Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: volare
Version: 0.5.1
Summary: A sky130 PDK builder/version manager
Home-page: UNKNOWN
Author: Mohamed Gaber
Author-email: mohamed.gaber@efabless.com
License: UNKNOWN
Description: <h1 align="center">⛰️ Volare</h1>
        <p align="center">
            <a href="https://opensource.org/licenses/Apache-2.0"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/License-Apache%202.0-blue.svg" alt="License: Apache 2.0"/></a>
            <img src="https://github.com/efabless/volare/actions/workflows/ci.yml/badge.svg?branch=main" alt="CI Status" />
            <a href="https://invite.skywater.tools"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Community-Skywater%20PDK%20Slack-ff69b4?logo=slack" alt="Invite to the Skywater PDK Slack"/></a>
            <a href="https://github.com/psf/black"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-black-000000.svg" alt="Code Style: Black"/></a>
        </p>
        
        <p align="center">Volare is a version manager (and builder) for builds of <a href="https://github.com/google/open-source-pdks">Google open-source PDKs</a> using <a href="https://github.com/rtimothyedwards/open_pdks">open_pdks</a>.</p>
        
        # Requirements
        * Python 3.6+ with PIP
        * macOS or GNU/Linux
        
        ## macOS
        Get [Homebrew](https://brew.sh) then:
        
        ```sh
        brew install python3
        ```
        
        ## Debian and Ubuntu
        Debian 10+ or Ubuntu 18.04+ is required.
        
        ```sh
        sudo apt-get update
        sudo apt-get install python3 python3-pip xz-utils
        ```
        
        ## RHEL and Derivatives
        RHEL 7+ or compatible operating system required.
        ```sh
        sudo yum install -y python3 python3-pip
        ```
        
        
        # Installation and Upgrades
        ```sh
        # To install (or upgrade)
        python3 -m pip install --upgrade --no-cache-dir volare
        
        # To verify it works
        volare --version
        ```
        
        ## Troubleshooting
        With a typical Python 3.6 or higher installation with PIP, installing `volare` is as simple as a `pip install`. Despite that, there are some peculiarities with PIP itself: For example, you may see a warning among these lines:
        
        ```sh
          WARNING: The script volare is installed in '/home/test/.local/bin' which is not on PATH.
          Consider adding this directory to PATH or, if you prefer to suppress this warning, use --no-warn-script-location.
        ```
        
        The solution is as simple as adding something like this to your shell's profile:
        
        ```sh
        export PATH="/home/test/.local/bin:$PATH"
        ```
        
        Do note that the path (`/home/test/.local/bin` in this example) varies depending on your operating system and version of Python you install, and whether you use `sudo` (absolutely not recommended) or not, so ensure that you actually read the warning and add the correct path.
        
        # About the builds
        In its current inception, volare supports builds of **sky130** and **gf180mcu** PDKs using [Open_PDKs](https://github.com/efabless/open_pdks), including the following libraries:
        
        |sky130|gf180mcu|
        |-|-|
        |sky130_fd_io|gf180mcu_fd_io|
        |sky130_fd_pr|gf180mcu_fd_pr|
        |sky130_fd_sc_hd|gf180mcu_fd_sc_mcu7t5v0|
        |sky130_fd_sc_hvl|gf180mcu_fd_sc_mcu9t5v0|
        |sky130 sram modules|gf180mcu_fd_bd_sram|
        
        All builds are identified by their **open_pdks** commit hash.
        
        # Usage
        Volare requires a so-called **PDK Root**. This PDK root can be anywhere on your computer, but by default it's the folder `~/.volare` in your home directory. If you have the variable `PDK_ROOT` set, volare will use that instead. You can also manually override both values by supplying the `--pdk-root` commandline argument.
        
        ## Listing All Available PDKs
        To list all available pre-built PDKs hosted in this repository, you can just invoke `volare ls-remote --pdk <PDK>`. If you omit the `--pdk` argument, `sky130` will be used as a default.
        
