mismatches.

       TICKCOUNT
           Warns that the number of ticks to delay a $past variable is greater than 10.  At
           present Verilator effectively creates a flop for each delayed signals, and as such any
           large counts may lead to large design size increases.

           Ignoring this warning will only slow simulations, it will simulate correctly.

       TIMESCALEMOD
           Error that `timescale is used in some but not all modules.  Recommend using
           --timescale argument, or in front of all modules use:

              `include "timescale.vh"

           Then in that file set the timescale.

           This is an error due to IEEE specifications, but it may be disabled similar to
           warnings.  Ignoring this error may result in a module having an unexpected timescale.

       UNDRIVEN
           Warns that the specified signal has no source.  Verilator is fairly liberal in the
           usage calculations; making a signal public, or setting only a single array element
           marks the entire signal as driven.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       UNOPT
           Warns that due to some construct, optimization of the specified signal or block is
           disabled.  The construct should be cleaned up to improve simulation performance.

           A less obvious case of this is when a module instantiates two submodules.  Inside
           submodule A, signal I is input and signal O is output.  Likewise in submodule B,
           signal O is an input and I is an output.  A loop exists and a UNOPT warning will
           result if AI & AO both come from and go to combinatorial blocks in both submodules,
           even if they are unrelated always blocks.  This affects performance because Verilator
           would have to evaluate each submodule multiple times to stabilize the signals crossing
           between the modules.

           Ignoring this warning will only slow simulations, it will simulate correctly.

       UNOPTFLAT
           Warns that due to some construct, optimization of the specified signal is disabled.
           The signal reported includes a complete scope to the signal; it may be only one
           particular usage of a multiply instantiated block.  The construct should be cleaned up
           to improve simulation performance; two times better performance may be possible by
           fixing these warnings.

           Unlike the UNOPT warning, this occurs after flattening the netlist, and indicates a
           more basic problem, as the less obvious case described under UNOPT does not apply.

           Often UNOPTFLAT is caused by logic that isn't truly circular as viewed by synthesis
           which analyzes interconnection per-bit, but is circular to simulation which analyzes
           per-bus:

                 wire [2:0] x = {x[1:0], shift_in};

           This statement needs to be evaluated multiple times, as a change in "shift_in"
           requires "x" to be computed 3 times before it becomes stable.  This is because a
           change in "x" requires "x" itself to change value, which causes the warning.

           For significantly better performance, split this into 2 separate signals:

                 wire [2:0] xout = {x[1:0], shift_in};

           and change all receiving logic to instead receive "xout".  Alternatively, change it to

                 wire [2:0] x = {xin[1:0], shift_in};

           and change all driving logic to instead drive "xin".

           With this change this assignment needs to be evaluated only once.  These sort of
           changes may also speed up your traditional event driven simulator, as it will result
           in fewer events per cycle.

           The most complicated UNOPTFLAT path we've seen was due to low bits of a bus being
           generated from an always statement that consumed high bits of the same bus processed
           by another series of always blocks.  The fix is the same; split it into two separate
           signals generated from each block.

           Another way to resolve this warning is to add a "split_var" metacomment described
           above. This will cause the variable to be split internally, potentially resolving the
           conflict. If you run with --report-unoptflat Verilator will suggest possible
           candidates for "split_var".

           The UNOPTFLAT warning may also be due to clock enables, identified from the reported
           path going through a clock gating cell.  To fix these, use the clock_enable meta
           comment described above.

           The UNOPTFLAT warning may also occur where outputs from a block of logic are
           independent, but occur in the same always block.  To fix this, use the
           isolate_assignments meta comment described above.

           To assist in resolving UNOPTFLAT, the option "--report-unoptflat" can be used, which
           will provide suggestions for variables that can be split up, and a graph of all the
           nodes connected in the loop. See the Arguments section for more details.

           Ignoring this warning will only slow simulations, it will simulate correctly.

       UNOPTTHREADS
           Warns that the thread scheduler was unable to partition the design to fill the
           requested number of threads.

           One workaround is to request fewer threads with "--threads".

           Another possible workaround is to allow more MTasks in the simulation runtime, by
           increasing the value of --threads-max-mtasks. More MTasks will result in more
           communication and synchronization overhead at simulation runtime; the scheduler
           attempts to minimize the number of MTasks for this reason.

           Ignoring this warning will only slow simulations, it will simulate correctly.

       UNPACKED
           Warns that unpacked structs and unions are not supported.

           Ignoring this warning will make Verilator treat the structure as packed, which may
           make Verilator simulations differ from other simulators. This downgrading may also
           result what would normally be a legal unpacked struct/array inside an unpacked
           struct/array becoming an illegal unpacked struct/array inside a packed struct/array.

       UNSIGNED
           Warns that you are comparing a unsigned value in a way that implies it is signed, for
           example "X < 0" will always be false when X is unsigned.

