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Bartels AutoEngineer® |
1 | General |
1.1 | Bartels AutoEngineer Product Line |
1.2 | System Requirements |
1.3 | Documentation |
1.4 | Installing on Windows and DOS Platforms |
1.5 | Installing on Linux and UNIX Platforms |
1.6 | Parameter Setup and Program Start |
1.7 | User Interface and General Functions |
1.8 | Symbol and Part Libraries |
2 | Schematic Editor |
2.1 | General |
2.2 | Symbols, Labels |
2.3 | Connections |
2.4 | Text, Attributes |
2.5 | Group Functions |
3 | Packager |
3.1 | Parameter Settings |
3.2 | Error Handling |
3.3 | Bus Net Attributes |
3.4 | Layout Library |
3.5 | Logical Library Definition Update |
3.6 | ERC (Electrical Rule Check) |
4 | Layout Editor |
4.1 | General |
4.2 | Display, Design Rule Check |
4.3 | Parts, Placement |
4.4 | Traces, Routing |
4.5 | Graphic, Copper Areas |
4.6 | Text, Drill |
4.7 | Group Functions |
4.8 | Automatic Copper Fill |
5 | Autorouter |
5.1 | Autorouter Algorithms |
6 | CAM Processor |
6.1 | General |
6.2 | Gerber Output |
6.3 | Drilling Data Output |
7 | CAM View |
7.1 | General |
8 | Neural Rule System |
8.1 | General |
8.2 | SCM Rules |
8.3 | Layout Rules |
9 | Utilities |
9.1 | COPYDDB |
9.2 | LOGLIB |
10 | Bartels User Language |
10.1 | General |
10.2 | User Language Compiler |
10.3 | User Language Interpreter |
10.4 | Index Variable Types |
10.5 | System Functions |
10.6 | BAE User Language Programs |
Tables |
1 | BAE Software License Files |
2 | BAE Graphic Device Drivers |
3 | BAE System File Environment Variables |
The following Bartels AutoEngineer software configurations are available:
Bartels AutoEngineer Professional is the standard BAE software configuration. BAE Professional is available for PCs with Windows, Linux or DOS operating systems. BAE Schematics, the schematic editor of BAE Professional is freely available and can be operated in stand-alone mode. Demo software configurations of BAE Professional (fully-featured except for data output) are available free of charge for test and evaluation purposes.
Bartels AutoEngineer Light is a shareware price-level BAE configuration for educational purposes and/or semi-professional users, available for PCs with Windows, Linux or DOS operating systems. BAE Light has full BAE Professional functionality, however, limited to a maximum PCB layout size of 180mm × 120mm and a maximum of two signal layers for manual routing and Autorouter.
BAE Economy is a low-price BAE configuration for educational purposes and/or small business users, available for PCs with Windows, Linux or DOS operating systems. BAE Economy has full BAE Professional functionality, however, limited to a maximum PCB layout size of 350mm × 200mm and a maximum of four signal layers to be simultaneously routed by the Autorouter.
Bartels AutoEngineer HighEnd is available for workstations and for PC systems (Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP, Linux). BAE HighEnd utilizes special operating system characteristics (multi-tasking, multi-windowing, virtual memory management, etc.) to implement advanced features and functions such as HighSpeed kernel, in-built messaging system to support advanced communication between different BAE modules, in-built multi-tasking to support multiple project views, global net highlight, cross-probing, selective layout short-circuit display, extremely fast airline calculation, optimized data structures for high Autorouter performance, advanced Neural Rule System features, rule-driven Neural Autorouter, nettype-specific routing area definitions, net-specific maximum via count settings, net-specific maximum connection length settings, etc.
BAE HighEnd is optionally available with Bartels AutoEngineer IC Design (BAEICD). BAE IC Design is a complete CAD/CAM system for the physical design of integrated circuits (gate arrays, standard cells, custom ICs and/or ASICs). BAEICD consists of a series of system components such as IC Mask Editor, IC Autoplacement, IC Autorouter, IC DRC (Design Rule Check) and GDS-II and CIF standard interfaces.
Bartels AutoEngineer FabView is a low-cost PCB layout viewer with manufacturing data output functions. BAE FabView is intended for PCB manufacturing departments and service providers who only have to produce manufacturing data and print/plot outputs but don't have to edit layouts. BAE FabView can be used together with BAE Professional and/or BAE HighEnd. BAE FabView provides the same functionality, however, the functions for saving design changes to BAE project files are deactivated.
A VGA or higher resolution monitor with a screen resolution of at least 800*600 pixels and a mouse or a corresponding pointing device are required on any BAE platform.
Up to 40 Mbytes hard disk space are required for installing the BAE software.
BAE Light, BAE Economy and BAE Professional versions are available for Linux (Kernel 2.0.x and above), Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows NT 4.0, Windows NT 3.51, Windows ME (Millenium Edition), Windows 98, Windows 95 and MS-DOS.
BAE HighEnd and BAE IC Design systems are available for Hewlett-Packard 9000/7xx workstations with OSF/Motif and/or X11 and for PCs with Linux (Kernel 2.0.x and above), Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows NT 4.0, Windows NT 3.51, Windows ME (Millenium Edition), Windows 98 and Windows 95 operating systems.
BAE Schematics and BAE FabView systems are available for all of the afore-mentioned platforms.
PC systems should be equipped with a Pentium (80586, 80686) or at least a 80486DX processor. Any compatible processor such as AMD-K6 or AMD-K7 (Athlon) will also do.
A minimum of 8 Mbytes RAM is required for DOS systems (16 Mbytes RAM recommended). A minimum of 32 Mbytes RAM is required for Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP and Linux systems (64 Mbytes RAM or more recommended).
The BAE software is usually provided on CD-ROM, i.e., a CD-ROM drive is required to install the software.
A hardlock key is used to protect BAE Economy, BAE Professional and BAE FabView Windows and DOS versions against software piracy. I.e., a printer port (LPT1, LPT2 or LPT3) is required to run these BAE versions under DOS and/or Windows.
On Linux systems, either a printer port (for the hardlock key) or an Ethernet card is required for checking the software authorization of BAE Economy, BAE Professional, BAE HighEnd and BAE FabView.
