C++ Arbitrary Precision Integer Types - 2021.1 English

Vitis High-Level Synthesis User Guide (UG1399)

Document ID
UG1399
Release Date
2021-06-16
Version
2021.1 English

The native data types in C++ are on 8-bit boundaries (8, 16, 32, and 64 bits). RTL signals and operations support arbitrary bit-lengths.

Vitis HLS provides arbitrary precision data types for C++ to allow variables and operations in the C++ code to be specified with any arbitrary bit-widths: 6-bit, 17-bit, 234-bit, up to 1024 bits.

Tip: The default maximum width allowed is 1024 bits. You can override this default by defining the macro AP_INT_MAX_W with a positive integer value less than or equal to 4096 before inclusion of the ap_int.h header file.

Arbitrary precision data types have are two primary advantages over the native C++ types:

  • Better quality hardware: If for example, a 17-bit multiplier is required, arbitrary precision types can specify that exactly 17-bit are used in the calculation.

    Without arbitrary precision data types, such a multiplication (17-bit) must be implemented using 32-bit integer data types and result in the multiplication being implemented with multiple DSP modules.

  • Accurate C++ simulation/analysis: Arbitrary precision data types in the C++ code allows the C++ simulation to be performed using accurate bit-widths and for the C++ simulation to validate the functionality (and accuracy) of the algorithm before synthesis.

The arbitrary precision types in C++ have none of the disadvantages of those in C:

  • C++ arbitrary types can be compiled with standard C++ compilers (there is no C++ equivalent of apcc).
  • C++ arbitrary precision types do not suffer from Integer Promotion Issues.

It is not uncommon for users to change a file extension from .c to .cpp so the file can be compiled as C++, where neither of these issues are present.

For the C++ language, the header file ap_int.h defines the arbitrary precision integer data types ap_(u)int<W>. For example, ap_int<8> represents an 8-bit signed integer data type and ap_uint<234> represents a 234-bit unsigned integer type.

The ap_int.h file is located in the directory $HLS_ROOT/include, where $HLS_ROOT is the Vitis HLS installation directory.

The code shown in the following example is a repeat of the code shown in the Basic Arithmetic example in Standard Types. In this example, the data types in the top-level function to be synthesized are specified as dinA_t, dinB_t, and so on.

#include "cpp_ap_int_arith.h"

void cpp_ap_int_arith(din_A  inA, din_B  inB, din_C  inC, din_D  inD,
 dout_1 *out1, dout_2 *out2, dout_3 *out3, dout_4 *out4
) {

 // Basic arithmetic operations
 *out1 = inA * inB;
 *out2 = inB + inA;
 *out3 = inC / inA;
 *out4 = inD % inA;

}

In this latest update to this example, the C++ arbitrary precision types are used:

  • Add header file ap_int.h to the source code.
  • Change the native C++ types to arbitrary precision types ap_int<N> or ap_uint<N>, where N is a bit-size from 1 to 1024 (as noted above, this can be extended to 4K-bits if required).

The data types are defined in the header cpp_ap_int_arith.h.

Compared with the Basic Arithmetic example in Standard Types, the input data types have simply been reduced to represent the maximum size of the real input data (for example, 8-bit input inA is reduced to 6-bit input). The output types have been refined to be more accurate, for example, out2, the sum of inA and inB, need only be 13-bit and not 32-bit.

The following example shows basic arithmetic with C++ arbitrary precision types.

#ifndef _CPP_AP_INT_ARITH_H_
#define _CPP_AP_INT_ARITH_H_

#include <stdio.h>
#include "ap_int.h"

#define N 9

// Old data types
//typedef char dinA_t;
//typedef short dinB_t;
//typedef int dinC_t;
//typedef long long dinD_t;
//typedef int dout1_t;
//typedef unsigned int dout2_t;
//typedef int32_t dout3_t;
//typedef int64_t dout4_t;

typedef ap_int<6> dinA_t;
typedef ap_int<12> dinB_t;
typedef ap_int<22> dinC_t;
typedef ap_int<33> dinD_t;

typedef ap_int<18> dout1_t;
typedef ap_uint<13> dout2_t;
typedef ap_int<22> dout3_t;
typedef ap_int<6> dout4_t;

void cpp_ap_int_arith(dinA_t inA,dinB_t inB,dinC_t inC,dinD_t inD,dout1_t 
*out1,dout2_t *out2,dout3_t *out3,dout4_t *out4);

#endif

If C++ Arbitrary Precision Integer Types are synthesized, it results in a design that is functionally identical to Standard Types. Rather than use the C++ cout operator to output the results to a file, the built-in ap_int method .to_int() is used to convert the ap_int results to integer types used with the standard fprintf function.

fprintf(fp, %d*%d=%d; %d+%d=%d; %d/%d=%d; %d mod %d=%d;\n, 
 inA.to_int(), inB.to_int(), out1.to_int(), 
 inB.to_int(), inA.to_int(), out2.to_int(), 
 inC.to_int(), inA.to_int(), out3.to_int(), 
 inD.to_int(), inA.to_int(), out4.to_int());