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Getting Started

Downloading and Running ISSIE

Start by clicking the download button on the top-right of your screen. This opens the page of the latest release of ISSIE on GitHub. At the bottom of the page, you can find the latest prebuilt binary for your platform (Windows or Macos). Issie will require in total about 200M of disk space.

Creating a New Project

Once you open Issie you should see two options: New Project and Open Project.

This process creates a folder where your project will be stored and the first sheet of your project, called main. You can see this by clicking at the Sheets selection button.

Your first design

Let's start with a very simple schematic: a simple 2-input AND gate.

Add the following components to your canvas from the Catalogue tab: - INPUT/OUTPUT => Input => Name: 'A', Bits: 1 - INPUT/OUTPUT => Input => Name: 'B', Bits: 1 - GATES => And - INPUT/OUTPUT => Output => Name: 'OUT', Bits: 1

Now make the appropriate wiring to connect all the components by clicking on one port and dragging the wire to the port you want to connect it to. Connect: - Input 'A' to the first input port of the AND gate - Input 'B' to the second input port of the AND gate - Output 'OUT' to the output port of the AND gate

Your design should look like this:

Simulation

Time to simulate our design and see how the output OUT changes as we change the two inputs.

Click the Simulation tab which is located on the top-right corner and then Start Simulation. Now you can change the value of the two inputs and see how the value of the output. Try all 4 combinations of inputs: - A=0, B=0
- A=0, B=1
- A=1, B=0
- A=1, B=1

and check that the output is correct based on the truth table of the AND gate.

Well Done! You just completed your first ISSIE design.

Exploiting the ISSIE Features

A slightly more complex design

Time to increase the complexity of our design and see how we can exploit the features of ISSIE to create clean and good-looking schematics.

Again, simulate the design and check the output remains correct as you change the values of the 4 inputs

Improving the looking of our design

Clearly, this is a terrible and hard to understand design. Let's improve it! The ISSIE canvas is fully customisable to allow the creation of readable and good-looking schematics. Specifically, we can: 1. Rotate, Flip and Move around all symbols 2. Change and Move around the symbols' labels 3. Manually route wires as you like 4. Auto-align elements 5. Select the wire type we desire (radiussed, jump or modern wires)

You can view the shortcuts for all these modifications by clicking on the edit and view menus.

Let's now look at our improved schematic:

Summary

Using Custom Components

Your root schematic

Time now to learn how to use or schematics as cstom components in other design sheets. Here is the idea: The very simple and theoretically useless design we created earlier can be used as a decoder of a 4-bit message to produce a true/false result. Therefore, we are going to create a schematic with an asynchronous-read 4-bit ROM and the schematic we created before as a custom symbol.

Steps: 1. Change the name of the current sheet from main to decoder (Sheets -> rename) 2. Add a new sheet and name it main 3. Add to the main sheet: - Asynchronous ROM (MEMORIES => ROM (asynchronous)). Select 4 bits addressor, 4 bits data and the Enter data later option - Your decoder (THIS PROJECT => decoder) - 1-bit output named 'RESULT' (INPUT/OUTPUT => Output) - 4-bit input named 'Addressor' (INPUT/OUTPUT => Input) 4. Using 3 SplitWire components (BUSES => SplitWire) separate the 4-bit ROM output to 4 1-bit wires. (see image below) 5. Make the appropriate connections to achieve the schematic below

Improving the design sheet

It's time to use another cool feature of Issie: Moving ports in custom components. Issie allows you to re-order and change the side of input and output ports of custom components by CTRL + CLICKING ON THE PORT you want to move.

Let's look how it works in the gif below:

ROM Initialisation

Currently our ROM is empty as we selected the option Enter Data Later before. Let's put some values in our ROM.

  1. Select the ROM and click on the Properties tab
  2. Click on view/edit memory content
  3. Change the content of the 16 memory location available by assigning a random 4-bit number to each one
  4. Click done

Simulation

Simulate your design! Change the value of the addressor input and see whether your decoder produces a true or false result for each number you assigned to the ROM.

Waveform Simulation

Creating a closed loop design

Let's now make our top-level design a closed-loop one using a custom addressor which will increment every clock cycle. Now, using the waveform simulator we will be able to view the output of our circuit for all memory locations. In order to create such designs easily, ISSIE offers a Counter component which starting from 0, it increments by one every clock cycle.

Add a Counter from the Catalogue (FLIP FLOPS AND REGISTERS). Now select the component and click on Properties. You can select to remove the load and enable ports and give them the default functionality (which is what we want in this case): enable=1; load=0;

Create a schematic like the one below:

Simulating your design

As soon as you connect everything correctly, You can simulate your design. Click on Simulations and then Wave Simulation.

Changing your design

Now add an extra register between the counter and the ROM address (or make any other change you want) and check that the simulation has the expected output. You can see the changes in the waveform simulator simply by clicking the refresh button which will be enabled as soon as it detects a change in the schematic.

Truth Table

One of ISSIE's features is the ability to view the truth table for a combinational circuit.

You can also select your inputs to be algebraic values to get an expression for each of your outputs.

Verilog Component

Last but not least, ISSIE allows you to create combinational custom components by defining the logic in Verilog. Click on Verilog -> New Verilog Component (Catalogue) and write the logic of your decoder in Verilog.

Now what?

You now know how to use ISSIE to create & simulate digital designs.

You can now create your designs (from simple circuits to fully functionable CPUs) and either simulate them or extract them as Verilog to use them with other tools.

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