Both the
Bartels AutoEngineer User Manual and the
Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide have been completely revised and are provided in HTML and PDF format (in the
baedoc
directory of the BAE CD-ROM).
The BAE library and User Language directory contents are replaced when performing update installations. It is strongly recommended to backup any user-specific data from these directories before installing the BAE update and to restore the required data afterwards.
The
bsetup.dat
file from the BAE programs directory is always re-installed when performing BAE Update Installations. I.e., it is not necessary to run the time-consuming batch for compiling the BAE User Language programs provided with the BAE software. However, user-specific BAE parameter settings stored with the existing
bsetup.dat
file will get lost and must be restored after successfully installing the BAE software using the
bsetup utility program (or the
function available from the BAE main menu of the Windows/Motif versions). Customer-specific
User Language programs developed and compiled under the previously installed BAE version must also be re-compiled after performing the BAE Update Installation.
The
bae.ini
file with user-specific parameter settings, key assignments and menu definitions is not overwritten when performing update installations. The
bae54.ini
file is provided for documentation purposes.
bae54.ini
contains all new parameter definitions and can be appended to
bae.ini
if required.
Under Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP, the BAE setup program for installing
BAE Demo,
BAE Schematics
BAE Light,
BAE Economy,
BAE Professional,
BAE HighEnd,
BAE IC Design and/or
BAE FabView should start automatically after inserting the BAE CD-ROM to the CD-ROM drive. If this doesn't happen, simply start the
setupen.exe
program from the CD-ROM using the
function from the Windows
menu. Please follow the instructions of the setup program.
The setup ends with the BAE software configuration. Please select the BAE configuration which is authorised for your machine (BAE Demo, BAE Schematics, BAE Light, BAE Economy, BAE Professional, BAE HighEnd, BAE IC Design oder BAE FabView; see also table 1).
For installing BAE Schematics, BAE Economy, BAE Professional, BAE HighEnd or BAE FabView under MS-DOS, the CD-ROM must be inserted to the CD-ROM drive, and the drive and directory must be set accordingly. E.g., to install the BAE software from CD-ROM drive D, insert the BAE CD-ROM to CD-ROM drive D, and enter the following commands to the DOS prompt:
> D: > install
Once the install program has been started, the instructions issued on the screen should be followed carefully. First you will be asked for the BAE user interface language (e.g., English, German, etc.) and for the operating system host platform (DOS, Windows NT, etc.).
The install program provides different modes for performing either new Installation or Update installations. The Update install mode is strongly recommended when just updating from earlier BAE Versions; this will prevent the install program from overwriting special BAE system and setup files ending on
.dat
,
.def
and
.fnt
(otherwise, user-defined color tables, aperture tables, fonts, layer definitions, library access path settings and menu setups stored with these files might get lost).
After selecting the install mode, you will be prompted to specify the destination directories for installing the programs, the libraries, the User Language source files and the examples and test jobs. You can exclude certain destination directories by deleting the corresponding path names. More experienced BAE users can, e.g., suppress the installation of the BAE example jobs, or re-install certain parts of the BAE software later. For security reasons, the install parameter settings will be verified with user query before starting the installation process. The destination directories will be created automatically on request. The install program automatically copies the BAE software files to the selected destination directories on the hard disk.
At the end of the install process, the install program asks for the licensed BAE software configuration in order to install the correct software authorization file (see table 1). When installing the DOS version, the user will also be asked to select the graphic device driver to be installed (see table 2).
The BAE PC software for Windows and DOS (except for BAE Demo, BAE Light and BAE Schematics) is protected by a hardlock key (dangle) which must be plugged onto one of the parallel ports (LPT1, LPT2 or LPT3) of your PC. Switch off your computer before mounting the hardlock key shipped with the software; otherwise the dangle could be damaged by high voltage! If you have connected a peripheral device such as a laser printer to the hardlock key, then you must always switch on the peripheral device before switching on your computer to avoid hardlock key check problems.
The BAE PC software provides the license files according to the available software configurations as shown in the table below. You will be asked to select the BAE software configuration (and thus the appropriate license file) when installing the BAE software. Make sure to select the BAE software configuration to be installed and/or authorized on your computer.
Software Configuration | License File Name | Note |
---|---|---|
BAE Demo | demo.cfg | SCM and Layout; no Hardlock Key, no (CAM) output |
BAE Schematics | schema.cfg | SCM only; no Hardlock Key |
BAE Light | see note | SCM and Layout; no Hardlock Key, customer-specific CFG file is provided on purchase |
BAE Economy | economy.cfg | SCM and Layout |
BAE Professional | autoeng.cfg | SCM and Layout |
BAE HighEnd | highend.cfg | SCM and Layout |
BAE Layout | layout.cfg | Layout only; required/provided only for updating from BAE Versions older than BAE Version 4.6 |
BAE IC Design | icdesign.cfg | SCM, Layout and IC Design |
BAE FabView | fabview.cfg | CAM/manufacturing data output; save to DDB file deactivated |
The
router.cfg
license file matching the BAE software configuration authorized on your computer must be available in the BAE programs directory. I.e., to install the correct license file you can also copy the desired CFG file to
router.cfg
in the BAE programs directory instead of selecting the valid BAE configuration during BAE software installation
BAE Demo software is intended for evaluation purposes only. BAE Demo cannot produce any CAM or User Language output. BAE Demo masks Layout board elements to prevent from processing with productive software configurations afterwards. I.e., the BAE user version are not able to read Demo jobs, however, we are able to convert these jobs.
With the Windows versions of the BAE software there is no BAE graphic device driver installation required since BAE Windows software runs under the graphic interface of the corresponding operating system.
The DOS versions of the BAE software are shipped with a series of graphic device drivers. During installation you will be asked to select an appropriate BAE graphic device driver. Table 2 provides the list of graphic device drivers supplied with the DOS PC software of the Bartels AutoEngineer. Please select the graphic device driver matching the video adapter and/or graphic card installed with your computer. It is recommended to install the standard VGA driver VGA480, if you are not sure about which driver to select since VGA480 is assumed to run on almost any PC system, and you can always select a different driver (e.g., with higher resolution) later (see below).
Graphic Driver | Type | Resolution | Chip Set/Manufacturer |
---|---|---|---|
CCD480.DEV | PGA | 640x 480 | IGC (Cad Card) |
EGA350.DEV | EGA | 640x 350 | Standard |
EGA480EW.DEV | EEGA | 640x 480 | EGA Wonder |
EGA480GE.DEV | EEGA | 640x 480 | Genoa, ATI |
EGA600EW.DEV | EEGA | 800x 600 | EGA Wonder |
EGA600GE.DEV | EEGA | 800x 600 | Genoa, ATI |
EGA600PA.DEV | EEGA | 800x 600 | Paradise |
QPC1024.DEV | - | 1280x1024 | Datapath QPDM |
QPDM768.DEV | VGA | 1024x 768 | AMD QPDM |
QPDM1024.DEV | VGA | 1280x1024 | AMD QPDM |
VGA480.DEV | VGA | 640x 480 | Tseng ET3000 / ET4000 |
VGA600.DEV | VGA | 800x 600 | Tseng ET3000 / ET4000 |
VGA768.DEV | VGA | 1024x 768 | Tseng ET3000 |
TSENG768.DEV | VGA | 1024x 768 | Tseng ET4000 |
VESA600.DEV | VESA | 800x 600 | various |
VESA768.DEV | VESA | 1024x 768 | various |
MACH768.DEV | - | 1024x 768 | ATI Mach 64 |
MACH1024.DEV | - | 1280x1024 | ATI Mach 64 |
MACH1200.DEV | - | 1600x1200 | ATI Mach 64 |
MGA600.DEV | - | 800x 600 | Matrox Millenium/Mystique |
MGA768.DEV | - | 1024x 768 | Matrox Millenium/Mystique |
MGA1024.DEV | - | 1280x1024 | Matrox Millenium/Mystique |
MGA1200.DEV | - | 1600x1200 | Matrox Millenium/Mystique |
TIGA.DEV | TI | variable | Texas TMS34010 / TMS34020 |
The graphic driver
.dev
file matching the video adapter and/or graphic card of your computer must be copied to the
bae.dev
file in the BAE programs directory. This is achieved either by selecting the correct driver during BAE software installation or by manually copying the desired
.dev
file in the BAE programs directory to
bae.dev
.
It is strongly recommended to add the BAE programs directory path to the
PATH
environment variable. Load the
autoexec.bat
file to your text editor and check whether
autoexec.bat
contains a
PATH
statement or not. If there is already a
PATH
statement defined in
autoexec.bat
, then just add the following program path link to the
PATH
statement (assume BAE programs directory
c:\bae
):
PATH=c:\bae
If there is no
PATH
statement defined in
autoexec.bat
, then insert the following
PATH
statement (assume BAE programs directory
c:\bae
):
PATH=c:\bae
You can also insert the following command at the end of the
autoexec.bat
file to include the BAE programs directory path name with the
PATH
variable:
PATH c:\bae;%path%
The
config.sys
file must contain the following statements:
BUFFERS=<b> FILES=<f>
The number
<b>
of buffers should be at least 30, and the number
<f>
of files should be at least 20.
Note that you must reboot your computer if you made any changes to the
config.sys
or
autoexec.bat
. Otherwise you might not be able to start BAE.
The BAE library and
User Language directory contents are replaced when performing update installations. It is strongly recommended to backup any user-specific data from these directories before installing the BAE update, and to restore the required data afterwards. The same backup and restore process should be applied to BAE programs directory files with extensions
.dat
(except for
bsetup.dat
; see next paragraph),
.def
and
.fnt
when just updating from earlier BAE versions since these files can contain user-defined color tables, layer definitions, Gerber aperture tables and character fonts which will be overwritten during update installations. The
router.cfg
file must also be saved and restored when updating from authorized BAE versions.
The
bsetup.dat
file from the BAE programs directory will always be re-installed when performing BAE Update Installations. I.e., it is not necessary to run the time-consuming batch for compiling the
BAE User Language programs provided with the BAE software. However, user-specific BAE parameter settings stored with the existing
bsetup.dat
file will get lost and must be restored after successfully installing the BAE software using the
bsetup utility program (or the
function available from the BAE main menu of the Windows/Motif versions). Customer-specific
User Language programs developed and compiled under the previously installed BAE version must also be re-compiled after performing the BAE Update Installation.
The
baelinux
directory on the BAE CD-ROM contains the
baelinux.tgz
and
baelinus.tgz
TGZ archive files with different BAE builds for operating
BAE Demo,
BAE Light,
BAE Economy and
BAE Professional under Linux. Each of these TGZ files contains the directories
bin
(programs and setup files),
baelib
(symbol and part libraries),
baeulc
(User Language source files) and
baejobs
(examples and test jobs). The BAE software is supposed to run on all common Linux system with Kernel 2.0.x (S.u.S.E. 6.0 or later, RedHat, etc.). The TGZ files
baelinhe.tgz
and
baelinhs.tgz
contain the binaries for
BAE HighEnd. An additional file named
baeeng.tgz
including the English BAE user interface setup is also provided.
We strongly recommend that you have a look into the
readme
file from the
baelinux
directory of the BAE CD-ROM before installing the BAE Linux software. The
readme
file contains a list of the provided BAE Linux archive files and latest information and important instructions for installing the BAE Linux software.
baelinus.tgz
must be installed on Linux systems without Motif.
baelinus.tgz
contains a statically linked BAE version including all system and Motif libraries (libc6/glibc, lesstif/Motif1.2) required to run BAE on any Linux Kernel 2.0.x distribution.
It is recommended to use the more efficient
dynamically linked BAE version from
baelinux.tgz
(linked to libc6/glibc and Motif2.0) on Linux systems where Motif is already installed. The statically linked version from
baelinus.tgz
can always be used on Linux systems which fail to run the dynamically linked version.
To install the BAE Linux software, simply mount the CD-ROM drive with the BAE-CD-ROM (e.g., under
/cdrom
), change to the directory where you want to install the BAE software, and unpack the appropriate archive file (e.g.,
baelinux.tgz
) using the
tar
command as in
> tar -xzfv /cdrom/baelinux.tgz
The
-z
option is used to filter the TGZ file through the
gzip
utility. If your
tar
command does not support the
-z
option, simply use
gzip
and
tar
as in
> gzip -dv /cdrom/baelinux.tgz > tar -xfv /cdrom/baelinux.tar
To install the dynamically linked
BAE HighEnd version, simply extract the
baelinhe.tgz
file after installing
baelinux.tgz
. To install the statically linked
BAE HighEnd version, simply install
baelinhs.tgz
after installing
baelinus.tgz
.
A configuration file is provided with productive BAE Linux versions. This configuration file
(router.cfg
) must be saved to the BAE program directory
(bin
, see above). To activate
BAE Demo, the
demo.cfg
configuration file must be copied to
router.cfg
, to activate
BAE Schematics,
schema.cfg
must be copied to
router.cfg
(see also
Table 1).
BAE is pre-configured with a German user interface. The English user interface can be activated by extracting the
baeeng.tgz
archive file from the CD-ROM
baelinux
directory to the destination directory.
The
BAE HighEnd archive files for UNIX workstation are provided in specific BAE-CD-ROM directories such as
baehp
for the HP version. These archive files contain the directories
bin
(programs and setup files),
baelib
(symbol and part libraries),
baeulc
(User Language source files) and
baejobs
(examples and test jobs). An additional file named
baeeng.tgz
including the English BAE user interface setup is also provided.
The
BAE HighEnd archive files for HP workstations are provided in the
baehp
directory on the BAE CD-ROM. Please see the
readme
file in the
baehp
directory for latest information and instructions on how to install the BAE HP software.
To install the HP software, simply mount the CD-ROM drive with the BAE-CD-ROM (e.g., under
/cdrom
), change to the directory where you intend to install the BAE software, and unpack the
baehp.tgz
archive using the
tar
command as in
> tar -xzfv /cdrom/baehp.tgz
This installs the
BAE HighEnd software with OSF/Motif interface. To activate the BAE HP software for X11, the
baehpx11.tgz
file from the
baehp
directory on the CD-ROM must be installed in the destination directory after installing
baehp.tgz
.
A configuration file is provided with productive BAE UNIX versions. This configuration file
(router.cfg
) must be saved to the BAE program directory
(bin
, see above) To activate
BAE Demo, the
demo.cfg
configuration file must be copied to
router.cfg
, to activate
BAE Schematics,
schema.cfg
must be copied to
router.cfg
(see also
Table 1).
BAE is pre-configured with a German user interface. The English user interface can be activated by extracting the
baeeng.tgz
archive file from the CD-ROM
baelinux
directory to the destination directory after installing the UNIX software.
The access rights must be set properly (i.e., execute for the programs, read access to the libraries, read/write access to the job files, all rights for the system administrator, special rights for the library manager, etc.). The user must have read access to the BAE program directory files ending on
.cfg
(for authorization check) and read/write access to the files with extensions
.dat
and
.fnt
. The user must also have write access in the working directory to enable temporary file creation.
The Linux/UNIX shell environment variable
PATH
must point to the BAE programs directory to allow for BAE program call from any other directory. The PATH
variable can be set automatically through shell profile execution (shell script
.profile
,
.login
,
.bashrc
or
.cshrc
, according to UNIX derivative, respectively).
The BAE software versions for Windows and Motif provide an interactive program for modifying the BAE system parameters. Under DOS, however, the bsetup utility must be applied as described herein.
With the BAE software, a setup definitions file template named
stdset.def
is supplied, which will be installed to the BAE programs directory. This file contains the following commands for setting the BAE library access paths:
SCMDEFLIBRARY("<libdir>/stdsym"); LAYDEFLIBRARY("<libdir>/laylib");
where
<libdir>
is the path name of the BAE library directory. If the library e.g., has been installed to the directory
c:\baelib
under DOS or Windows then you should replace
<libdir>
with this path name to provide correct access to the BAE symbol libraries. If the library e.g., has been installed to the directory
/usr/bae/lib
under Linux or Unix, then you should insert the following commands to the setup definitions file for providing correct access to the supplied BAE symbol libraries:
SCMDEFLIBRARY(/usr/bae/lib/stdsym); LAYDEFLIBRARY(/usr/bae/lib/laylib);
The setup definitions file can be transferred to the BAE setup file
bsetup.dat
using the following
bsetup program call (assuming
stdset.def
to be the name of the setup definitions file, and the BAE programs directory to be the working directory):
> bsetup stdset
The bsetup utility program is also used for defining important system parameters such as the documentary layer definitions and the menu setup. The documentary layer definitions and assignments have major impact on how manufacturing data is generated. It is strongly recommended to become familiar with the features of the bsetup utility program before using BAE for the design of real layouts. See Bartels AutoEngineer User Manual - Chapter 7.2 for details on how to use bsetup.
The BAE software installs many pre-compiled
User Language programs to the
bsetup.dat
file of the BAE programs directory. The corresponding source files are are also provided in the
User Language directory
(baeulc
). See
Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide - Chapter 4 for a complete listing and short descriptions of the
BAE User Language programs.
Some of the installed User Language programs define implicit User Language program calls for activating a modified BAE user interface with many additional functions. You can add even more functions or modify and/or reset the predefined menu assignments and key bindings.
Usually, it is not necessary to (re-)compile the
User Language programs delivered with the BAE software, since the compiled programs will be installed to the
bsetup.dat
file of the BAE programs directory. Nevertheless, the
User Language directory provides several batch files for automatically compiling all
BAE User Language programs. The CPLSLL (ComPiLe with Static Link Library) batch file is recommended for compilation. The compile batch can be started in the
User Language directory
(baeulc
) by entering
> cplsll
to an MS-DOS-Prompt (with the
PATH
variable pointing to the BAE programs directory) or with the
> cplsll.bat
command from a Linux or UNIX shell. The compilation process might last some time according to the power of your computer.
Use the following command to start the Bartels AutoEngineer from a DOS prompt or a Linux and/or UNIX command shell:
> bae
Design file access can be simplified by starting and/or running BAE from the design and/or project files directory.
Under Windows, the
Bartels AutoEngineer can also be started by selecting the
bae.exe
file using the
function from the Windows
menu. Windows also allows for application startup by double-clicking the application from Windows Explorer, and it is also possible to define an initial working directory for the application to start in. A shortcut to
bae.exe
can be placed on the desktop or the Windows Start menu to provide an even more convenient method of starting up the
Bartels AutoEngineer.
When installing the BAE software under Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP, a BAE program group with shortcuts for starting the BAE main menu ( ) and the BAE program modules ( , , , , , , ) and for accessing the Bartels AutoEngineer User Manual ( ) is added to the Windows menu.
The
New BAE DDB File
is included with the
function from the Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP Desktop and Windows Explorer context menus to be activated through the right mouse button. The BAE DDB file context menus provide the
and
options for loading the selected BAE file to the
Schematic Editor and/or the
Layout Editor. Double-clicking a BAE DDB file automatically loads the DDB file's standard layout element to the
Layout Editor. The system suggests to create a new layout element if the DDB file does not yet contain a layout element with default name.
Please consult your operating system documentation for more information on how to configure applications for startup.
Environment variable references in file name specifications are automatically substituted. This allows for definitions such as
$BAELIB
for the symbol library directory and combined specifications such as
$BAELIB/laylib
or
$BAELIB/$STDLIB
to be used for path and file name specifications in functions such as
from the
menu. The environment variables are not evaluated until they are actually referred for file access. I.e., they will be stored with design files to be transferred to different computers where they can refer to machine-dependent path specifications defined through corresponding environment variables. Environment variable references are preceded with a dollar sign
($
) and must be either entirely lower-case or entirely upper-case. The
~
character refers to the
$HOME
variable. Undefined environment variable references are substituted with empty strings.
The environment variables listed in table 3 are evaluated for advanced configuration of BAE system file access in network installations.
Environment Variable | System File Default Name |
Contents |
---|---|---|
BAE_CFG | router.cfg | BAE Configuration/License File |
BAE_BSETUP | bsetup.dat | BAE System Parameters |
BAE_ULCLIB | bsetup.dat | BAE User Language Programs |
BAE_RULELIB | brules.dat | BAE Rules Database |
BAE_LANG | language.dat | BAE Menu String Tables (language-specific) |
BAE_FONTLIB | ged.fnt | BAE Graphic Character Fonts |
BAE_SCMLIB | scm.dat | SCM Color Tables |
BAE_GEDLIB | ged.dat | PCB Layout Color Tables |
BAE_CEDLIB | ced.dat | IC Layout Color Tables |
BAE_CAMLIB | cam.dat | CAM Gerber Aperture Tables |
BAE_DCOLLIB | bae.col | BAE Display Color Table |
BAE_PCOLLIB | baep.col | BAE Printer Color Table |
BAE_WINLIB | baewin.dat baexwin.dat | BAE Windows Position File |
BAE_CLIPB | baeclipb.dat | BAE Clipboard File |
Environment variables must specify complete paths to the corresponding system files. This feature can be used in definitions such as
set BAE_WINLIB=d:\bae\user1.dat
where access to a machine-specific Windows positions file in network installations with central BAE programs directory is established.
System files without environment variable definition are accessed from the BAE programs directory using the default system file name.
The
BAE_PROGDIR
environment variable allows for the specification of an alternative system file directory.
The
ANSI_FIXED_FONT
system font is used on default for displaying status line and dialog text in BAE Windows versions. Alternatively,
SYSTEM_FIXED_FONT
can be selected by assigning an arbitrary value to the
BAE_OLDFONT
environment variable if
ANSI_FIXED_FONT
isn't suited for the configured screen/monitor resolution.
Most status/message line input prompts have been replaced by comfortable text input dialogs with cursor key support and operating system specific cut, copy and paste functions.
The access rights for new DDB files under Unix and Linux will now be set according to the current
umask
settings. Previously, only read and write access rights were granted to the file owner.
The SCM symbol and layout part libraries have been completely revised. A series of new symbol and part definitions have been added to the SCM and layout libraries.
SCM symbol name and attribute texts have been centered to standardize the visual appearance of symbols with different symbol name lengths and attribute values.
The new
laylib.ddb
and
smd.ddb
layout libraries.
PDF files displaying all graphic symbols of the officially released BAE libraries are provided in the
pdflib
directory of the BAE-CD-ROM.
A series of useful library management User Language programs for library management (library check, automatic symbol edit, automatic generation of library documentation, etc.) are installed with the BAE software. See Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide - Chapter 4 for a complete listing of the User Language programs provided with the BAE software.
Input value dialogs have been added for size specifications such as text heights to allow for the editing of existing values.
A series of new SCM functions and features such as
have been implemented with User Language programs.
The symbol macro name query of the
function has been replaced by a dialog with a symbol macro name input field and listboxes for optional project file symbol macro selection, library file symbol macro selection and library directory file selection. Additionally, the button is provided for selecting symbol macros from any other DDB file.The attribute assignment dialog of the attrset User Language program.
function has been re-implemented with advanced features through theA $plname
and $rlname
attributes.
A
button is provided for assigning default attribute values as defined on symbol level.The
bae.ini
configuration file allows for the definition of attribute descriptions (e.g.,
(Part Package)
for the
$plname
attribute) to be displayed in the attribute input dialogs.
The
option has been added to the function from the menu. The default mode causes the function to reset any symbol name and attribute text positions, whilst the mode preserves non-default symbol name and attribute text position settings.The
virtual
and can provide any number of
newattr
commands for defining net attributes which will be assigned to the label net by the Packager. This feature is useful for assigning net attributes such as net types and/or DRC blocks to a series of nets without having to place numerous attribute symbols. The new
function (see below) can be applied to prepare older SCM plans for this new feature.
The functions for automatically re-routing connections when moving symbols and/or groups have been improved.
A new option for activating and/or deactivating signal routing for symbols and/or gorups has been added to the
dialog from the menu.The
function with the , and options has been added to the submenu from the menu. can be used to assign text classes for display and/or plot visibility control. The option activates a dialog box for assigning text classes to mouse selectable texts. The option can be used on schematic plan level to fade-out texts of a specific text class from mouse-selectable symbols. The option can be used to fade-out all schematic plan level texts of a specific text class. Each text can be assigned to different text classes. A text is faded-out if one its assigned text classes is faded-out. Texts without text class assignment are always visible.A total of up to 31 different text classes are supported. Text class names can be optionally specified in the
bae.ini
file. The system assignes default text class names such as
Class 1
,
Class 2
etc. if no text class names are defined in
bae.ini
.
