How to Use Predefined Projects in the DVT Eclipse IDE - Part I

Overview

DVT Eclipse IDE comes with Predefined Projects, which are meant to help new users explore and learn about DVT's various capabilities. This is the first part in a series that will walk you through Predefined Projects.

DVT Eclipse is an Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for SystemVerilog, Verilog, VHDL, e Language, and mixed-language projects. We recommend that new DVT users start with the Predefined Projects.

Follow this link to access the online DVT documentation: https://eda.amiq.com/docs

Language-specific User Guides are available:

SystemVerilog - https://eda.amiq.com/documentation/eclipse/sv/index.html

VHDL - https://eda.amiq.com/documentation/eclipse/vhdl/index.html

e Language - https://eda.amiq.com/documentation/eclipse/elang/index.html

Good starting points are the "Getting Started" and "Tips and Tricks" sections.

For any questions or feedback feel free to email us at: support@amiq.com.

Traing labs in PDF format are also available on demand from support@amiq.com.

Details

Introduction

If you're new to DVT, you may want to start with a predefined project.

Opening a Predefined Project

To open one, go to File, New, and select DVT Predefined Project. A dialog that shows you a list of all the predefined projects currently available appears.

Overview of Predefined Projects

Predefined projects are provided to illustrate the different capabilities of DVT. Their purpose is mainly educational, but also act as good references when setting up your own DVT projects. They are included in all DVT install distributions, and there is at least one for every DVT-supported language: SystemVerilog, Verilog, VHDL, and e Language.

Selecting and Saving a Predefined Project

Every project has a short description. You can see it in the right panel. A copy of the selected project will be saved in the target directory. This way, you won't need to concern yourself that you may break something. At any time, you can overwrite it.

Starting Your Project

Let's select UVM 1.2 Ubus and click Finish. You now have a fully functional project to start.