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SystemVerilog Style Linter

The verible-verilog-lint SV style linter analyzes code for patterns and constructs that are deemed undesirable according to the implemented lint rules. Ideally, each lint rule should reference a passage from an authoritative style guide. The style linter operates on single unpreprocessed files in isolation.

For automatic code-reviews on github, there is a easy to integrate github action available.

The style linter excels at:

  • Finding patterns in code that can be expressed in terms of syntax tree or token matching rules.
    • Expressing rules with syntactic context-sensitivity.

Consequences of reading unpreprocessed input:

  • Can examine comments.
  • Good at examining uses of unexpanded macros.

Currrent limitations:

  • No attempt to understand preprocessing conditional branches.
  • No semantic analysis (such as connectivity). This requires:
    • preprocessing
    • multi-file analysis
    • abstract syntax tree

Developers

Style lint rule development guide.

Usage

usage: verible-verilog-lint [options] <file> [<file>...]

  Flags from external/com_google_absl/absl/flags/parse.cc:
    --flagfile (comma-separated list of files to load flags from); default: ;
    --fromenv (comma-separated list of flags to set from the environment [use
      'export FLAGS_flag1=value']); default: ;
    --tryfromenv (comma-separated list of flags to try to set from the
      environment if present); default: ;
    --undefok (comma-separated list of flag names that it is okay to specify on
      the command line even if the program does not define a flag with that
      name); default: ;

  Flags from verilog/analysis/verilog_linter.cc:
    --rules (Comma-separated of lint rules to enable. No prefix or a '+' prefix
      enables it, '-' disable it. Configuration values for each rules placed
      after '=' character.); default: ;
    --rules_config (Path to lint rules configuration file. Disables
      --rule_config_search if set.); default: "";
    --rules_config_search (Look for lint rules configuration file
      '.rules.verible_lint' searching upward from the location of each analyzed
      file.); default: false;
    --ruleset ([default|all|none], the base set of rules used by linter);
      default: default;
    --waiver_files (Path to waiver config files (comma-separated). Please refer
      to the README file for information about its format.); default: "";

  Flags from verilog/parser/verilog_parser.cc:
    --verilog_trace_parser (Trace verilog parser); default: false;

  Flags from verilog/tools/lint/verilog_lint.cc:
    --autofix (autofix mode; one of
      [no|patch-interactive|patch|inplace-interactive|inplace|generate-waiver]);
      default: no;
    --autofix_output_file (File to write a patch with autofixes to if
      --autofix=patch or --autofix=patch-interactive or a waiver file if
      --autofix=generate-waiver); default: "";
    --check_syntax (If true, check for lexical and syntax errors, otherwise
      ignore.); default: true;
    --generate_markdown (If true, print the description of every rule formatted
      for the Markdown and exit immediately. Intended for the output to be
      written to a snippet of Markdown.); default: false;
    --help_rules ([all|<rule-name>], print the description of one rule/all rules
      and exit immediately.); default: "";
    --lint_fatal (If true, exit nonzero if linter finds violations.);
      default: true;
    --parse_fatal (If true, exit nonzero if there are any syntax errors.);
      default: true;
    --show_diagnostic_context (prints an additional line on which the diagnostic
      was found,followed by a line with a position marker); default: false;

We recommend each project maintain its own configuration file for convenience and consistency among project members.

Diagnostics

Syntax errors and lint rule findings have the following format:

FILE:LINE:COL: text...

Examples:

path/to/missing-endmodule.sv:3:1: syntax error (unexpected EOF).
path/to/number-as-statement.sv:2:3: syntax error, rejected "123".
path/to/bad-dimensions.sv:114:43: Packed dimension range must be in decreasing order. http://your.style/guide.html#packed-ordering [packed-dimensions-range-ordering]

Lint Rules

User documentation for the lint rules is generated dynamically, and can be found at https://chipsalliance.github.io/verible/verilog_lint.html, or by running verible-verilog-lint --help_rules for text or --generate_markdown. We also provide a Bazel build rule:

# Generating documentation
bazel build :lint_doc

# It will be generated into
bazel-bin/documentation_verible_lint_rules.md

Rule Configuration

The --rules flag allows to enable/disable rules as well as pass configuration to rules that accept them. It accepts a comma-separated list rule names. If prefixed with a - (minus), the rule is disabled. No prefix or a '+' (plus) prefix enables the rule. An optional configuration can be passed after an = assignment. Each name/value is

So rule configurations with parameters looks like this

  --rules=[+-]rule-name="<param>:<paramvalue>;<param2>:<value>",[+-]next-rule...

The following example enables the enum-name-style rule, enables and configures the line-length rule (80 characters length) and disables the no-tabs rule.

verible-verilog-lint --rules=enum-name-style,+line-length=length:80,-no-tabs ...

Some lint rules have multiple parameters, these are separated with semicolon. Since common shells treat semicolon as special character, you have to put the parameters in quotes.

verible-verilog-lint --rules="undersized-binary-literal=hex:true;lint_zero:true" ...

Additionally, the --rules_config flag can be used to read configuration stored in a file. The syntax is the same as above, except the rules can be also separated with the newline character.

Waiving Lint Violations {#lint-waiver}

In-file waiver comments

In the rare circumstance where a line needs to be waived from a particular lint rule, you can use the following waiver comment:

// This example waives the line after the waiver.
// verilog_lint: waive rule-name
The next non-comment line like this one is waived.

// This example waives the same line as the waiver.
This line is waived.  // verilog_lint: waive rule-name

// This example shows accumulation of waivers over multiple lines.
// verilog_lint: waive rule-name-1
// verilog_lint: waive rule-name-2
// Other comments, possibly waivers for other tools.
This line will be waived for both rule-name-1 and rule-name-2.

// This example shows how to waive an entire range of lines.
// verilog_lint: waive-start rule-X
...
All lines in between will be waived for rule-X
...
// verilog_lint: waive-stop rule-X

External waiver files

If you prefer to manage waivers out-of-source, then waiver files may be a suitable option, especially if the use of multiple linters risks cluttering your source with too many lint waiver directives.

The --waiver_files flag accepts a single configuration file or a list of files (comma-separated). Specifying multiple files is equivalent to concatenating the files in order of appearance. By default, the rules are applied to all files, but with --location you can choose to only apply them to filenames matching the location regexp.

The format of this file is as follows:

waive --rule=rule-name-1 --line=10
waive --rule=rule-name-2 --line=5:10
waive --rule=rule-name-3 --regex="^\s*abc$"
waive --rule=rule-name-4 --line=42 --location=".*some_file.*"

The --line flag can be used to specify a single line to apply the waiver to or a line range (separated with the : character). Additionally the --regex flag can be used to dynamically match lines on which a given rule has to be waived. This is especially useful for projects where some of the files are auto-generated.

The name of the rule to waive is at the end of each diagnostic message in [].

These waiver rules can be automatically generated with the AutoFix mode generate-waiver to stdout, or to a waiver file if a path is passed to --autofix_output_file. e.g.

verible-verilog-lint --autofix=generate-waiver --autofix_output_file=violations.waiver ...

Generated waiving rules will follow this format:

waive --rule=<rule_name> --line=<number> --location=<file_name>

Syntax errors

Syntax errors cannot be waived. A common source of syntax errors is if the file is not a standalone Verilog program as defined by the LRM, e.g. a body snippet of a module, class, task, or function. In such cases, the parser can be directed to treat the code as a snippet by selecting a parsing mode, which looks like a comment near the top-of-file like // verilog_syntax: parse-as-module-body.

Automatically fixing trivial violations

Some trivial violations (e.g. trailing spaces or repeated semicolons) can be fixed automatically. The --autofix flag controls the mode in which fixes are presented or applied.

--autofix value Description
no No fix is is shown or applied.
patch-interactive Interactive choice of fixes that are written as unified diff to --autofix_output_file.
inplace-interactive Interacive choice of fixes that are applied to the original file in place. (modifies input)
patch All available fixes are written as unified diff.
inplace All available fixes are applied to the original file in place. (modifies input)
generate-waiver Generates a waiver rule for each violation, as a temporary fix.

If --autofix_output_file is not given, patch or waiver output is written to stdout.

The interactive modes --autofix=patch-interactive and --autofix=inplace-interactive offer the following actions for each fix:

  • y - apply fix
  • n - reject fix
  • a - apply this and all remaining fixes for violations of this rule
  • d - reject this and all remaining fixes for violations of this rule
  • A - apply this and all remaining fixes
  • D - reject this and all remaining fixes
  • p - show fix
  • P - show fixes applied so far
  • ? - print this help and prompt again

Example interactive session (--autofix=inplace-interactive):

$ verible-verilog-lint --rules="undersized-binary-literal=hex:true" --autofix=inplace-interactive autofixtest.sv

autofixtest.sv:2:30: Parenthesize condition expressions that appear in the true-clause of another condition expression. [Style: parentheses] [suggest-parentheses]
[ Add parenthesis for readability ]
@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
 module foo();
-   assign foo = condition_a? condition_b ? condition_c ? a : b : c : d;
+   assign foo = condition_a? (condition_b ? condition_c ? a : b : c) : d;
    assign c = 32'h1;
Autofix is available. Apply? [y,n,a,d,A,D,p,P,?] y
autofixtest.sv:2:44: Parenthesize condition expressions that appear in the true-clause of another condition expression. [Style: parentheses] [suggest-parentheses]
[ Add parenthesis for readability ]
@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
 module foo();
-   assign foo = condition_a? condition_b ? condition_c ? a : b : c : d;
+   assign foo = condition_a? condition_b ? (condition_c ? a : b) : c : d;
    assign c = 32'h1;
Autofix is available. Apply? [y,n,a,d,A,D,p,P,?] y
autofixtest.sv:3:19: Hex literal 32'h1 has less digits than expected for 32 bits. [Style: number-literals] [undersized-binary-literal]
[ 1. Alternative Left-expand leading zeroes ]
@@ -2,3 +2,3 @@
    assign foo = condition_a? condition_b ? condition_c ? a : b : c : d;
-   assign c = 32'h1;
+   assign c = 32'h00000001;
 endmodule
[ 2. Alternative Replace with decimal ]
@@ -2,3 +2,3 @@
    assign foo = condition_a? condition_b ? condition_c ? a : b : c : d;
-   assign c = 32'h1;
+   assign c = 32'd1;
 endmodule
Autofix is available. Apply? [1,2,y,n,a,d,A,D,p,P,?] 1