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Please be advised that ModelSim PE Student Edition 10.4a is available for download:
Download File Instructions:
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- Click the download link on the web page.
- Sign-in or Create a Mentor Graphics Account.
- BE SURE YOU USE A VALID EMAIL ADDRESS!!
- Review the License Agreement, then click Accept.
- You will then be taken to the confirmation page, informing you that an email has just be sent you.
- Check your Junk Mail and SPAM folder for this email.
- If you do not receive this email. You need to double-check your Mentor Account and validate the email is valid.
- Request the download file again by repeating the above steps.
- Check your email for the file download location.
- Click on the file link and download the installer.
Before you install ModelSim PE Student Edition, please reboot your Windows PC.
Installation Instructions:
- Verify that you have 'ADMINISTRATOR' rights to the Windows 8 or lower based PC you plan to install ModelSim PE Student Edition upon.
- Follow the installation dialog prompts.
- The last step of the installation will launch a web browser window to the Student Edition license request page. If this does not happen, something on your machine is preventing the browser from launching.
- Your PC security software could be blocking this action from launching.
- You need to re-run the installer again.
- Information from YOUR computer will assist in creating the license file.
- Fill out the license request form and be sure that you enter a valid email address.
- You will immediately be sent an email with the license file and instructions.
- Check your Junk Mail or SPAM folder if you do not receive the license file within a few minutes.
- If you never receive the email containing the license file, you MUST rerun the installer to reach the license request page again.
- THIS IS THE ONLY WAY TO RECEIVE A LICENSE FILE!
Please remember that the license file is tied to the computer that you installed ModelSim PE Student Edition upon.
You may request the license be delivered to a different email address if you did not receive the license file the first time around.
In addition, if your University uses ModelSim PE Student Edition in your Classroom - please have your course administrator contact the Mentor Graphics Higher Education Department for FULL ModelSim LICENSES through the Higher Education Program for a modest support fee. http://www.mentor.com/company/higher_ed/
Lastly - there is NO End-User Product Support for ModelSim PE Student Edition.
Mentor Questasim is officially only supported on RHEL. However, I’m using Ubuntu 16.04 on my desktop, on which it won’t run by default. Here’s how to get that fixed. This probably works on all Debian-like systems.
Installation
As detailed in this blog post by Eldon Nelson, the installer won’t work if you only have 64-bit libraries installed. So, first step: installing 32-bit ones.
Now Questasim can be installed, and its bin path added to your $PATH.
License manager
However, the FLEXnet license manager it uses won’t run. As shown in the mentioned blog post, you’ll get this error:
ARM’s website says to solve this by installing a package that make Ubuntu completely Linux Standard Base, whatever that might mean:
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This indeed fixes the license manager issue, and it’s at this point Eldon’s blog post ends. Unfortunately, that didn’t quite do the trick for me, because I still couldn’t actually run Questasim.
Linking code
Part 1 – Environment variable
The design I wanted to simulate requires SystemVerilog, Verilog, VHDL and SystemC, which means GCC is required. Questasim comes with its own bundled GCC 4.7.4, which compiled the code just fine. Unfortunately, linking generated the following errors:
Now, first of all, let’s make sure these files are actually installed on the system. We’ll also need a linker later on, so let’s make sure that’s installed as well.
Now the issue is that in RHEL these .o files are in /usr/lib64, whereas on Ubuntu they are in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu. We could help the linker out a bit by setting the following environment variable:
That only gets you so far though. The linker now finds the files but, as also described in this bug report, you will be greeted by the following error:
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This is because the GCC version that comes with Questasim is quite old. However, the object files we’re telling it to link with aren’t. At some point in time, the tools with which these .o files are compiled started adding extra information into them, which Questasim’s GCC 4.7.4 can’t handle. The system’s (newer) linker can though. So we somehow have to get Questa to compile everything using it’s own compiler and then link it using the system’s linker.
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Part 2 – Replacing Questasim’s linker
There’s three ways to make Questasim use the system’s linker, the first two of which are discussed in the bug report mentioned earlier.
The first one is to supply sccom (Questasim’s GCC) with the “-B/usr/bin” argument. This tells GCC to look for binaries in /usr/bin when it calls ld to link. This solution works fine for compilation, but failed for me whenactually running a simulation with vsim. While loading the design, vsim compiles another object file, encode_tramp.o, and linking it fails as before. As far as I could find, there’s no arguments to vsim equivalent to the “-B”flag for sccom/gcc. Another drawback of this method is that is requires modifying your build scripts.
The second way is to simply replace Questasim’s ld with the system’s ld. However, this requires you to have root access to the Questa install location. That rather crude and won’t work in many environments, e.g. in my case Questasim is installed on a central server and is mounted read-only over NFS. Furthermore, the installation might be used on different systems, in which case replacing ld for everyone is out of the question as well.
Still, replacing ld seems like the foolproof way to go. Which brings us to the third way. The solution is quite simple and elegant: use a union file system. Mount the existing Questasim installation as read-only in the union and on top of this mount a directory structure which contains a single symlink to the system’s linker. The beauty is that you can do this on only those systems that require it, without having to touch any of your build scripts or the Questasim installation itself.
The choices for such a setup are UnionFS, aufs or OverlayFS. Be warned though that there’s a bug with OverlayFS if the lower layer is an NFS read-only mount backed by certain file systems such as glusterfs. Since I ran into this bug, I used aufs instead.
That’s it! Simply point your build scripts to the merged directory and enjoy Questasim on Ubuntu 16.04!
Automatically mounting the union
One minor issue with the solution so far is that the union mount will be gone when you reboot. If you have Questasim installed locally, you could simply add the mount information to /etc/fstab. That didn’t work for me though, because my Questasim installation is mounted by autofs over NFS. To work around this, I created a systemd service to mount the union once the Questasim installation is reachable. For the sake of completeness, here is how that works.
First I put together a short script to do the mounting. Note that it is rather specific, you’ll most likely have to adapt it a bit for your particular setup. I put this in /usr/local/sbin/mount_questasim.sh:
Next up, I created the following systemd service file in /etc/systemd/system/mount_questasim.service:
Then simply activate the service to run at boot: