Parameter | Arguments | Description | Version | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
-32bit | launch directly in 32bit mode |
Discover gists
The Verilog-perl module comes with some utilities to help you orient yourself in an alien code.
One of the first things you normally do is to understend the module dependencies. That is, what module instantiates other modules. You can do this easily as follows:
vhier -sv --no-missing --missing-modules --forest <files>
STA's primary function is to check a data signal timing to a clock signal timing, such as setup and hold constraints that require the data signal to remain stable around the active clock edge. In certain cases, we need to constrain the data change not to a clock event but another data signal event. These are called data-to-data checks. You can find them frequently in hard macros with asynchronous interfaces; but also in flip-flops with both asynchronous set and reset to enforce priority of one over the other.
Data-to-data checks can be expressed as user constraints (set_data_check
) or as Liberty timing arcs
%% \todo{} command. | |
% | |
% Outputs red TODOs in the document. Requires \usepackage{color}. | |
% | |
% Usage: \todo{Document the TODO command.} | |
% | |
% Comment out second line to disable. | |
\newcommand{\todo}[1]{} | |
\renewcommand{\todo}[1]{{\color{red} TODO: {#1}}} |
# KEYCLOAK BASE URL | |
KEYCLOAK_BASE_URL= | |
# KEYCLOAK CLIENT SECRET | |
KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_SECRET= | |
# KEYCLOAK CLIENT ID | |
KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_ID= | |
# BASE URL FOR NEXT AUTH |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
import os | |
import md5 | |
import zlib | |
import json | |
import socket | |
import urllib2 | |
import subprocess | |
For some reason, it is surprisingly hard to create a bootable Windows USB using macOS. These are my steps for doing so, which have worked for me in macOS Monterey (12.6.1) for Windows 10 and 11. After following these steps, you should have a bootable Windows USB drive.
You can download Windows 10 or Windows 11 directly from Microsoft.
After plugging the drive to your machine, identify the name of the USB device using diskutil list
, which should return an output like the one below. In my case, the correct disk name is disk2
.
- Adopted from: https://stubby4j.com/docs/admin_portal.html
- Inspired by Swagger API docs style & structure: https://petstore.swagger.io/#/pet