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       UNSUPPORTED
           UNSUPPORTED is an error that the construct might be legal according to IEEE but is not
           currently supported.

           This error may be ignored with --bbox-unsup, however this will make the design
           simulate incorrectly; see the details under --bbox-unsup.

       UNUSED
           Warns that the specified signal is never used/consumed.  Verilator is fairly liberal
           in the usage calculations; making a signal public, a signal matching --unused-regexp
           ("*unused*") or accessing only a single array element marks the entire signal as used.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

           A recommended style for unused nets is to put at the bottom of a file code similar to
           the following:

               wire _unused_ok = &{1'b0,
                                   sig_not_used_a,
                                   sig_not_used_yet_b,  // To be fixed
                                   1'b0};

           The reduction AND and constant zeros mean the net will always be zero, so won't use
           simulation runtime.  The redundant leading and trailing zeros avoid syntax errors if
           there are no signals between them.  The magic name "unused" (-unused-regexp) is
           recognized by Verilator and suppresses warnings; if using other lint tools, either
           teach it to the tool to ignore signals with "unused" in the name, or put the
           appropriate lint_off around the wire.  Having unused signals in one place makes it
           easy to find what is unused, and reduces the number of lint_off pragmas, reducing
           bugs.

       USERINFO, USERWARN, USERERROR, USERFATAL
           A SystemVerilog elaboration-time assertion print was executed.

       VARHIDDEN
           Warns that a task, function, or begin/end block is declaring a variable by the same
           name as a variable in the upper level module or begin/end block (thus hiding the upper
           variable from being able to be used.)  Rename the variable to avoid confusion when
           reading the code.

           Disabled by default as this is a code style warning; it will simulate correctly.

       WIDTH
           Warns that based on width rules of Verilog, two operands have different widths.
           Verilator generally can intuit the common usages of widths, and you shouldn't need to
           disable this message like you do with most lint programs.  Generally other than simple
           mistakes, you have two solutions:

           If it's a constant 0 that's 32 bits or less, simply leave it unwidthed. Verilator
           considers zero to be any width needed.

           Concatenate leading zeros when doing arithmetic.  In the statement

                   wire [5:0] plus_one = from[5:0] + 6'd1 + carry[0];

           The best fix, which clarifies intent and will also make all tools happy is:

                   wire [5:0] plus_one = from[5:0] + 6'd1 + {5'd0, carry[0]};

           Ignoring this warning will only suppress the lint check, it will simulate correctly.

       WIDTHCONCAT
           Warns that based on width rules of Verilog, a concatenate or replication has an
           indeterminate width.  In most cases this violates the Verilog rule that widths inside
           concatenates and replicates must be sized, and should be fixed in the code.

               wire [63:0] concat = {1, 2};

           An example where this is technically legal (though still bad form) is:

               parameter PAR = 1;
               wire [63:0] concat = {PAR, PAR};

           The correct fix is to either size the 1 ("32'h1"), or add the width to the parameter
           definition ("parameter [31:0]"), or add the width to the parameter usage
           ("{PAR[31:0],PAR[31:0]}".

       The following describes the less obvious errors:

       Internal Error
           This error should never occur first, though may occur if earlier warnings or error
           messages have corrupted the program.  If there are no other warnings or errors, submit
           a bug report.

       Unsupported: ....
           This error indicates that you are using a Verilog language construct that is not yet
           supported in Verilator.  See the Limitations chapter.

DEPRECATIONS

       The following deprecated items are scheduled for future removal:

       Pre-C++11 compiler support
           Verilator supports pre-C++11 compilers for non-threaded models when configured with
           --enable-prec11/--enable-prec11-final.  This flag will be removed and C++11 compilers
           will be required for both compiling Verilator and compiling Verilated models no sooner
           than September 2020.

       SystemC 2.2 and earlier support
           Support for SystemC versions 2.2 and earlier including the related sc_clock variable
           attribute will be removed no sooner than September 2020.  The supported versions will
           be SystemC 2.3.0 (SYSTEMC_VERSION 20111121) and later (presently 2.3.0, 2.3.1, 2.3.2,
           2.3.3).

       Configuration File -msg
           The -msg argument to lint_off has been replaced with -rule.  -msg is planned for
           removal no sooner than January 2021.

       XML locations
           The XML "fl" attribute has been replaced with "loc".  "fl" is planned for removal no
           sooner than January 2021.

FAQ/FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

       Can I contribute?
           Please contribute!  Just submit a pull request, or raise an issue to discuss if
           looking for something to help on.  For more information see our contributor agreement.

       How widely is Verilator used?
           Verilator is used by many of the largest silicon design companies, and all the way
           down to college projects.  Verilator is one of the "big 4" simulators, meaning one of
           the 4 main SystemVerilog simulators available, namely the commercial products Synopsys
           VCS (tm), Mentor Questa/ModelSim (tm), Cadence Xcelium/Incisive/NC-Verilog/NC-Sim
           (tm), and the open-source Verilator.  The three commercial offerings are often
           collectively called the "big 3" simulators.

       Does Verilator run under Windows?
           Yes, using Cygwin.  Verilated output also compiles under Microsoft Visual C++, but
           this is not tested every release.

       Can you provide binaries?
           You can install Verilator via the system package manager (apt, yum, etc.) on many
           Linux distributions, including Debian, Ubuntu, SuSE, Fedora, and others.  These
           packages are provided by the Linux distributions and generally will lag the version of
           the mainline Verilator repository.  If no binary package is available for your
           distribution, how about you set one up?  Please contact the authors for assistance.

       How can it be faster than (name-a-big-3-closed-source-simulator)?
           Generally, the implied part of the question is "... with all of the manpower they can
           put into developing it."

           Most simulators have to be compliant with the complete IEEE 1364 (Verilog) and IEEE
           1800 (SystemVerilog) standards, meaning they have to be event driven.  This prevents
           them from being able to reorder blocks and make netlist-style optimizations, which are
           where most of the gains come from.

           You should not be scared by non-compliance.  Your synthesis tool isn't compliant with
           the whole standard to start with, so your simulator need not be either.  Verilator is
           closer to the synthesis interpretation, so this is a good thing for getting working
           silicon.

       Will Verilator output remain under my own license?
           Yes, it's just like using GCC on your programs; this is why Verilator uses the "GNU
           *Lesser* Public License Version 3" instead of the more typical "GNU Public License".
           See the licenses for details, but in brief, if you change Verilator itself or the
           header files Verilator includes, you must make the source code available under the GNU
           Lesser Public License.  However, Verilator output (the Verilated code) only "include"s
           the licensed files, and so you are NOT required to release any output from Verilator.

           You also have the option of using the Perl Artistic License, which again does not
           require you to release your Verilog or generated code, and also allows you to modify
           Verilator for internal use without distributing the modified version.  But please
           contribute back to the community!

           One limit is that you cannot under either license release a commercial Verilog
           simulation product incorporating Verilator without making the source code available.

           As is standard with Open Source, contributions back to Verilator will be placed under
           the Verilator copyright and LGPL/Artistic license.  Small test cases will be released
           into the public domain so they can be used anywhere, and large tests under the
           LGPL/Artistic, unless requested otherwise.

       Why is running Verilator (to create a model) so slow?
           Verilator needs more memory than the resulting simulator will require, as Verilator
           internally creates all of the state of the resulting generated simulator in order to
           optimize it.  If it takes more than a few minutes or so (and you're not using --debug
           since debug mode is disk bound), see if your machine is paging; most likely you need
           to run it on a machine with more memory. Very large designs are known to have topped
           16GB resident set size.

       How do I generate waveforms (traces) in C++?
           See the next question for tracing in SystemC mode.

           A. Add the --trace switch to Verilator, and in your top level C code, call
           Verilated::traceEverOn(true).  Then you may use $dumpfile and $dumpvars to enable
           traces, same as with any Verilog simulator. See "examples/make_tracing_c".

           B. Or, for finer-grained control, or C++ files with multiple Verilated modules you may
           also create the trace purely from C++.  Create a VerilatedVcdC object, and in your
           main loop call "trace_object->dump(time)" every time step, and finally call
           "trace_object->close()".  You also need to compile verilated_vcd_c.cpp and add it to
           your link, preferably by adding the dependencies in $(VK_GLOBAL_OBJS) to your
           Makefile's link rule.  This is done for you if using the Verilator --exe flag.  Note
           you can also call ->trace on multiple Verilated objects with the same trace file if
           you want all data to land in the same output file.

               #include "verilated_vcd_c.h"
               ...
               int main(int argc, char** argv, char** env) {
                   ...
                   Verilated::traceEverOn(true);
                   VerilatedVcdC* tfp = new VerilatedVcdC;
                   topp->trace(tfp, 99);  // Trace 99 levels of hierarchy
                   tfp->open("obj_dir/t_trace_ena_cc/simx.vcd");
                   ...
                   while (sc_time_stamp() < sim_time && !Verilated::gotFinish()) {
                       main_time += #;
                       tfp->dump(main_time);
                   }
                   tfp->close();
               }

       How do I generate waveforms (traces) in SystemC?
           A. Add the --trace switch to Verilator, and in your top level sc_main, call
           Verilated::traceEverOn(true).  Then you may use $dumpfile and $dumpvars to enable
           traces, same as with any Verilog simulator, see the non-SystemC example in
           "examples/make_tracing_c". This will trace only the module containing the $dumpvar.

