System Calls - 2024.2 English

Vitis High-Level Synthesis User Guide (UG1399)

Document ID
UG1399
Release Date
2024-11-13
Version
2024.2 English

System calls cannot be synthesized because they are actions that relate to performing some task upon the operating system in which the C/C++ program is running.

Vitis HLS ignores commonly-used system calls that display only data and that have no impact on the execution of the algorithm, such as printf() and fprintf(stdout,). In general, calls to the system cannot be synthesized and should be removed from the function before synthesis. Other examples of such calls are getc(), time(), sleep(), all of which make calls to the operating system.

Vitis HLS defines the macro __SYNTHESIS__ when synthesis is performed. This allows the __SYNTHESIS__ macro to exclude non-synthesizable code from the design.

Note: Only use the __SYNTHESIS__ macro in the code to be synthesized. Do not use this macro in the test bench, because it is not obeyed by C/C++ simulation or C/C++ RTL co-simulation.
CAUTION:
You must not define or undefine the __SYNTHESIS__ macro in code or with compiler options, otherwise compilation might fail.

In the following code example, the intermediate results from a sub-function are saved to a file on the hard drive. The macro __SYNTHESIS__ is used to ensure the non-synthesizable files writes are ignored during synthesis.

#include "hier_func4.h"

int shift_func(dint_t *in1, dint_t *in2, dout_t *outA, dout_t *outB)
{
 *outA = *in1 >> 1;
 *outB = *in2 >> 2;
}

void hier_func4(din_t A, din_t B, dout_t *C, dout_t *D)
{
 dint_t apb, amb;

 sumsub_func(&A,&B,&apb,&amb);
#ifndef __SYNTHESIS__
 FILE *fp1; // The following code is ignored for synthesis
 char filename[255];
 sprintf(filename,Out_apb_%03d.dat,apb);
 fp1=fopen(filename,w);
 fprintf(fp1, %d \n, apb);
 fclose(fp1);
#endif
 shift_func(&apb,&amb,C,D);
}

The __SYNTHESIS__ macro is a convenient way to exclude non-synthesizable code without removing the code itself from the function. Using such a macro does mean that the code for simulation and the code for synthesis are now different.

CAUTION:
If the __SYNTHESIS__ macro is used to change the functionality of the C/C++ code, it can result in different results between C/C++ simulation and C/C++ synthesis. Errors in such code are inherently difficult to debug. Do not use the __SYNTHESIS__ macro to change functionality.