This document describes how to optimize the speed at which you can write a new fpga_rom during development.
When experimenting with code in fpga_rom, it can be annoying to have to wait for the new ROM to be written to SPI flash. Our write speed, even utilizing both I2C and SWD is only about 30KiB/s.
We optimize our link order so that code that we change the most doesn‘t affect the placement of code that we don’t change as much.
The code that we change the most when experimenting tends to be fpga_app and associated crates, followed by some bits of TFLM. So we put these towards the end.
To determine how well optimized the link order is, run ./scripts/fpga-rom-run
, then make a representative change - e.g. comment out a println in the Rust code, then rerun ./scripts/fpga-rom-run
. On the second run, you're looking to see how many blocks needed to be written. e.g.:
Need to write 2 of 14 blocks
If the number of blocks is higher than you'd like, dump the assembly of the ELF file with and without your println commented.
/opt/hps-sdk/bin/riscv64-unknown-elf-objdump -d \ ./rust/riscv/target/riscv32i-unknown-none-elf/release/fpga_rom >~/tmp/a.S
Then diff the two assembly files:
meld ~/tmp/{a,b}.S
Find the first line that is different and see what symbol it‘s referring to. That symbol has moved. Find what input file it’s defined in and move it earlier in the link order.
You can find what symbols a file defines by running nm --defined-only
on it.
You can find all input files to the linker by running a command like the following:
strace -f --string-limit=1000 ./scripts/build-fpga-rom-dev 2>&1 | \ grep openat | grep -v ENOENT | grep -E '(\.(a|rlib|o)")' | cut -d'"' -f2
The diff may contain lots of changes due to different debug symbol names. e.g.:
-202acb1c: fffc8d13 addi s10,s9,-1 # ffff <.LLST153+0x26> +202acb1c: fffc8d13 addi s10,s9,-1 # ffff <.LLST148+0x27>
Note that the word (0xfffc8d13) hasn't changed, just the symbol name and offset. To make finding actual differences easier, you can temporarily set debug = false
in Cargo.toml.