        ```sh
        $ volare ls-remote --pdk sky130
        Pre-built sky130 PDK versions
        ├── 44a43c23c81b45b8e774ae7a84899a5a778b6b0b (2022.08.16) (enabled)
        ├── e8294524e5f67c533c5d0c3afa0bcc5b2a5fa066 (2022.07.29) (installed)
        ├── 41c0908b47130d5675ff8484255b43f66463a7d6 (2022.04.14) (installed)
        ├── 660c6bdc8715dc7b3db95a1ce85392bbf2a2b195 (2022.04.08)
        ├── 5890e791e37699239abedfd2a67e55162e25cd94 (2022.04.06)
        ├── 8fe7f760ece2bb49b1c310e60243f0558977dae5 (2022.04.06)
        └── 7519dfb04400f224f140749cda44ee7de6f5e095 (2022.02.10)
        
        $ volare ls-remote --pdk gf180mcu
        Pre-built gf180mcu PDK versions
        └── 120b0bd69c745825a0b8b76f364043a1cd08bb6a (2022.09.22)
        ```
        
        It includes a commit hash, which is the `open_pdks` version used to build this particular PDK, the date that this commit was created, and whether you already installed this PDK and/or if it is the currently enabled PDK.
        
        ## Listing Installed PDKs
        Typing `volare ls --pdk <pdk>` in the terminal shows you your PDK Root and the PDKs you currently have installed. Again, if you omit the `--pdk` argument, `sky130` will be used as a default.
        
        ```sh
        $ volare ls --pdk sky130
        /home/test/volare/sky130/versions
        ├── 44a43c23c81b45b8e774ae7a84899a5a778b6b0b (2022.08.16) (enabled)
        ├── e8294524e5f67c533c5d0c3afa0bcc5b2a5fa066 (2022.07.29)
        └── 41c0908b47130d5675ff8484255b43f66463a7d6 (2022.04.14)
        ```
        
        (If you're not connected to the Internet, the release date of the commit will not be included.)
        
        
        ## Downloading and Enabling PDKs
        You can enable a particular sky130 PDK by invoking `volare enable --pdk <pdk> <open_pdks commit hash>`. This will automatically download that particular version of the PDK, if found, and set it as your currently used PDK.
        
        For example, to activate a build of sky130 using open_pdks `7519dfb04400f224f140749cda44ee7de6f5e095`, you invoke `volare enable --pdk sky130 7519dfb04400f224f140749cda44ee7de6f5e095`, as shown below:
        
        ```sh
        $ volare enable --pdk sky130 7519dfb04400f224f140749cda44ee7de6f5e095
        Downloading pre-built tarball for 7519dfb04400f224f140749cda44ee7de6f5e095… ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 100% 0:00:00
        Unpacking…                                                                  ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 100% 0:00:00
        PDK version 7519dfb04400f224f140749cda44ee7de6f5e095 enabled.
        ```
        
        What's more is: if you're using a repository with a `tool_metadata.yml` file, such as [OpenLane](https://github.com/The-OpenROAD-Project/OpenLane) or [DFFRAM](https://github.com/Cloud-V/DFFRAM), you can just invoke `volare enable --pdk sky130` without the commit hash and Volare will automatically extract the version required by the utility. Once again, if you omit the `--pdk` argument, `sky130` will be used as a default.
        
        ## Building PDKs
        For special cases, i.e. you require other libraries, you'll have to build the PDK yourself, which Volare does support.
        
        It does require Docker 19.04 or higher, however.
        
        You can invoke `volare build --help` for more options. Be aware, the built PDK won't automatically be enabled and you'll have to `volare enable` the appropriate version.
        
        # License
        The Apache License, version 2.0. See 'License'.
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX :: Linux
Classifier: Operating System :: MacOS :: MacOS X
Requires-Python: >3.6
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
