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schematic editor question: tie two global signals together

apple419
apple419 over 11 years ago

Hi, cadence virtuoso schematic editor L (615) users:

   How to tie two global signals together so that when netlist there is only one global signal name for both cases.

   For example, in my design all digital parts have ground vss! and all analog parts have ground vssa!. Since the design only has one ground pin VSS, I need to tie vss! and vssa! together to the pin VSS. This way I will not have ant LVS problem.

   I tried to do this (put symbol vss and symbol vssa on the schematic page and tie them together to the pin VSS),

   but after check and save, Cadence gave errors:

   Error: Net "vss!" shorted to net "vssa!",

   Error: Global signal "vss!" shorted to terminal "VSS".

   Does anyone have similar issues? It looks like two global nets can not be tied together. Is it right?

 

Thanks!! 

 

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  • Andrew Beckett
    Andrew Beckett over 11 years ago

     Calibre will use a CDL netlist (a SPICE-like format that originated with Dracula), available via File->Export->CDL. Depending on the version you're using, the cds_thru will be netlisted as either a small valued resistor (which can be filtered by Calibre by ensuring the *.RESI construct is in the netlist with a threshold above the value that the cds_thru is netlisted as), or as an attempt to short the nets in the auCdl netlister, or by netlisting it as a .CONNECT statement which is CDL-speak for a short.

    The cds_thru uses different approaches in different netlisters to represent the short - using something appropriate in each language.

    Regards,

    Andrew.

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  • Andrew Beckett
    Andrew Beckett over 11 years ago

     Calibre will use a CDL netlist (a SPICE-like format that originated with Dracula), available via File->Export->CDL. Depending on the version you're using, the cds_thru will be netlisted as either a small valued resistor (which can be filtered by Calibre by ensuring the *.RESI construct is in the netlist with a threshold above the value that the cds_thru is netlisted as), or as an attempt to short the nets in the auCdl netlister, or by netlisting it as a .CONNECT statement which is CDL-speak for a short.

    The cds_thru uses different approaches in different netlisters to represent the short - using something appropriate in each language.

    Regards,

    Andrew.

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