           B. Or, you may create a trace purely from SystemC, which may trace all Verilated
           designs in the SystemC model. Create a VerilatedVcdSc object as you would create a
           normal SystemC trace file.  For an example, see the call to VerilatedVcdSc in the
           examples/make_tracing_sc/sc_main.cpp file of the distribution, and below.

           Alternatively you may use the C++ trace mechanism described in the previous question,
           note the timescale and timeprecision will be inherited from your SystemC settings.

           You also need to compile verilated_vcd_sc.cpp and verilated_vcd_c.cpp and add them to
           your link, preferably by adding the dependencies in $(VK_GLOBAL_OBJS) to your
           Makefile's link rule.  This is done for you if using the Verilator --exe flag.

           Note you can also call ->trace on multiple Verilated objects with the same trace file
           if you want all data to land in the same output file.

           When using SystemC 2.3, the SystemC library must have been built with the experimental
           simulation phase callback based tracing disabled. This is disabled by default when
           building SystemC with its configure based build system, but when building SystemC with
           CMake, you must pass -DENABLE_PHASE_CALLBACKS_TRACING=OFF to disable this feature.

               #include "verilated_vcd_sc.h"
               ...
               int main(int argc, char** argv, char** env) {
                   ...
                   Verilated::traceEverOn(true);
                   VerilatedVcdSc* tfp = new VerilatedVcdSc;
                   topp->trace(tfp, 99);  // Trace 99 levels of hierarchy
                   tfp->open("obj_dir/t_trace_ena_cc/simx.vcd");
                   ...
                   sc_start(1);
                   ...
                   tfp->close();
               }

       How do I generate FST waveforms (traces) in C++?
           FST is a trace file format developed by GTKWave.  Verilator provides basic FST
           support.  To dump traces in FST format, add the --trace-fst switch to Verilator and
           either A. use $dumpfile/$dumpvars in Verilog as described in the VCD example above, or
           B. in C++ change the include described in the VCD example above:

               #include "verilated_fst_c.h"
               VerilatedFstC* tfp = new VerilatedFstC;

           Note that currently supporting both FST and VCD in a single simulation is impossible,
           but such requirement should be rare.  You can however ifdef around the trace format in
           your C++ main loop, and select VCD or FST at build time, should you require.

       How do I generate FST waveforms (aka dumps or traces) in SystemC?
           The FST library from GTKWave does not currently support SystemC; use VCD format
           instead.

       How do I view waveforms (aka dumps or traces)?
           Verilator creates standard VCD (Value Change Dump) and FST files.  VCD files are
           viewable with the open source GTKWave (recommended) or Dinotrace (legacy) programs, or
           any of the many closed-source offerings; FST is supported only by GTKWave.

       How do I reduce the size of large waveform (trace) files?
           First, instead of calling VerilatedVcdC->open at the beginning of time, delay calling
           it until the time stamp where you want tracing to begin.  Likewise you can also call
           VerilatedVcdC->open before the end of time (perhaps a short period after you detect a
           verification error).

           Next, add /*verilator tracing_off*/ to any very low level modules you never want to
           trace (such as perhaps library cells).  Finally, use the --trace-depth option to limit
           the depth of tracing, for example --trace-depth 1 to see only the top level signals.

           Also be sure you write your trace files to a local solid-state drive, instead of to a
           network drive.  Network drives are generally far slower.

           You can also consider using FST tracing instead of VCD. FST dumps are a fraction of
           the size of the equivalent VCD. FST tracing can be slower than VCD tracing, but it
           might be the only option if the VCD file size is prohibitively large.

       How do I do coverage analysis?
           Verilator supports both block (line) coverage and user inserted functional coverage.

           First, run verilator with the --coverage option.  If you are using your own makefile,
           compile the model with the GCC flag -DVM_COVERAGE (if using the makefile provided by
           Verilator, it will do this for you).

           At the end of your test, call VerilatedCov::write passing the name of the coverage
           data file (typically "logs/coverage.dat").

           Run each of your tests in different directories.  Each test will create a
           logs/coverage.dat file.

           After running all of your tests, execute the verilator_coverage tool.  The
           verilator_coverage tool reads the logs/coverage.dat file(s), and creates an annotated
           source code listing showing code coverage details.

           For an example, after running 'make test' in the Verilator distribution, see the
           examples/make_tracing_c/logs directory.  Grep for lines starting with '%' to see what
           lines Verilator believes need more coverage.

           Info files can be written by verilator_coverage for import to "lcov".  This enables
           use of "genhtml" for HTML reports and importing reports to sites such as
           <https://codecov.io>.

       Where is the translate_off command?  (How do I ignore a construct?)
           Translate on/off pragmas are generally a bad idea, as it's easy to have mismatched
           pairs, and you can't see what another tool sees by just preprocessing the code.
           Instead, use the preprocessor; Verilator defines the "VERILATOR" define for you, so
           just wrap the code in an ifndef region:

              `ifndef VERILATOR
                 Something_Verilator_Dislikes;
              `endif

           Most synthesis tools similarly define SYNTHESIS for you.

       Why do I get "unexpected "do"" or "unexpected "bit"" errors?
           The words "do", "bit", "ref", "return", and others are reserved keywords in
           SystemVerilog.  Older Verilog code might use these as identifiers.  You should change
           your code to not use them to ensure it works with newer tools.  Alternatively,
           surround them by the Verilog 2005/SystemVerilog begin_keywords pragma to indicate
           Verilog 2001 code.

              `begin_keywords "1364-2001"
                 integer bit; initial bit = 1;
              `end_keywords

           If you want the whole design to be parsed as Verilog 2001, please see the
           "--default-language" option.

       How do I prevent my assertions from firing during reset?
           Call Verilated::assertOn(false) before you first call the model, then turn it back on
           after reset.  It defaults to true.  When false, all assertions controlled by --assert
           are disabled.

       Why do I get "undefined reference to `sc_time_stamp()'"?
           In C++ (non SystemC) code you need to define this function so that the simulator knows
           the current time.  See the "CONNECTING TO C++" examples.

       Why do I get "undefined reference to `VL_RAND_RESET_I' or `Verilated::...'"?
           You need to link your compiled Verilated code against the verilated.cpp file found in
           the include directory of the Verilator kit.  This is one target in the
           $(VK_GLOBAL_OBJS) make variable, which should be part of your Makefile's link rule.
           If you use --exe, this is done for you.

       Is the PLI supported?
           Only somewhat.  More specifically, the common PLI-ish calls $display, $finish, $stop,
           $time, $write are converted to C++ equivalents.  You can also use the "import DPI"
           SystemVerilog feature to call C code (see the chapter above).  There is also limited
           VPI access to public signals.

           If you want something more complex, since Verilator emits standard C++ code, you can
           simply write your own C++ routines that can access and modify signal values without
           needing any PLI interface code, and call it with $c("{any_c++_statement}").

       How do I make a Verilog module that contain a C++ object?
           You need to add the object to the structure that Verilator creates, then use $c to
           call a method inside your object.  The test_regress/t/t_extend_class files show an
           example of how to do this.

       How do I get faster build times?
           When running make pass the make variable VM_PARALLEL_BUILDS=1 so that builds occur in
           parallel. Note this is now set by default if an output file was large enough to be
           split due to the --output-split option.

           Verilator emits any infrequently executed "cold" routines into separate __Slow.cpp
           files. This can accelerate compilation as optimization can be disabled on these
           routines. See the OPT_FAST and OPT_SLOW make variables and the BENCHMARKING &
           OPTIMIZATION section of the manual.

           Use a recent compiler.  Newer compilers tend to be faster.

           Compile in parallel on many machines and use caching; see the web for the ccache,
           distcc and icecream packages. ccache will skip GCC runs between identical source
           builds, even across different users.  If ccache was installed when Verilator was built
           it is used, or see OBJCACHE environment variable to override this. Also see the
           --output-split option.

           To reduce the compile time of classes that use a Verilated module (e.g. a top CPP
           file) you may wish to add /*verilator no_inline_module*/ to your top level module.
           This will decrease the amount of code in the model's Verilated class, improving
           compile times of any instantiating top level C++ code, at a relatively small cost of
           execution performance.

       Why do so many files need to recompile when I add a signal?
           Adding a new signal requires the symbol table to be recompiled.  Verilator uses one
           large symbol table, as that results in 2-3 less assembly instructions for each signal
           access.  This makes the execution time 10-15% faster, but can result in more
           compilations when something changes.

       How do I access Verilog functions/tasks in C?
           Use the SystemVerilog Direct Programming Interface.  You write a Verilog function or
           task with input/outputs that match what you want to call in with C.  Then mark that
           function as a DPI export function.  See the DPI chapter in the IEEE Standard.

       How do I access C++ functions/tasks in Verilog?
           Use the SystemVerilog Direct Programming Interface.  You write a Verilog function or
           task with input/outputs that match what you want to call in with C.  Then mark that
           function as a DPI import function.  See the DPI chapter in the IEEE Standard.

       How do I access signals in C?
           The best thing to do is to make a SystemVerilog "export DPI" task or function that
           accesses that signal, as described in the DPI chapter in the manual and DPI tutorials
           on the web.  This will allow Verilator to better optimize the model and should be
           portable across simulators.

           If you really want raw access to the signals, declare the signals you will be
           accessing with a /*verilator public*/ comment before the closing semicolon.  Then
           scope into the C++ class to read the value of the signal, as you would any other
           member variable.

