Formal Definition
Entity is the description of the interface between a design and its external environment. It may also specify the declarations and statements that are part of the design entity. A given entity declaration may be shared by many design entities, each of which has a different architecture. Thus, an entity declaration can potentially represent a class of design entities, each having the same interface.
Simplified Syntax
entity entity_name is
generic (generic_list);
port (port_list);]
end entity entity_name;
Description
An entity specifies the interface between the specified design (formally called a design entity) and the environment in which it operates. On the other hand, an architecture is a description of the inner design operation and it must be assigned to an entity. The architecture can be assigned to one entity only but one entity may be assigned to a number of architectures.
The entity statement declares the design name (the identifier item in the Syntax example). In addition, it defines generic parameters (see generic) and ports (see port) of the design entity. Generic parameters provide static information (like timing parameters or bus width) to a design. Ports provide communication channels between the design and its environment. For each port, its mode (i.e. data flow) and type are defined.
Optionally, an entity may contain a declarative part. Any subprograms, types, subtypes, and constants can be declared here.
Declarations which are defined in an entity are visible to all architectures assigned to this entity.
An entity may contain its own statements, declared after the begin keyword. The statements here must be passive, which means they cannot alter values of any signals; Passive processes, concurrent assertion statements and passive concurrent procedure calls can be used here.
The entity declaration may be preceded by the library and use clauses. This way all declarations defined in a package will be visible for the entity and all architectures assigned to it.
Examples
Example 1
library IEEE;
use IEEE.std_logic_1164.all;
entity BCD_Decoder is
port (
BCD : in Bit_Vector (2 downto 0);
Enable : in Bit;
LED : out Std_Ulogic_Vector (3 downto 0));
constant ZERO : Std_Ulogic_Vector(3 downto 0) := "0000";
begin
assert (BCD /= "111") report "BCD = 7 " severity note;
end entity BCD_Decoder;
The above example illustrates several important issues related to entities. First two lines contain a call to the IEEE library and to the std_logic_1164 package, respectively. These two lines are required because the Std_Ulogic_Vector type used for the output signal LED is not a standard type but it is defined in the mentioned package. If LED would be of Bit_Vector type then the two lines could have been omitted.
The BCD_Decoder identifier, which is following the entity keyword, is a name assigned by the designer to the entity. Note that this name is repeated at the very end of the entity.
The above listed entity contains the specification of ports only. In this case there are two inputs (BCD and Enable) and one output (LED). The mode for each of them is supported after a colon and is followed by a specification of the signal's type. See ports for more details on modes and types of ports.
The Declarative part of the above entity contains two declarations: constant and assert statements. The constant introduced here will be visible in all architectures of the BCD_Decoder entity. This type of a declaration makes sense if there are more than one such architectures. Otherwise, it might be better to place it in the architecture section to make the entity more clear. See constant for more details on constants.
The assert statement is a concurrent statement which will be active whenever any of the BCD_Decoder architectures is active. This particular statement will generate a Message listed in the report clause, whenever BCD will be equal to "111" ("BCD = 7"). Note that the condition in the assert statement should be interpreted as "if not condition - then report". Turn to assert for more information on this topic.
Important Notes
· The VHDL Language Reference Manual uses the name design entity for a complete specification of the design, i.e. both its interface (entity unit) and behavior or structure (architecture unit). Therefore entity and design entity are not the same concepts!
· The identifier for an entity must conform to VHDL identifier rules; it must start with a letter followed by an arbitrary combination of letters, digits and underline symbols.
· While it is not necessary to repeat the name of an entity at the end of the declaration, it is strongly recommended to do it for the sake of clarity of the description; for the same reason it is advised to add the entity keyword between the end and the entity name.
· It is possible to write an entity without any generics, ports and passive statements. In fact this is used in constructing testbenches (see testbench).
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