Automatically generated usage message.
-h,--help Show a brief usage message and exit.
--readme Show a more elaborate README and exit.
-n,--name=NAME Default is "design". Should be a short name
that identifies the project that this zip
file is parsing. This controls how the file
will be presented in the "Choose Model"
screen in the Module Browser.
-o,--output=FILE Default is "design.vlzip". Where to write
the collected up modules. Typically this
should have a .vlzip extension.
-s,--search=DIR Control the search path for finding modules.
You can give this switch multiple times, to
set up multiple search paths in priority
order.
-I,--incdir=DIR Control the list of directories for `include
files. You can give this switch multiple
times. By default, we look only in the
current directory.
--searchext=EXT Control the search extensions for finding
modules. You can give this switch multiple
times. By default we just look for files
named "foo.sv" and "foo.v" in the --search
directories. If you have Verilog files with
different extensions, this won't work, so you
can add these extensions here.
-D,--define=VAR Set up definitions to use before parsing
begins. For instance, "--define foo" is
similar to "`define foo" and "--define foo=3"
is similar to "`define foo 3". Note: these
defines are "sticky" and will override
subsequent `defines in your Verilog files
unless your Verilog explicitly uses `undef.
You can give this option multiple times.
--edition=EDITION Which edition of the Verilog standard to
implement? Default: "SystemVerilog" (IEEE
1800-2012). You can alternately use
"Verilog" for IEEE 1364-2005, i.e.,
Verilog-2005.
--strict Disable VL extensions to Verilog.
-m,--mem=GB How much memory to try to use. Default: 4
GB. Raising this may improve performance by
avoiding garbage collection. To avoid
swapping, keep this below (physical_memory -
2 GB).