           Signals are the smallest of 8-bit unsigned chars (equivalent to uint8_t), 16-bit
           unsigned shorts (uint16_t), 32-bit unsigned longs (uint32_t), or 64-bit unsigned long
           longs (uint64_t) that fits the width of the signal.  Generally, you can use just
           uint32_t's for 1 to 32 bits, or vluint64_t for 1 to 64 bits, and the compiler will
           properly up-convert smaller entities.  Note even signed ports are declared as
           unsigned; you must sign extend yourself to the appropriate signal width.

           Signals wider than 64 bits are stored as an array of 32-bit uint32_t's.  Thus to read
           bits 31:0, access signal[0], and for bits 63:32, access signal[1].  Unused bits (for
           example bit numbers 65-96 of a 65-bit vector) will always be zero.  If you change the
           value you must make sure to pack zeros in the unused bits or core-dumps may result,
           because Verilator strips array bound checks where it believes them to be unnecessary
           to improve performance.

           In the SYSTEMC example above, if you had in our.v:

               input clk /*verilator public*/;
               // Note the placement of the semicolon above

           From the sc_main.cpp file, you'd then:

               #include "Vour.h"
               #include "Vour_our.h"
               cout << "clock is " << top->our->clk << endl;

           In this example, clk is a bool you can read or set as any other variable.  The value
           of normal signals may be set, though clocks shouldn't be changed by your code or
           you'll get strange results.

       Should a module be in Verilog or SystemC?
           Sometimes there is a block that just interconnects cells, and have a choice as to if
           you write it in Verilog or SystemC.  Everything else being equal, best performance is
           when Verilator sees all of the design.  So, look at the hierarchy of your design,
           labeling cells as to if they are SystemC or Verilog.  Then:

           A module with only SystemC cells below must be SystemC.

           A module with a mix of Verilog and SystemC cells below must be SystemC. (As Verilator
           cannot connect to lower-level SystemC cells.)

           A module with only Verilog cells below can be either, but for best performance should
           be Verilog.  (The exception is if you have a design that is instantiated many times;
           in this case Verilating one of the lower modules and instantiating that Verilated
           cells multiple times into a SystemC module *may* be faster.)

BUGS

       First, check the "LANGUAGE LIMITATIONS" section.

       Next, try the --debug switch.  This will enable additional internal assertions, and may
       help identify the problem.

       Finally, reduce your code to the smallest possible routine that exhibits the bug.  Even
       better, create a test in the test_regress/t directory, as follows:

           cd test_regress
           cp -p t/t_EXAMPLE.pl t/t_BUG.pl
           cp -p t/t_EXAMPLE.v t/t_BUG.v

       There are many hints on how to write a good test in the driver.pl documentation which can
       be seen by running:

           cd $VERILATOR_ROOT  # Need the original distribution kit
           test_regress/driver.pl --help

       Edit t/t_BUG.pl to suit your example; you can do anything you want in the Verilog code
       there; just make sure it retains the single clk input and no outputs.  Now, the following
       should fail:

           cd $VERILATOR_ROOT  # Need the original distribution kit
           cd test_regress
           t/t_BUG.pl  # Run on Verilator
           t/t_BUG.pl --debug # Run on Verilator, passing --debug to Verilator
           t/t_BUG.pl --vcs  # Run on VCS simulator
           t/t_BUG.pl --nc|--iv|--ghdl  # Likewise on other simulators

       The test driver accepts a number of options, many of which mirror the main Verilator
       option. For example the previous test could have been run with debugging enabled.  The
       full set of test options can be seen by running driver.pl --help as shown above.

       Finally, report the bug using the bug tracker at <https://verilator.org/issues>.  The bug
       will become publicly visible; if this is unacceptable, mail the bug report to
       "wsnyder@wsnyder.org".

HISTORY

       Verilator was conceived in 1994 by Paul Wasson at the Core Logic Group at Digital
       Equipment Corporation.  The Verilog code that was converted to C was then merged with a C
       based CPU model of the Alpha processor and simulated in a C based environment called CCLI.

       In 1995 Verilator started being used also for Multimedia and Network Processor development
       inside Digital.  Duane Galbi took over active development of Verilator, and added several
       performance enhancements.  CCLI was still being used as the shell.

       In 1998, through the efforts of existing DECies, mainly Duane Galbi, Digital graciously
       agreed to release the source code.  (Subject to the code not being resold, which is
       compatible with the GNU Public License.)

       In 2001, Wilson Snyder took the kit, and added a SystemC mode, and called it Verilator2.
       This was the first packaged public release.

       In 2002, Wilson Snyder created Verilator 3.000 by rewriting Verilator from scratch in C++.
       This added many optimizations, yielding about a 2-5x performance gain.

       In 2009, major SystemVerilog and DPI language support was added.

       In 2018, Verilator 4.000 was released with multithreaded support.

       Currently, various language features and performance enhancements are added as the need
       arises.  Verilator is now about 3x faster than in 2002, and is faster than most (if not
       every) other simulator.

