Provided by: magic_7.5.233-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       ext - format of .ext files produced by Magic's hierarchical extractor

DESCRIPTION

       Magic's  extractor  produces  a .ext file for each cell in a hierarchical design.  The .ext file for cell
       name is name.ext.  This file contains three kinds of  information:  environmental  information  (scaling,
       timestamps,  etc),  the  extracted  circuit  corresponding  to  the  mask  geometry of cell name, and the
       connections between this mask geometry and the subcells of name.

       A .ext file consists of a series of lines, each of which begins with a keyword.  The keyword beginning  a
       line  determines  how the remainder of the line is interpreted.  The following set of keywords define the
       environmental information:

       tech techname
              Identifies the technology of cell name as techname, e.g, nmos, cmos.

       timestamp time
              Identifies the time when cell name was last modified.  The value time is the time stored by  Unix,
              i.e,  seconds since 00:00 GMT January 1, 1970.  Note that this is not the time name was extracted,
              but rather the timestamp value stored in the .mag file.  The incremental  extractor  compares  the
              timestamp in each .ext file with the timestamp in each .mag file in a design; if they differ, that
              cell is re-extracted.

       version version
              Identifies the version of .ext format used to write name.ext.  The current version is 5.1.

       style style
              Identifies the style that the cell has been extracted with.

       scale rscale cscale lscale
              Sets the scale to be used in interpreting resistance, capacitance, and linear dimension values  in
              the  remainder  of  the .ext file.  Each resistance value must be multiplied by rscale to give the
              real resistance in milliohms.  Each capacitance value must be multiplied by  cscale  to  give  the
              real capacitance in attofarads.  Each linear dimension (e.g, width, height, transform coordinates)
              must be multiplied by lscale to give the real linear dimension in centimicrons.  Also,  each  area
              dimension  (e.g,  transistor channel area) must be multiplied by scale*scale to give the real area
              in square centimicrons.  At most one scale line may appear in a .ext file.  If none  appears,  all
              of rscale, cscale, and lscale default to 1.

       resistclasses r1 r2 ...
              Sets  the  resistance  per  square  for the various resistance classes appearing in the technology
              file.  The values r1, r2, etc. are in milliohms; they are  not  scaled  by  the  value  of  rscale
              specified  in  the  scale  line above.  Each node in a .ext file has a perimeter and area for each
              resistance class; the values r1, r2, etc.  are used to convert these  perimeters  and  areas  into
              actual  node  resistances.  See ``Magic Tutorial #8: Circuit Extraction'' for a description of how
              resistances are computed from perimeters and areas by the program ext2sim.

       The following keywords define the circuit formed by the mask information in cell name.  This  circuit  is
       extracted  independently  of any subcells; its connections to subcells are handled by the keywords in the
       section after this one.

       node name R C x y type a1 p1 a2 p2 ... aN pN
              Defines an electrical node in name.  This node is referred to by the name name in subsequent equiv
              lines,  connections  to the terminals of transistors in fet lines, and hierarchical connections or
              adjustments using merge or adjust.  The node has a total capacitance to ground  of  C  attofarads,
              and  a  lumped  resistance  of  R milliohms.  For purposes of going back from the node name to the
              geometry defining the node, (x,y) is the coordinate of a point inside the node, and  type  is  the
              layer  on  which this point appears.  The values a1, p1, ... aN, pN are the area and perimeter for
              the material in each of the  resistance  classes  described  by  the  resistclasses  line  at  the
              beginning  of  the  .ext  file; these values are used to compute adjusted hierarchical resistances
              more accurately.  NOTE: since many analysis tools compute transistor gate  capacitance  themselves
              from  the  transistor's  area  and  perimeter, the capacitance between a node and substrate (GND!)
              normally does not include the capacitance from transistor gates connected to that  node.   If  the
              .sim  file  was  produced  by  ext2sim(1),  check the technology file that was used to produce the
              original .ext files to see whether transistor  gate  capacitance  is  included  or  excluded;  see
              ``Magic Maintainer's Manual #2: The Technology File'' for details.

       attr name xl yl xh yh type text
              One  of  these  lines  appears  for  each label ending in the character ``@'' that was attached to
              geometry in the node name.  The location of each attribute label (xl yl xh yh)  and  the  type  of
              material  to  which  it  was  attached (type) are given along with the text of the label minus the
              trailing ``@'' character (text).

       equiv node1 node2
              Defines two node names in cell name as being equivalent: node1 and node2.  In a collection of node
              names related by equiv lines, exactly one must be defined by a node line described above.

       fet type xl yl xh yh area perim sub GATE T1 T2 ...
              Defines  a  transistor  in  name.   The  kind  of transistor is type, a string that comes from the
              technology file and is intended to have meaning to simulation  programs.   The  coordinates  of  a
              square entirely contained in the gate region of the transistor are (xl, yl) for its lower-left and
              (xh, yh) for its upper-right.  All four coordinates are in the name's coordinate  space,  and  are
              subject  to  scaling as described in scale above.  The gate region of the transistor has area area
              square centimicrons and  perimeter  perim  centimicrons.   The  substrate  of  the  transistor  is
              connected to node sub.

