Comments are allowed within the input by placing a pound sign (#) as the first character on a line. Comments and unrecognized keywords are passed directly from the input file to standard output. Any white-space (blanks, tabs, etc.), except when used as a delimiter in an embedded command, is ignored. It is generally assumed that the PLA is specified such that each row of the PLA fits on a single line in the input file.
The purpose of the espresso minimization program is to find a logically equivalent set of product-terms to represent the ON -set and optionally minterms which lie in the DC -set, without containing any minterms of the OFF -set.
A Boolean function can be described in one of the following ways:
If at all possible, espresso should be given the DC -set (either implicitly or explicitly) in order to improve the results of the minimization.
A term is represented by a "cube" which can be considered either a compact representation of an algebraic product term which implies the function value is a 1, or as a representation of a row in a PLA which implements the term. A cube has an input part which corresponds to the input plane of a PLA , and an output part which corresponds to the output plane of a PLA (for the multiple-valued case, see below).
Each position in the input plane corresponds to an input variable where a 0 implies the corresponding input literal appears complemented in the product term, a 1 implies the input literal appears uncomplemented in the product term, and - implies the input literal does not appear in the product term.
With type f , for each output, a 1 means this product term belongs to the ON -set, and a 0 or - means this product term has no meaning for the value of this function. This type corresponds to an actual PLA where only the ON -set is actually implemented.
With type fd (the default), for each output, a 1 means this product term belongs to the ON -set, a 0 means this product term has no meaning for the value of this function, and a - implies this product term belongs to the DC -set.
With type fr , for each output, a 1 means this product term belongs to the ON -set, a 0 means this product term belongs to the OFF -set, and a - means this product term has no meaning for the value of this function.
With type fdr , for each output, a 1 means this product term belongs to the ON -set, a 0 means this product term belongs to the OFF -set, a - means this product term belongs to the DC -set, and a ~ implies this product term has no meaning for the value of this function.
Note that regardless of the type of PLA , a ~ implies the product term has no meaning for the value of this function. 2 is allowed as a synonym for - , 4 is allowed for 1 , and 3 is allowed for ~ .
A multiple-output binary function with ni inputs and no outputs would be specified as .mv ni+1 ni no . .mv cannot be used with either .i or .o - use one or the other to specify the function size.
The binary variables are given as described above. Each of the multiple-valued variables are given as a bit-vector of 0 and 1 which have their usual meaning for multiple-valued functions. The last multiple-valued variable (also called the output) is interpreted as described above for the output (to split the function into an ON -set, OFF -set and DC -set). A vertical bar | may be used to separate the multiple-valued fields in the input file.
If the size of the multiple-valued field is less than zero, than a symbolic field is interpreted from the input file. The absolute value of the size specifies the maximum number of unique symbolic labels which are expected in this column. The symbolic labels are white-space delimited strings of characters.
To perform a kiss -style encoding problem, the keyword .kiss should be included in the file. The third to last variable on the input file must be the symbolic "present state", and the second to last variable must be the "next state". As always, the last variable is the output. The symbolic "next state" will be hacked to be actually part of the output.
# 2-bit by 2-bit binary adder (with no carry input) .i 4 .o 3 0000 000 0001 001 0010 010 0011 011 0100 001 0101 010 0110 011 0111 100 1000 010 1001 011 1010 100 1011 101 1100 011 1101 100 1110 101 1111 110
It is also possible to specify some extra options, such as:
# 2-bit by 2-bit binary adder (with no carry input) .i 4 .o 3 .ilb a1 a0 b1 b0 .ob s2 s1 s0 .pair 2 (a1 b1) (a0 b0) .phase 011 0000 000 0001 001 0010 010 . . . 1111 110 .e
The option .pair indicates that the first binary-valued variable should be paired with the third binary-valued variable, and that the second variable should be paired with the fourth variable. The function will then be mapped into an equivalent multiple-valued minimization problem.
