/***************************************************************************** Licensed to Accellera Systems Initiative Inc. (Accellera) under one or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. Accellera licenses this file to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. *****************************************************************************/ /***************************************************************************** test.cpp -- Original Author: Martin Janssen, Synopsys, Inc., 2002-02-15 *****************************************************************************/ /***************************************************************************** MODIFICATION LOG - modifiers, enter your name, affiliation, date and changes you are making here. Name, Affiliation, Date: Description of Modification: *****************************************************************************/ /* Nov/29/00 Ulli Holtmann Assignment of values other than 0 or 1 to an sc_bit results in a core dump on Sparc SC5.0 as well as g++. I used SystemC 1.0.1 I can understand that only 0 and 1 make sense, so please either forbid assignment from an integer and cast the integer to bool first. A core dump is a bit to drastic. Example: */ #include int sc_main(int argc, char* arg[]) { sc_bit res; // works fine res = 0; cout << res << "\n"; res = 1; cout << res << "\n"; res = bool(2); cout << res << "\n"; // results in a core dump res = sc_bit(2); cout << res << "\n"; res = 2; cout << res << "\n"; return 0; } /* Dec/7/00 ulrich Hi Gene, I agree that the assignment of values other than 0,1 doesn't make much sense, so please go ahead and forbid it in one way or another. However, such an illegal assignment may easily happen in a user-program because the compiler accepts it. It very easy to write. The point I dislike is that the class library immediately core dumps without any warning or explanation. Does SystemC throw an exception? I don't know and I most likely will not write an exception handler, therefore I will never know. I just see that the SystemC kernel core dumps. What about an assert statement such like assert(v==0 || v==1); That should me as the user a precise and reasonable explanation that I made a mistake. I could also accept an error message like E200x or so coming like when I enter illlegal bit characters, e.g. sc_bv<10>="102abd00". But please, not just a core dump. Jan/9/01 ulrich Hi Gene, I still only ask that the program does not core dump and instead prints an error message or warning like it does for sc_logic. I only object to the core dump itself. Example: int main(int argc, char* arg[]) { sc_logic l (5); cout << l << "\n"; sc_bit b(2); cout << b << "\n"; } Both are invalid assignments. The first one prompt a warning (1006), the second a core dump. Both should prompt warnings/run time errors. I reduce the prioity to B2 because it's now only a matter of properly reporting an error. Other than this, I can share your view that assigning 2 is a user error. */