Perl is a high-level programming language. Larry Wall invented Perl and thousands have contributed their time making it a very powerful tool. Perl borrows heavily from the C programming language and copies the really useful bits from sed, awk, Unix shell, and many other tools and languages.
Perl Productivity
Perl's process, file, and text manipulation facilities make it
particularly well-suited for tasks involving automatic code generation,
report filtering, netlist patching, generating test vectors and
controlling tools.
Perl is FREE so maybe you should use it too.
Followings offer advice and examples for improving design productivity through with Perl.
Automatic Code Generation
Perl has been used for translating between related languages: VHDL to
Verilog, Xilinx Netlist Files to VHDL, VHDL to SystemC, etc. Source
files with low originality are prime candidates for automatic
generation.VHDL engineers regularly write testbenches. We've written an
online demonstration to show you how Perl can do it for you.
Perl is also useful for Coding Style conformance checking and enforcement.
Report Filtering
EDA tools are notorious for creating verbose report files. Many
megabytes of text may contain little interesting information. Perl is
well matched to extracting key information quickly.
Netlist Patching
EDA tools within design flows never fit together perfectly. Often,
really useful features are unsupported. Netlists generated from one
tool need modifying before the next tool will read them. Perl is well
matched to intelligent search and replace jobs.
Generating Test Vectors
Perl can apply rules for generating sophisticated test vector patterns:
ATM packets, MPEG streams, QAM samples with added noise, etc.
Controlling Tools
Perl is able to call any tool installed on its host computer. Perl can
even run Telnet and FTP sessions to control remote computers. Any task
involving more than one tool can be automated using a Perl script.
A Perl script might run a tool, filter the textual output then decide
whether to: modify constraints and try again, move on to the next tool
in the flow or abort and send email notification to a project leader.
Where To Get Perl
Many operating systems support Perl. Most importantly ports exist for,
Linux, Windows and versions of Unix. The standard Perl release is
available in source code only. However, hardware engineers don't have
time to compile their own and binary distributions are freely
available.
You can find ports for many operating systems on CPAN (Comprehensive
Perl Archive Network. Currently, Doulos use the free ActivePerl
distributions from ActiveState for Solaris and Windows.
Regular Expressions
Almost every Perl script uses regular expressions. We've written a Perl
Regular Expression Viewer tool to help you write them faster. Download
your free copy now.
Essential Perl training
To become a skilled and efficient user of Perl for hardware design, you need to attend Essential Perl, an intensive 3 day course teaching the application of Perl specifically to ASIC, FPGA and PLD design.