Text classes can be used to increase the legibility of schematic plans by fading out less significant (symbol) attributes.
The
function from the submenu of the menu assigns class 31 to texts which are defined for nonzero symbol rotation angles. This causes to fade-out rotation texts whilst editing combined symbols.The
$pltfname
(element file path name),
$pltfsname
(element file name) and
$pltename
(element name) texts can be placed to display the project file path name, the project file name (without directory path) and the element name of the currently loaded top level element.
The
$pltstime
(element save time),
$pltsdatede
(element save date, German notation) and
$pltsdateus
(element save date, US English notation) texts can be placed to display the time and date the currently loaded top level element was last saved.
The
hostnameclipb.dat
(hostname
is the network name of the host computer).
The
function for assigning a group name to the currently selected group elements has been added to the submenu of the menu. The has been added to the and group functions to allow for group selections through group name specifications.Unlike group selection status flags, group name assignments are saved with the project. I.e., group name assignments are permanent, allowing for grouped circuitry to be easily re-selected and/or re-processed in later sessions.
The
option for selecting and/or deselecting SCM groups by symbol name has been added to the and functions from the submenu of the menu. The symbol name group selector can specified by picking from the list of currently used symbols or by symbol name pattern input.The
function for changing group-selected label macros has been added to the submenu of the menu. changes only labels without implicit label macro assignment through label name.The Packager settings for the layout library name, the alternative layout library name and the layout element are saved with the project files and will be reloaded with future Packager runs. This allows for the and Schematic Editor functions to be applied to projects with non-default layout element names.
The Packager behaviour in case of missing layout parts and/or pins has been added to the menu. The option causes the Packager to abort with an error message on missing layout parts and/or pins. The option causes the Packager to issue missing layout part/pin warning messages without aborting the packaging process.
function for controlling theThe Packager runs. It is strongly recommended to apply a layout net list consistency check using the checklnl User Language program on layouts created with option.
option should be used carefully since it can create physically non-existing layout net list pins for missing logical pin definitions. For this reason, the setting is not saved with the project file, i.e., it has to be re-selected in subsequentThe
Packager has been updated so that net attributes assigned to busses through
virtual
symbols and/or tag symbols are now being propagated to all nets of the affected bus.
The Packager searches the alternative library for logical part definitions and/or layout part macros which are neither in the project file nor in the standard layout library.
parameter for specifying a second layout library has been added to the menu. TheThe Packager copies referenced part macros from the standard and/or alternative layout library to the project file, thus enabling the generation of project specific layout libraries during packaging.
The
parameter with the and options has been added to the menu. is the default setting for transfering only those logical part definitions from the library file(s) which are not yet in the project file. forces the logical part definitions from the library file(s) to be copied to the project file, thus overwriting (updating) existing logical part definitions in the project file. Logical part definitions which only exist in the project file are not changed.The
Packager evaluates
$pintype
pin attribute settings to perform electrical rule checks (ERC). It is recommended to assign fixed ERC pin types through the logical symbol/part definitions. The following pin type attribute value settings are supported:
$pintype | Pin Type |
---|---|
in | Input Pin |
out | Output Pin |
bidi | Bi-directional Pin |
anl | Analog Pin |
sup | Power Supply Pin |
The ERC issues a warning message such as
if a net with one or more input pins has no (normal, bi-directional or power supply) output pin. A warning message such as is issued if a normal output pin is connected to another output pin, a bi-directional pin or a power supply pin.Input value dialogs have been added for size specifications such as trace widths and text heights to allow for the editing of existing values.
The
function for importing packed net lists from Intusoft's ICAP/4 SCM/simulation tool (Version 8.2.10 / 1843 and above; Tango net list export) has been added to the submenu of the menu.A series of new Layout Editor functions and features such as
have been implemented with User Language programs.
The
function from the menu has been changed to indicate element fixed modes.The
function from the menu has been changed to display non-default drill class settings for pins and vias.The
and grid options have been added to the menus for setting the input and display grid.The
function from the menu has been changed to allow for layer-specific polygon display pattern assignments. The color selection facility provides a graphical selection bar with outline, filled area and dotted outline default display modes and 32 different polygon display patterns. Arrows are used between the color and pattern selection bars to indicate color and pattern selections.The polygon display patterns are designed with offsets to ensure visual distinction of overlapping patterns and/or areas from different layers. Outline and pattern display modes with appropriate color assignments can be used to enhance the visibility of multi-layer structures and copper fill areas significantly.
Polygon display patterns are only applied on-screen. I.e., CAM output is not affected by these settings.
The BAE HighEnd menu now provides a dialog for layer-specific minimum distance value settings.
function from theThe
BAE HighEnd version supports netgroup-specific clearance parameters. This allows for the definition of clearance parameters to be used when checking elements of specific netgroups such as high and low voltage circuit blocks against each other. Netgroups can be definied in the
Schematic Editor by assigning
$nettype
attribute values to nets. Nets without
$nettype
attribute value assignment are considered to be of type
std
. DRC block assignments through specific rule definitions are required for net type combinations which are to be checked. The
nettype.rul
rule definition file from the
baeulc
directory contains an example which shows how to use an alternate DRC block for checking
hv
(high voltage) net type elements against other net types.
The part name selection menu of the
has been replaced by a comfortable dialog with a part name input field and scrollable listboxes for placed and unplaced parts, constructive parts and selected and unselected net list parts from the current part set. The name of the next unplaced part is loaded to the part name input field upon activation of the part name selection dialog. The , , and buttons can be used for direct part set manipulations.A dialog with three scrollable listboxes for selecting currently defined vias, project file padstacks and library file padstacks has been implemented for the via selection function.
The coordinates and rotation angles of part name texts on
PHYSICAL
documentary layers have been included to the report of the
functions, thus allowing for part insertion pick point coordinate queries.
