Verilog Procedural Interface


The Verilog Procedural Interface, originally known as PLI 2.0, is an interface primarily intended for the C programming language. It allows behavioral Verilog code to invoke C functions, and C functions to invoke standard Verilog system tasks. The Verilog Procedural Interface is part of the IEEE 1364 Programming Language Interface standard; the most recent edition of the standard is from 2005. VPI is sometimes also referred to as PLI 2, since it replaces the deprecated Program Language Interface.
While PLI 1 was deprecated in favor of VPI, PLI 1 is still commonly used over VPI due to its much more widely documented tf_put, tf_get function interface that is described in many verilog reference books.

Use of C++

C++ is integrable with VPI and PLI 1.0, by using the "extern C/C++" keyword built into C++ compilers.

Example

As an example, consider the following Verilog code fragment:

val = 41;
$increment;
$display;

Suppose the increment system task increments its first parameter by one. Using C and the VPI mechanism, the increment task can be implemented as follows:

// Implements the increment system task
static int increment

Also, a function that registers this system task is necessary. This function is invoked prior to elaboration or resolution of references when it is placed in the externally visible vlog_startup_routines array.

// Registers the increment system task
void register_increment
// Contains a zero-terminated list of functions that have to be called at startup
void = ;

The C code is compiled into a shared object that will be used by the Verilog simulator. A simulation of the earlier mentioned Verilog fragment will now result in the following output:

VPI routine received 41
After $increment, val=42