The option .phase indicates that the positive-phase should be used for the second and third outputs, and that the negative phase should be used for the first output.
.mv 8 5 4 27 10 .ilb in1 in2 in3 in4 in5 .label var=5 part1 part2 part3 part4 .label var=6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z a1 .label var=7 out1 out2 out3 out4 out5 out6 out7 out8 out9 out10 0-010|1000|100000000000000000000000000|0010000000 10-10|1000|010000000000000000000000000|1000000000 0-111|1000|001000000000000000000000000|0001000000 0-10-|1000|000100000000000000000000000|0001000000 00000|1000|000010000000000000000000000|1000000000 00010|1000|000001000000000000000000000|0010000000 01001|1000|000000100000000000000000000|0000000010 0101-|1000|000000010000000000000000000|0000000000 0-0-0|1000|000000001000000000000000000|1000000000 10000|1000|000000000100000000000000000|0000000000 11100|1000|000000000010000000000000000|0010000000 10-10|1000|000000000001000000000000000|0000000000 11111|1000|000000000000100000000000000|0010000000 . . . 11111|0001|000000000000000000000000001|0000000000 Example #3 This example shows a description of a multiple-valued function setup for kiss -style minimization. There are 5 binary variables, 2 symbolic variables (the present-state and the next-state of the FSM) and the output (8 variables total). .mv 8 5 -10 -10 6 .ilb io1 io0 init swr mack .ob wait minit mrd sack mwr dli .type fr .kiss --1-- - init0 110000 --1-- init0 init0 110000 --0-- init0 init1 110000 --00- init1 init1 110000 --01- init1 init2 110001 --0-- init2 init4 110100 --01- init4 init4 110100 --00- init4 iowait 000000 0000- iowait iowait 000000 1000- iowait init1 110000 01000 iowait read0 101000 11000 iowait write0 100010 01001 iowait rmack 100000 11001 iowait wmack 100000 --01- iowait init2 110001 --0-0 rmack rmack 100000 --0-1 rmack read0 101000 --0-0 wmack wmack 100000 --0-1 wmack write0 100010 --0-- read0 read1 101001 --0-- read1 iowait 000000 --0-- write0 iowait 000000 Example 4 This example shows the use of the .symbolic keyword to setup a multiple-valued minimization problem. .i 15 .o 4 .ilb SeqActive<0> CacheOp<6> CacheOp<5> CacheOp<4> CacheOp<3> CacheOp<2> CacheOp<1> CacheOp<0> userKernel<0> Protection<1> Protection<0> cacheState<1> cacheState<0> PageDirty<0> WriteCycleIn<0> .ob CacheBusy<0> dataMayBeValid<0> dataIsValid<0> WriteCycleOut<0> .symbolic CacheOp<6> CacheOp<5> CacheOp<4> CacheOp<3> CacheOp<2> CacheOp<1> CacheOp<0> ; FET NA PHY_FET PR32 PRE_FET PW32 RA32 RD32 RD64 RDCACHE RFO32 RFO64 TS32 WR32 WR64 WRCACHE ; .symbolic Protection<1> Protection<0> ; PROT_KRO_UNA PROT_KRW_UNA PROT_KRW_URO PROT_KRW_URW ; .symbolic cacheState<1> cacheState<0> ; CS_Invalid CS_OwnPrivate CS_OwnShared CS_UnOwned ; .p 22 0000001--010110 0001 0000001-1-00110 0001 00001011-01011- 0100 000010111-0011- 0100 0000--001--01-- 0100 0000-10--0-1--- 0100 0000-10-1--1--- 0100 00000-0--0-1--- 0100 00000-0-1--1--- 0100 0000-10--0--1-- 0100 0000-10-1---1-- 0100 00000-0--0--1-- 0100 00000-0-1---1-- 0100 ---1----------- 1000 --1------------ 1000 -1------------- 1000 1-------------- 1000 -------0------- 1000 ----1---------- 1000 -----0--------- 1000 ------0-------- 1000 --------------1 1110 .e