The
option has been added to the context menu of the function from the menu. considers intersection points between new and neighbouring segments and rearranges neighbouring segments accordingly. This feature is especially useful for moving diagonal segments at trace corners. The option is applied if neighbouring segments cannot be rearranged.The
option for generating angle measuring graphics has been added to the function from the submenu of the menu. prompts for a documentary layer and angle start, center and end points. The angle measuring circle segment graphic is then drawn clockwise from angle start to end point, and a measuring label text (angle value in degrees) is dropped for placement.The
for placing active copper areas with "no net" attribute assignment is now available on part and padstack level. On padstack level, active copper area placement is restricted to power layers. These new features allow for the definition of power layer milling cutouts on part level.The net name selection menus of the polygon functions have been replaced by dialogs with scrollable net name selection list boxes. The system remembers the last selected net name and uses this name as default in subsequent net name queries.
The
$pltfname
(element file path name),
$pltfsname
(element file name) and
$pltename
(element name) texts can be placed to display the project file path name, the project file name (without directory path) and the element name of the currently loaded element.
Drill holes with direct power layer connections are indicated through an X-shaped marker (matching the drill hole size) to distinguish such drill holes from drill holes without power layer connection.
The
hostnameclipb.dat
(hostname
is the network name of the host computer).
The
function for assigning a group name to the currently selected group elements has been added to the submenu of the menu. The has been added to the and group functions to allow for group selections through group name specifications.Unlike group selection status flags, group name assignments are saved with the project. I.e., group name assignments are permanent, allowing for grouped layout element to be easily re-selected and/or re-processed in later sessions.
The
option for selecting and/or deselecting layout groups by part name has been added to the and functions from the submenu of the menu. The part name group selector can specified by picking from the list of currently used parts or by part name pattern input.The
option for selecting and/or deselecting polygon group elements by polygon type has been added to the and functions from the submenu of the menu.The
option for selecting and/or deselecting layout group elements by net has been added to the and functions from the submenu of the menu. The net group selector is picked from the list of currently defined nets. All elements connected to the selected net are selected and/or deselected. Parts with at least one pin connected to the net fulfill the selection criteria.The
function for changing the polygon type of group-selected polygon elements has been added to the submenu of the menu. Polygon layer and net assignments are not affected by this function. Polygons with layer assignments incompatible to the new polygon type are not changed.Automatic copper fill has been significantly improved to allow for the generation of different fill area types even on layers different from the current fill area layer. The
function creates standard fill areas with identical source and destination layers. The option of the function from the submenu of the menu allows for the assignment of non-default fill area parameters. requires net name, source layer, destination layer and area type specifications for the area to be generated. For signal source layers, the clearance calculation mode must also be selected. The clearance calculation mode considers general and net-specific DRC parameters. The calculation mode ignores the DRC parameters and considers only the minimum distance specified for copper fill (which can be zero).These features allow for a series of new copper fill applications. Specific parameter settings and destination layer and area type specifications can be used to generate milling contours for prototype manufacturing, positive solder resist mask generation from negative layers, dielectric layer generation for hybrid circuits, etc.
The
and functions from the submenu have been changed to retain fixed copper areas matching the copper fill area signal level. Such copper areas can be placed onto pins to create pin-specific power plane connections which can be different from the connections generated by automatic copper fill (e.g., direct connections instead of heat-traps). The function from the menu can be used to fix group-selected polygons (use, e.g., for area group selection).The
option has been added to the dialog of the submenu from the . With the option, the automatic copper fill functions select isolated areas as they are created. Group-selected isolated areas can easily be recognized through group-highlight, and the user can subsequently decide whether to keep or delete these areas.The Autoplacement and Autorouter, whilst creates keepout areas only relevant for automatic copper fill. Copper fill keepout areas can be used to, e.g., suppress heat-trap connections for specific pin without causing DRC errors.
and modes have been added to the polygon type selection option provided with the function from the submenu of the menu. creates default keepout areas to be used for DRC, copper fill,The
option has been added to the dialog from the submenu of the menu. can be used to set the hatching angle for traces to be generated by the and functions. A zero degree hatching angle setting might be useful to avoid problems when performing visual PCB checking automatically.Distance checks on fixed traces were carried out using wrong trace width values (trace diameter instead of trace radius). This could cause redundant/erroneous
messages for thick trace segments placed close to the board outline. This bug has been fixed.The Autorouter sometimes created short-circuits to nets with pins blocked by keepout or copper areas. This problem has been fixed.
A series of new CAM Processor functions and features such as
have been implemented with User Language programs.
Pads with
assignments for mirrored output were not processed when generating dynamic aperture tables for Extended Gerber output. This problem has been fixed.The
and output format options have been added to the function from the submenu of the menu. These formats include the drill tool table with the drilling data output file, thus eliminating the need for transmitting the drill tool table in a separate file. The drilling coordinates resolution/accuracy is 1/100 mm, whilst the drilling coordinates resolution/accuracy is 1/1000 mm.CAM View now supports interactive zoom window selection whilst the left mouse button is pressed.
The
brules.dat
file installed to the BAE programs directory contains precompiled rule definitions. The source files for these rule definitions are also provided
(User Language directory; file extension
.rul
), i.e., the rule definitions can be modified and recompiled with the
rulecomp Rule System Compiler.
Rules referenced throughout a project are now automatically copied from the global rule database file
(brules.dat
) to the project file. This allows for the transfer of project files with specific rule definitions to a different user and/or BAE installation without having to transfer and compile the referenced rule definitions in a separate step.
The copyddb utility program has been adapted accordingly - referenced rule definitions are automatically copied with each element.
BAE Version 5.4 provides a series of new rules for the implementation of special SCM features (e.g., text class assignments). See chapter 2 of this documentation for a description of these rules and their applications.
BAE Version 5.4 provides a series of new rules for the implementation of special layout features (e.g., group name assignments to elements). See chapter 4 of this documentation for a description of these rules and their applications.
The
-rule
option for copying rule definitions has been added to the
copyddb utility program.
The
loglib utility program supports the new architecture
command for the definition of logical parts consisting of different arbitrarily connected SCM symbols and/or layout parts. This allows for the definition of schematic symbols consisting of different layout parts (e.g., 16-bit driver logic consisting of two physical 8-bit drivers) without having to apply hierarchical design.
