In 1983, VHDL was originally developed at the behest of the
U.S. Department of Defense in order to document the behavior of the
ASIC that supplier companies were including in equipment. The standard MIL-STD-454N in Requirement 64 in section 4.5.1 "ASIC documentation in VHDL" explicitly requires documentation of "Microelectronic Devices" in VHDL. The idea of being able to simulate the ASICs from the information in this documentation was so obviously attractive that
logic simulators were developed that could read the VHDL files. The next step was the development of
logic synthesis tools that read the VHDL and output a definition of the physical implementation of the circuit. Due to the Department of Defense requiring as much of the syntax as possible to be based on Ada, in order to avoid re-inventing concepts that had already been thoroughly tested in the development of Ada, VHDL borrows heavily from the
Ada programming language in both concept and
syntax. The initial version of VHDL, designed to
IEEE standard IEEE 1076–1987, included a wide range of data types, including numerical (
integer and
real), logical (
bit and
Boolean),
character and
time, plus
arrays of bit called bit_vector and of character called
string. A problem not solved by this edition, however, was
multi-valued logic, where a signal's
drive strength (none, weak or strong) and unknown values are also considered. This required
IEEE standard 1164, which defined the 9-value logic types: scalar std_logic and its vector version std_logic_vector. Being a resolved subtype of its std_Ulogic parent type, std_logic-typed signals allow multiple driving for modeling bus structures, whereby the connected resolution function handles conflicting assignments adequately. The updated
IEEE 1076, in 1993, made the syntax more consistent, allowed more flexibility in naming, extended the character type to allow
ISO-8859-1 printable characters, added the xnor operator, etc. Minor changes in the standard (2000 and 2002) added the idea of protected types (similar to the concept of class in
C++) and removed some restrictions from port mapping rules. In addition to IEEE standard 1164, several child standards were introduced to extend functionality of the language. IEEE standard 1076.2 added better handling of real and complex data types. IEEE standard 1076.3 introduced
signed and unsigned types to facilitate arithmetical operations on vectors. IEEE standard 1076.1 (known as
VHDL-AMS) provided analog and mixed-signal circuit design extensions. Some other standards support wider use of VHDL, notably
VITAL (VHDL Initiative Towards ASIC Libraries) and
microwave circuit design extensions. In June 2006, the VHDL Technical Committee of
Accellera (delegated by IEEE to work on the next update of the standard) approved so-called Draft 3.0 of VHDL-2006. While maintaining full compatibility with older versions, this proposed standard provides numerous extensions that make writing and managing VHDL code easier. Key changes include incorporation of child standards (1164, 1076.2, 1076.3) into the main 1076 standard, an extended set of operators, more flexible syntax of
case and
generate statements, incorporation of VHPI (VHDL Procedural Interface) (interface to C/C++ languages) and a subset of PSL (
Property Specification Language). These changes should improve quality of synthesizable VHDL code, make testbenches more flexible, and allow wider use of VHDL for system-level descriptions. In February 2008, Accellera approved VHDL 4.0, also informally known as VHDL 2008, which addressed more than 90 issues discovered during the trial period for version 3.0 and includes enhanced generic types. In 2008, Accellera released VHDL 4.0 to the IEEE for balloting for inclusion in IEEE 1076–2008. The VHDL standard IEEE 1076-2008 was published in January 2009.
Standardization The
IEEE Standard 1076 defines the
VHSIC Hardware Description Language, or VHDL. It was originally developed under contract F33615-83-C-1003 from the
United States Air Force awarded in 1983 to a team of Intermetrics, Inc. as language experts and prime contractor,
Texas Instruments as chip design experts and
IBM as computer-system design experts. The language has undergone numerous revisions and has a variety of sub-standards associated with it that augment or extend it in important ways. IEEE Standard 1076 was and continues to be a milestone in the design of electronic systems.
Revisions • IEEE 1076–1987 (also published with ). Significant improvements resulting from several years of feedback. Probably the most widely used version with the greatest vendor tool support. • IEEE 1076–2000. Minor revision. Introduces the use of
protected types. • IEEE 1076–2002. Minor revision of 1076–2000. Rules with regard to
buffer ports are relaxed. • IEC 61691-1-1:2004. IEC adoption of IEEE 1076–2002. • IEEE 1076c–2007. Introduced VHPI, the VHDL procedural interface, which provides software with the means to access the VHDL model. The VHDL language required minor modifications to accommodate the VHPI. • IEEE 1076–2008 (previously referred to as 1076–200x). Major revision released on 2009-01-26. Among other changes, this standard incorporates a basic subset of PSL, allows for generics on packages and subprograms and introduces the use of
external names. • IEC 61691-1-1:2011. IEC adoption of IEEE 1076–2008. • IEEE 1076–2019. Major revision.
Related standards • IEEE 1076.1 VHDL Analog and Mixed-Signal (
VHDL-AMS) • IEEE 1076.1.1 VHDL-AMS Standard Packages (stdpkgs) • IEEE 1076.2 VHDL Math Package • IEEE 1076.3 VHDL Synthesis Package (vhdlsynth) (
numeric std) • IEEE 1076.3 VHDL Synthesis Package – Floating Point (fphdl) • IEEE 1076.4 Timing (VHDL Initiative Towards ASIC Libraries: VITAL) • IEEE 1076.6 VHDL Synthesis Interoperability (withdrawn in 2010) •
IEEE 1164 VHDL Multivalue Logic (std_logic_1164) Packages ==Design==