AUTHORS

       When possible, please instead report bugs to <https://verilator.org/issues>.

       Wilson Snyder <wsnyder@wsnyder.org>

       Major concepts by Paul Wasson, Duane Galbi, John Coiner and Jie Xu.

CONTRIBUTORS

       Many people have provided ideas and other assistance with Verilator.

       Verilator is receiving major development support from the CHIPS Alliance.

       Previous major corporate sponsors of Verilator, by providing significant contributions of
       time or funds included include Atmel Corporation, Cavium Inc., Compaq Corporation, Digital
       Equipment Corporation, Embecosm Ltd., Hicamp Systems, Intel Corporation, Mindspeed
       Technologies Inc., MicroTune Inc., picoChip Designs Ltd., Sun Microsystems Inc., Nauticus
       Networks Inc., and SiCortex Inc.

       The people who have contributed major functionality are Byron Bradley, Jeremy Bennett,
       Lane Brooks, John Coiner, Duane Galbi, Geza Lore, Todd Strader, Stefan Wallentowitz, Paul
       Wasson, Jie Xu, and Wilson Snyder.  Major testers included Jeff Dutton, Jonathon
       Donaldson, Ralf Karge, David Hewson, Iztok Jeras, Wim Michiels, Alex Solomatnikov,
       Sebastien Van Cauwenberghe, Gene Weber, and Clifford Wolf.

