IEEE 1076
|
The IEEE Standard 1076 defines the VHSIC Hardware Description Language or VHDL. It was originally developed by CLSI under contract F33615-83-C-1003 from the United States Airforce in 1983. The language has undergone numerous revisions and has a variety of sub-standards associated with it that augment or extend it in important ways.
1076 was and continues to be a milestone in the design of electronic systems.
Revisions:
- 1076-1987 First standardized revision of ver 7.2 of the language from the United States Air Force.
- 1076-1993 (ISBN 1-55937-376-8) Significant improvements resulting from several years of feedback. Probably the most widely used version with the greatest vendor tool support.
- 1076-2000 Minor revision. Done mainly to meet IEEE requirement that standards are addressed every five years to see if they are still pertinent
- 1076-200x The name given to future work on the standard going on as of 2004
See Also:
- IEEE 1076.1 VHDL Analog and Mixed-Signal
- IEEE 1076.1.1 VHDL-AMS Standard Packages (stdpkgs)
- IEEE 1076.2 VHDL Math Package (math)
- IEEE 1076.3 VHDL Synthesis Package (vhdlsynth)
- IEEE 1076.3 VHDL Synthesis Package - Floating Point (fphdl)
- IEEE 1076.4 Timing (VHDL Initiative Towards ASIC Libraries: vital)
- IEEE 1076.6 VHDL Synthesis Interoperability
- IEEE 1164 VHDL Multivalue Logic (std_logic_1164) Packages