              The remainder of a fet line consists of a series of triples: GATE, T1, ....  Each describes one of
              the terminals of the transistor; the first describes the gate,  and  the  remainder  describe  the
              transistor's  non-gate  terminals  (e.g, source and drain).  Each triple consists of the name of a
              node connecting to that terminal, a terminal length, and an attribute list.  The  terminal  length
              is  in  centimicrons;  it  is  the  length  of that segment of the channel perimeter connecting to
              adjacent material, such as polysilicon for the gate or diffusion for a source or drain.

              The attribute list is either the single token ``0'', meaning no attributes, or  a  comma-separated
              list  of  strings.  The strings in the attribute list come from labels attached to the transistor.
              Any label ending in the character ``^'' is considered a gate attribute and appears on  the  gate's
              attribute  list,  minus  the trailing ``^''.  Gate attributes may lie either along the border of a
              channel or in its interior.  Any label ending in the character  ``$''  is  considered  a  non-gate
              attribute.   It  appears  on the list of the terminal along which it lies, also minus the trailing
              ``$''.  Non-gate attributes may only lie on the border of the channel.

       The keywords in this section describe information that is not processed hierarchically: path lengths  and
       accurate  resistances  that  are computed by flattening an entire node and then producing a value for the
       flattened node.

       killnode node
              During resistance extraction, it is sometimes necessary to break a node up  into  several  smaller
              nodes.   The  appearance  of  a  killnode line during the processing of a .ext file means that all
              information currently accumulated about node, along with all fets that have a  terminal  connected
              to  node,  should  be  thrown out; it will be replaced by information later in the .ext file.  The
              order of processing .ext files is important in order for  this  to  work  properly:  children  are
              processed before their parents, so a killnode in a parent overrides one in a child.

       resist node1 node2 R
              Defines  a  resistor  of  R  milliohms  between  the  two  nodes  node1 and node2.  Both names are
              hierarchical.

       distance name1 name2 dmin dmax
              Gives the distance between two electrical terminals name1 (a driver) and name2 (a receiver).  Note
              that these are terminals and not nodes: the names (which are hierarchical label names) are used to
              specify two different locations on the same electrical node.  The two distances,  dmin  and  dmax,
              are  the  lengths  (in  lambda)  of  the shortest and longest acyclic paths between the driver and
              receiver.

       The keywords in this last section describe the subcells used by name, and how connections are made to and
       between them.

       use def use-id TRANSFORM
              Specifies that cell def with instance identifier use-id is a subcell of cell name.  If cell def is
              arrayed, then use-id will be followed by two bracketed subscript ranges of the form:  [lo,hi,sep].
              The  first  range  is  for  x,  and the second for y.  The subscripts for a given dimension are lo
              through hi inclusive, and the separation between adjacent array elements is sep centimicrons.

              TRANSFORM is a set of six integers that describe how coordinates in def are to be  transformed  to
              coordinates  in the parent name.  It is used by ext2sim(1) in transforming transistor locations to
              coordinates in the root of a design.  The six integers of TRANSFORM  (ta, tb, tc, td, te, tf)  are
              interpreted  as components in the following transformation matrix, by which all coordinates in def
              are post-multiplied to get coordinates in name:

                                  ta   td   0
                                  tb   te   0
                                  tc   tf   1

       merge path1 path2 C a1 p1 a2 p2  ... aN pN
              Used to specify a connection between two subcells, or between a subcell and  mask  information  of
              name.   Both path1 and path2 are hierarchical node names.  To refer to a node in cell name itself,
              its pathname is just its node name.  To refer to a  node  in  a  subcell  of  name,  its  pathname
              consists  of  the  use-id  of  the  subcell  (as  it  appeared in a use line above), followed by a
              slash (/), followed by the node name in the subcell.  For example, if name  contains  subcell  sub
              with  use identifier sub-id, and sub contains node n, the full pathname of node n relative to name
              will be sub-id/n.

       Connections between adjacent elements of an array are represented  using  a  special  syntax  that  takes
       advantage  of  the regularity of arrays.  A use-id in a path may optionally be followed by a range of the
       form [lo:hi] (before the following slash).  Such a use-id is interpreted as the elements  lo  through  hi
       inclusive  of a one-dimensional array.  An element of a two-dimensional array may be subscripted with two
       such ranges: first the y range, then the x range.

       Whenever one path in a merge line contains such  a  subscript  range,  the  other  must  contain  one  of
       comparable size.  For example,

                 merge  sub-id[1:4,2:8]/a  sub-id[2:5,1:7]/b

       is acceptable because the range 1:4 is the same size as 2:5, and the range 2:8 is the same size as 1:7.

       When a connection occurs between nodes in different cells, it may be that some resistance and capacitance
       has been recorded redundantly.  For example, polysilicon in one cell may overlap polysilicon in  another,
       so  the  capacitance  to  substrate will have been recorded twice.  The values C, a1, p1, etc. in a merge
       line provide a way of compensating for such overlap.  Each of a1, p1, etc. (usually negative)  are  added
       to  the  area  and perimeter for material of each resistance class to give an adjusted area and perimeter
       for the aggregate node.  The value C attofarads (also usually negative)  is  added  to  the  sum  of  the
       capacitances (to substrate) of nodes path1 and path2 to give the capacitance of the aggregate node.

       cap node1 node2 C
              Defines a capacitor between the nodes node1 and node2, with capacitance C.  This construct is used
              to specify both internodal capacitance within a single cell and between cells.

AUTHOR

       Walter Scott

SEE ALSO

       ext2sim(1), magic(1)