       Some of the people who have provided ideas, and feedback for Verilator include: David
       Addison, Tariq B. Ahmad, Nikana Anastasiadis, Hans Van Antwerpen, Vasu Arasanipalai, Jens
       Arm, Sharad Bagri, Matthew Ballance, Andrew Bardsley, Matthew Barr, Geoff Barrett, Julius
       Baxter, Jeremy Bennett, Michael Berman, Victor Besyakov, Moinak Bhattacharyya, David
       Binderman, Piotr Binkowski, Johan Bjork, David Black, Tymoteusz Blazejczyk, Daniel Bone,
       Gregg Bouchard, Christopher Boumenot, Nick Bowler, Byron Bradley, Bryan Brady, Maarten De
       Braekeleer, Charlie Brej, J Briquet, Lane Brooks, John Brownlee, Jeff Bush, Lawrence
       Butcher, Tony Bybell, Ted Campbell, Chris Candler, Lauren Carlson, Donal Casey, Sebastien
       Van Cauwenberghe, Alex Chadwick, Terry Chen, Yi-Chung Chen, Enzo Chi, Robert A. Clark,
       Allan Cochrane, John Coiner, Gianfranco Costamagna, Sean Cross, George Cuan, Joe DErrico,
       Lukasz Dalek, Laurens van Dam, Gunter Dannoritzer, Ashutosh Das, Bernard Deadman, John
       Demme, Mike Denio, John Deroo, Philip Derrick, John Dickol, Ruben Diez, Danny Ding, Jacko
       Dirks, Ivan Djordjevic, Jonathon Donaldson, Leendert van Doorn, Sebastian Dressler, Alex
       Duller, Jeff Dutton, Tomas Dzetkulic, Usuario Eda, Charles Eddleston, Chandan Egbert, Joe
       Eiler, Ahmed El-Mahmoudy, Trevor Elbourne, Mats Engstrom, Robert Farrell, Eugen Fekete,
       Fabrizio Ferrandi, Udi Finkelstein, Brian Flachs, Andrea Foletto, Bob Fredieu, Duane
       Galbi, Benjamin Gartner, Christian Gelinek, Peter Gerst, Glen Gibb, Michael Gielda,
       Shankar Giri, Dan Gisselquist, Petr Gladkikh, Sam Gladstone, Amir Gonnen, Chitlesh Goorah,
       Kai Gossner, Sergi Granell, Al Grant, Alexander Grobman, Xuan Guo, Driss Hafdi, Neil
       Hamilton, James Hanlon, Oyvind Harboe, Jannis Harder, Junji Hashimoto, Thomas Hawkins,
       Mitch Hayenga, Robert Henry, Stephen Henry, David Hewson, Jamey Hicks, Joel Holdsworth,
       Andrew Holme, Hiroki Honda, Alex Hornung, David Horton, Peter Horvath, Jae Hossell, Alan
       Hunter, James Hutchinson, Jamie Iles, Ben Jackson, Shareef Jalloq, Krzysztof Jankowski,
       HyungKi Jeong, Iztok Jeras, James Johnson, Christophe Joly, Franck Jullien, James Jung,
       Mike Kagen, Arthur Kahlich, Kaalia Kahn, Guy-Armand Kamendje, Vasu Kandadi, Kanad Kanhere,
       Patricio Kaplan, Pieter Kapsenberg, Ralf Karge, Dan Katz, Sol Katzman, Ian Kennedy,
       Jonathan Kimmitt, Olof Kindgren, Kevin Kiningham, Dan Kirkham, Sobhan Klnv, Gernot Koch,
       Soon Koh, Nathan Kohagen, Steve Kolecki, Brett Koonce, Will Korteland, Wojciech Koszek,
       Varun Koyyalagunta, David Kravitz, Roland Kruse, Sergey Kvachonok, Charles Eric LaForest,
       Ed Lander, Steve Lang, Stephane Laurent, Walter Lavino, Christian Leber, Larry Lee, Igor
       Lesik, John Li, Eivind Liland, Yu Sheng Lin, Charlie Lind, Andrew Ling, Jiuyang Liu, Paul
       Liu, Derek Lockhart, Jake Longo, Geza Lore, Arthur Low, Stefan Ludwig, Dan Lussier, Fred
       Ma, Duraid Madina, Affe Mao, Julien Margetts, Mark Marshall, Alfonso Martinez, Yves
       Mathieu, Patrick Maupin, Jason McMullan, Elliot Mednick, Wim Michiels, Miodrag Milanovic,
       Wai Sum Mong, Peter Monsson, Sean Moore, Dennis Muhlestein, John Murphy, Matt Myers,
       Nathan Myers, Richard Myers, Dimitris Nalbantis, Peter Nelson, Bob Newgard, Cong Van
       Nguyen, Paul Nitza, Yossi Nivin, Pete Nixon, Lisa Noack, Mark Nodine, Kuba Ober, Andreas
       Olofsson, Aleksander Osman, James Pallister, Vassilis Papaefstathiou, Brad Parker, Dan
       Petrisko, Maciej Piechotka, David Pierce, Dominic Plunkett, David Poole, Mike Popoloski,
       Roman Popov, Rich Porter, Niranjan Prabhu, Usha Priyadharshini, Mark Jackson Pulver,
       Prateek Puri, Marshal Qiao, Danilo Ramos, Chris Randall, Anton Rapp, Josh Redford, Odd
       Magne Reitan, Frederic Requin, Frederick Requin, Dustin Richmond, Alberto Del Rio, Eric
       Rippey, Oleg Rodionov, Ludwig Rogiers, Paul Rolfe, Arjen Roodselaar, Tobias Rosenkranz,
       Huang Rui, Jan Egil Ruud, Denis Rystsov, John Sanguinetti, Galen Seitz, Salman Sheikh, Hao
       Shi, Mike Shinkarovsky, Rafael Shirakawa, Jeffrey Short, Anderson Ignacio Da Silva, Rodney
       Sinclair, Steven Slatter, Brian Small, Garrett Smith, Tim Snyder, Maciej Sobkowski, Stan
       Sokorac, Alex Solomatnikov, Wei Song, Art Stamness, David Stanford, John Stevenson, Pete
       Stevenson, Patrick Stewart, Rob Stoddard, Todd Strader, John Stroebel, Sven Stucki, Howard
       Su, Emerson Suguimoto, Gene Sullivan, Qingyao Sun, Renga Sundararajan, Rupert Swarbrick,
       Yutetsu Takatsukasa, Peter Tengstrand, Wesley Terpstra, Rui Terra, Stefan Thiede, Gary
       Thomas, Ian Thompson, Kevin Thompson, Mike Thyer, Hans Tichelaar, Viktor Tomov, Steve
       Tong, Michael Tresidder, Neil Turton, Srini Vemuri, Yuri Victorovich, Bogdan Vukobratovic,
       Holger Waechtler, Philipp Wagner, Stefan Wallentowitz, Shawn Wang, Paul Wasson, Greg
       Waters, Thomas Watts, Eugene Weber, David Welch, Thomas J Whatson, Marco Widmer, Leon
       Wildman, Daniel Wilkerson, Gerald Williams, Trevor Williams, Jan Van Winkel, Jeff Winston,
       Joshua Wise, Clifford Wolf, Tobias Wolfel, Johan Wouters, Junyi Xi, Ding Xiaoliang, Jie
       Xu, Mandy Xu, Takatsukasa Y, Luke Yang, and Amir Yazdanbakhsh.

       Thanks to them, and all those we've missed including above, or wished to remain anonymous.

DISTRIBUTION

       The latest version is available from <https://verilator.org>.

       Copyright 2003-2020 by Wilson Snyder. This program is free software; you can redistribute
       it and/or modify the Verilator internals under the terms of either the GNU Lesser General
       Public License Version 3 or the Perl Artistic License Version 2.0.

       All Verilog and C++/SystemC code quoted within this documentation file are released as
       Creative Commons Public Domain (CC0).  Many example files and test files are likewise
       released under CC0 into effectively the Public Domain as described in the files
       themselves.

SEE ALSO

       verilator_coverage, verilator_gantt, verilator_profcfunc, make,

       "verilator --help" which is the source for this document,

       and docs/internals.adoc in the distribution.