CSPICE

NAME
SYNOPSIS
OPTIONS
DESCRIPTION
NUMERIC SUFFIXES
CONFIGURATION FILE
EXAMPLES
FILES
SEE ALSO

NAME

cspice - put a SPICE network description into the database

SYNOPSIS

cspice [-Idpsw] networkfile ...

OPTIONS

The following options can be specified:

-I

Interactive mode for circuit equivalence selection (functional mode only).

-d

Generate dummy circuit design object for all instantiated functional blocks. Will overwrite an existing working version of the circuit (functional mode only).

-p

Run the C preprocessor before parsing the input file.

-s

The silent mode suppresses messages about the actions taken by the program which are usually printed on the screen.

-w

Do not print warnings.

DESCRIPTION

Cspice is a program that generates from a spice network description a circuit description in database format. The database format can serve as input to several application programs, e.g. the circuit simulator spice, the switch-level simulator sls, and the network comparison program match. A description of the spice language can be found in the SPICE User's Guide. The spice description that can be used as input for cspice extends the normal spice network description in that numbers as well as identifiers may be used for node and terminal specifications.

A network description can be hierarchical and may reside in several files. However, when one particular network is added to the database, network descriptions of the networks that are called in the network must have been added to the database before.

In the file 'global_nets' one may optionally specify names of nets (terminals) that are global. Each node or terminal that has a name equal to the name of a global net, will be connected to other nodes and terminals that have the same name, among other things by possibly defining extra terminals for each network. First, cspice will try to find a file 'global_nets' in the current working directory. Second, if the above attempt fails, cspice will try to open a file 'global_nets' in the corresponding process directory.

NUMERIC SUFFIXES

Cspice supports the following scale-factor letter conventions (case is insignificant):

A

1e-18

F

1e-15

P

1e-12

N

1e-9

U

1e-6

M

1e-3

MI

25.4e-4 (MIL)

K

1e+3

ME

1e+6 (MEG)

G

1e+9

T

1e+12

CONFIGURATION FILE

At start-up of the program, cspice will read some information from a configuration file called ".cspicerc". First, it tries to read this file from the process directory (without leading dot). Second, it tries to read this file from the home directory of the user. Thirdly, it tries to read this file from the current directory. Settings in the second and third configuration file overrule the previous settings. The configuration file may contain the following keywords, followed by a specification on the same line if the keyword ends with ':';

FORBID_FIRST_CAPITAL_ON

Generate an error message if the name of a network that is defined starts with a capital.

FORBID_FIRST_CAPITAL_OFF

Don't generate an error message (default mode).

RUN_CPP_ON

Run the C preprocessor before parsing the input file.

RUN_CPP_OFF

Don't run the C preprocessor (default mode).

CPP_OPTIONS:

Options for running the C preprocessor (default none).

DEFAULT_INCLUDE:

Specifies a file that is automatically included at the top of the input file if the C preprocessor is run (default: no include).

EXAMPLES

$ cspice latch.spc

FILES

.cspicerc

(2nd altern.) configuration file

HOME/.cspicerc

(1st altern.) configuration file

ICDPATH/share/lib/process/process/cspicerc

(default) configuration file

global_nets

(default) file to specify global nets

ICDPATH/share/lib/process/process/global_nets

(altern.) file to specify global nets

/usr/tmp/x*

temporary files

SEE ALSO

"SPICE 3B1 User's Guide", Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California, Berkeley.
csls(1ICD), sls(1ICD), nspice(1ICD), xspice(1ICD).