gnupic: Thread: gpsim: how to reset simulation time?


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Subject: gpsim: how to reset simulation time?
From: Jan Reucker ####@####.####
Date: 27 Mar 2003 12:33:07 -0000
Message-Id: <20030327132003.1bd0c344.jan.reucker@web.de>

Hello!

I'm currently learning how to use gpsim and I'm really impressed of it.
But somehow there seems to be one function missing (or maybe I just
didn't find it in the documentation:

How can I *completely* reset the simulation, not only the processor
itself? After a reset command, the simulation time and all stimuli
do not reset to zero. This means I have to quit gpsim and start it
over again to simulate a stimulus again. Is there any other way?

Thanks a lot for your support!
Jan

-- 
Dipl.-Ing. Jan Reucker   email:   ####@####.####
Ober-Ramstadt, Germany   home:    http://www.reucker-online.de/
ICQ#   46584597          PGP-Key: http://www.reucker-online.de/pgpkey.asc
Linux - because life is too short to reboot.
Subject: Re: gpsim: how to reset simulation time?
From: Scott Dattalo ####@####.####
Date: 27 Mar 2003 14:42:29 -0000
Message-Id: <Pine.LNX.4.44.0303270626030.5120-100000@ruckus.brouhaha.com>

On Thu, 27 Mar 2003, Jan Reucker wrote:

> Hello!
> 
> I'm currently learning how to use gpsim and I'm really impressed of it.
> But somehow there seems to be one function missing (or maybe I just
> didn't find it in the documentation:
> 
> How can I *completely* reset the simulation, not only the processor
> itself? After a reset command, the simulation time and all stimuli
> do not reset to zero. This means I have to quit gpsim and start it
> over again to simulate a stimulus again. Is there any other way?
> 
> Thanks a lot for your support!

Unfortunately, quitting and restarting is the only option right now. You 
could minimize the pain by creating scripts to initialize a certain debug 
state. (For example, you could create a single script for setting a dozen 
break points or whatever.)

Scott

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