Intel® Quartus® Prime Standard Edition User Guide: Getting Started
ID
683475
Date
12/16/2019
Public
1. Introduction to Intel® Quartus® Prime Standard Edition
2. Managing Intel® Quartus® Prime Projects
3. Design Planning
4. Introduction to Intel® FPGA IP Cores
5. Migrating to Intel® Quartus® Prime Pro Edition
A. Intel® Quartus® Prime Pro Edition User Guide: Getting Started Documentation Archive
B. Intel® Quartus® Prime Standard Edition User Guides
2.1. Viewing Basic Project Information
2.2. Intel® Quartus® Prime Project Contents
2.3. Managing Project Settings
2.4. Managing Logic Design Files
2.5. Managing Timing Constraints
2.6. Integrating Other EDA Tools
2.7. Exporting Compilation Results
2.8. Migrating Projects Across Operating Systems
2.9. Archiving Projects
2.10. Command-Line Interface
2.11. Managing Projects Revision History
3.1. Design Planning
3.2. Create a Design Specification and Test Plan
3.3. Plan for the Target Device
3.4. Plan for Intellectual Property Cores
3.5. Plan for Standard Interfaces
3.6. Plan for Device Programming
3.7. Plan for Device Power Consumption
3.8. Plan for Interface I/O Pins
3.9. Plan for other EDA Tools
3.10. Plan for On-Chip Debugging Tools
3.11. Plan HDL Coding Styles
3.12. Plan for Hierarchical and Team-Based Designs
3.13. Design Planning Revision History
4.1. IP Catalog and Parameter Editor
4.2. Installing and Licensing Intel® FPGA IP Cores
4.3. IP General Settings
4.4. Adding Your Own IP to IP Catalog
4.5. Best Practices for Intel® FPGA IP
4.6. Generating IP Cores ( Intel® Quartus® Prime Standard Edition)
4.7. Modifying an IP Variation
4.8. Upgrading IP Cores
4.9. Simulating Intel® FPGA IP Cores
4.10. Synthesizing IP Cores in Other EDA Tools
4.11. Instantiating IP Cores in HDL
4.12. Introduction to Intel FPGA IP Cores Revision History
5.2.1. Modify Entity Name Assignments
5.2.2. Resolve Timing Constraint Entity Names
5.2.3. Verify Generated Node Name Assignments
5.2.4. Replace Logic Lock (Standard) Regions
5.2.5. Modify Signal Tap Logic Analyzer Files
5.2.6. Remove References to .qip Files
5.2.7. Remove Unsupported Feature Assignments
5.4.1. Verify Verilog Compilation Unit
5.4.2. Update Entity Auto-Discovery
5.4.3. Ensure Distinct VHDL Namespace for Each Library
5.4.4. Remove Unsupported Parameter Passing
5.4.5. Remove Unsized Constant from WYSIWYG Instantiation
5.4.6. Remove Non-Standard Pragmas
5.4.7. Declare Objects Before Initial Values
5.4.8. Confine SystemVerilog Features to SystemVerilog Files
5.4.9. Avoid Assignment Mixing in Always Blocks
5.4.10. Avoid Unconnected, Non-Existent Ports
5.4.11. Avoid Illegal Parameter Ranges
5.4.12. Update Verilog HDL and VHDL Type Mapping
2.3.2.2. Optimize Settings with Project Revisions
You can save multiple, named project revisions within your Intel® Quartus® Prime project (Project > Revisions). Each project revision captures a unique set of project settings and constraints, while using the same set of logic design files.
Use revisions to experiment with different settings while preserving the original. Optimize different revisions for separate applications:
- Create a unique revision to optimize a design for different criteria, such as by area in one revision and by fMAX in another revision.
- When you create a new revision the default Intel® Quartus® Prime settings initially apply.
- Create a revision of a revision to experiment with settings and constraints. The child revision includes all the assignments and settings of the parent revision.
You create, delete, and edit revisions in the Revisions dialog box. Each time you create a new project revision, the Intel® Quartus® Prime software creates a new .qsf using the revision name.
To compare each revision’s synthesis, fitting, and timing analysis results side-by-side, click Project > Revisions and then click Compare. In addition to viewing the compilation Results of each revision, you can also compare the Assignments for each revision. This comparison reveals how different optimization options affect your design.
Figure 12. Comparing Project Revisions
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