This section describes general changes to the User Language specification. See Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide - Chapter 2 for a detailed description of the User Language specification.
The internal version of BAE Version 5.4 User Language has been changed. User Language programs compiled under earlier BAE versions won't execute in the BAE Version 5.4 User Language Interpreter environment (error message ). This means that each User Language program compiled under earlier BAE Versions must be recompiled under BAE Version 5.4 to regain compatibility.
This section describes the news and changes introduced to the User Language Compiler. See Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide - Chapter 3 for detailed information on how to operate the User Language Compiler.
The Optimizer of the
User Language Compiler has been updated to allow for the substitution of the
loadv
(Load variable) and
loads
(Load stack) machine instructions with the new and more efficient
loadvd
(Load variable destructive) and
loadsd
(Load stack destructive) machine instructions, respectively. The substitution takes place in assignment operations where the assigned variable on the left is part of the assignment expression on the right
(n = 5 * n
,
s += s + "ABC"
, increment, decrement, etc.).
This section describes the news and changes introduced to the User Language Interpreter. See Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide - Chapter 3 for detailed information on how to operate the User Language Interpreter.
The
loadvd
(Load variable destructive) and
loadsd
(Load stack destructive) instructions have been added to the machine instruction set, and the Optimizer of the
User Language Compiler has been redesigned to substitute
loadv
(Load variable) and
loads
(Load stack) instructions with the more efficient
loadvd
and
loadsd
instructions if possible (see above).
The
addstr
(Add string) machine instruction for concatenating strings has been optimized This optimization reduces the computing time used for concatenating long strings by roughly 50 percent. The performance of
User Language programs which create long strings can be significantly increased (factor 10 to 20) by assembling long strings from short string concatenations instead of repeatedely concatenating short strings to long strings.
This section lists the new and changed User Language index variable types. See Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide - Appendix B for a detailed description of all index variable types.
The following new User Language index variable types have been implemented for BAE Version 5.4:
IP | Index Variable Type | Short Description |
---|---|---|
CAP | CL_ALTPLNAME | Layout Net List Alternate Part Package |
CL_ATTRIBUTE | Layout Net List Attribute | |
CL_CNET | Layout Net List | |
CL_CPART | Layout Net List Part Entry | |
CL_CPIN | Layout Net List Part Pin Entry |
The
int
attribute VIS
for net visibility queries has been added to the
L_CNET index variable type.
The
int
attribute RULEOBJID
for element-specific rule object queries has been added to the
I_FIGURE index variable type.
This section lists the new and changed User Language system functions. See Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide - Appendix C for a detailed description of all system functions.
The following new User Language system functions have been implemented for BAE Version 5.4:
IP | System Function | Short Description |
---|---|---|
STD | bae_asksymname | Interactive BAE library element query |
bae_dialadvcontrol | Add advanced BAE dialog element | |
bae_getpackdata | Get BAE Packager data | |
bae_menuitemhelp | Display BAE menu item help | |
bae_setplanfname | Set BAE project file name | |
launch | Pass command to operating system without waiting for completion | |
rulecompile | Compile a rule definition | |
CAP | cap_findlayconpart | Get layout connection list part index |
cap_findlaycontree | Get layout connection list net name net index | |
cap_getlaytreeidx | Get layout connection list net number net index | |
cap_layconload | Load layout net list | |
SCM | scm_attachtextpos | Attach text position to SCM element |
scm_checkjunctplot | Get SCM junction point plot status | |
scm_chkattrname | SCM attribute name validation | |
scm_gethpglparam | SCM HP-GL plot parameter query | |
GED | ged_askrefname | Interactive GED reference name query |
ged_asktreeidx | Interactive GED net query | |
ged_attachtextpos | Attach text position to layout element | |
CAM | cam_getdrlaccuracy | Get CAM drill tool tolerance |
cam_setdrlaccuracy | Set CAM drill tool tolerance |
The system function has been changed to wait for command completion in any operating system environment before returning to BAE.
A new parameter for specifying part processing mode flags (remove from screen, screen redraw) has been added to the scm_setpartattrib function.
The ged_groupselect provides new modes for selecting elements with or without connection to specified tree/net numbers and for selecting elements by polygon type.
BAE installs
some 200 pre-compiled User Language programs to the
bsetup.dat
file of the BAE programs directory. Additionally, the
User Language source files
(more than 3.5 Mbytes; more than 120,000 lines) are installed to a special directory
(baeulc
). See
Bartels User Language Programmer's Guide - Chapter 4 for a complete listing and short descriptions of the
BAE User Language programs.
The User Language include files already delivered with the previous BAE Version have been completely revised and extended by a series of new definitions and functions.
The following new User Language include files are provided with BAE Version 5.4:
IP | Include File | Short Description |
---|---|---|
ICD | icd.ulh | IC Design Utilities |
The baewsresize and baewsshrink functions for Schematic Editor, Layout Editor and Chip Editor workarea manipulation have been integrated to the std.ulh include file. These functions replace the corresponding functions from scm.ulh (scmwsresize and scmwsshrink) and ged.ulh (gedwsresize and gedwsshrink). All User Language programs have been changed to use the new workarea functions as required. ged.ulh has become redundant and was removed from the BAE software.
The following new User Language programs are provided with BAE Version 5.4:
IP | Program Name | Short Description |
---|---|---|
SCM | attrset | SCM Symbol Attribut Assignment |
GED | icapnet | ICAP Logical Netlist Import |
ICD | icdpcr | IC Design Report |
CED | ced_ms | Chip Editor Mouse Action |
ceddisp | Chip Editor Display Functions | |
cedgroup | Chip Editor Group Functions | |
cedmacl | IC Design Macro Load | |
cedpart | Chip Editor Macro and Placement Functions | |
cedpoly | Chip Editor Polygon Functions |
The User Language programs already delivered with the previous BAE Version have been completely revised and extended by many new features and functions. A series of significant improvements and enhancements have already been mentioned in the previous sections of these Release Notes.
Bartels :: Bartels AutoEngineer :: BAE Documentation :: BAE V5.4 Release Notes |
Bartels AutoEngineer® - Version 5.4 - Release Notes
© 1985-2024 Oliver Bartels F+E • Updated: 27 May 2011, 21:34 [UTC]
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