Caltech Intermediate Form
Caltech Intermediate Form is a file format for describing integrated circuits.
CIF provides a limited set of graphics primitives that are useful for describing the two-dimensional
shapes on the different layers of a chip.
The format allows hierarchical description, which makes the representation concise.
In addition, it is a terse but human-readable text format.
Overview
Each statement in CIF consists of a keyword or letter followed by parameters and terminatedwith a semicolon.
Spaces must separate the parameters but there are no restrictions on the number of statements
per line or of the particular columns of any field.
Comments can be inserted anywhere by enclosing them in parentheses.
There are only a few CIF statements and they fall into one of two categories: geometry or control.
The geometry statements are:
LAYER
to switch mask layers, BOX
to draw arectangle,
WIRE
to draw a path, ROUNDFLASH
to draw a circle, POLYGON
to draw an arbitraryfigure, and
CALL
to draw a subroutine of other geometry statements.The control statements are
DS
to start the definition of a subroutine, DF
to finish thedefinition of a subroutine,
DD
to delete the definition of subroutines, 0
through 9
toinclude additional user-specified information, and
END
to terminate a CIF file.All of these keywords are usually abbreviated to one or two letters that are unique.
Geometry
TheLAYER
statement sets the mask layer to be usedfor all subsequent geometry until the next such statement.
Following the
LAYER
keyword comes a single layer-name parameter.For example, the command:
L CC;
sets the layer to be the CMOS contact cut.
The
BOX
statement is the most commonly used way ofspecifying geometry.
It describes a rectangle by giving its length, width, center position, and an optional rotation.
The format is as follows:
B length width xpos ypos ;
Without the rotation field, the four numbers specify a box the center of which is
at and is length across in x and width tall in y.
All numbers in CIF are integers that refer to centimicrons of distance, unless subroutine
scaling is specified.
The optional rotation field contains two numbers that define a vector endpoint
starting at the origin.
The default value of this field is, which is a right-pointing vector.
Thus the rotation clause
10 5
defines a 26.6-degree counterclockwise rotation from the normal.Similarly,
10 -10
will rotate clockwise by 45 degrees.Note that the magnitude of this rotation vector has no meaning.
The
WIRE
statement is used to construct apath that runs between a set of points.
The path can have a nonzero width and has rounded corners.
After the
WIRE
keyword comes the width value and then an arbitrarynumber of coordinate pairs that describe the endpoints.
Figure B.2 shows a sample wire.
Note that the endpoint and corner rounding are implicitly handled.
The
ROUNDFLASH
statement draws a filledcircle, given the diameter and the center coordinate. For example, the statement:
R 20 30 40;
will draw a circle that has a radius of 10, centered at.
The
POLYGON
statement takes a series ofcoordinate pairs and draws a filled polygon from them.
Since filled polygons must be closed, the first and last coordinate points are
implicitly connected and need not be the same.
Polygons can be arbitrarily complex, including concavity and self-intersection.
Figure B.3 illustrates a polygon statement.
Hierarchy
TheCALL
statement invokes a collectionof other statements that have been packaged with
DS
and DF
.All subroutines are given numbers when they are defined and these numbers are used in
the
CALL
to identify them.If, for example, a
LAYER
statement and a BOX
statement arepackaged into subroutine 4, then the statement:
C 4;
will cause the box to be drawn on that layer.
In addition to simply invoking the subroutine, a
CALL
statement can includetransformations to affect the geometry inside the subroutine.
Three transformations can be applied to a subroutine in CIF: translation, rotation, and mirroring.
Translation is specified as the letter
T
followed by an x, y offset.These offsets will be added to all coordinates in the subroutine, to translate its
graphics across the mask.
Rotation is specified as the letter
R
followed by an x, y vector endpointthat, much like the rotation clause in the
BOX
statement, defines a line to the origin.The unrotated line has the endpoint, which points to the right.
Mirroring is available in two forms:
MX
to mirror in x and MY
to mirror in y.Mirroring is a bit confusing, because
MX
causes a negation of the xcoordinate, which effectively mirrors about the y axis.
Any number of transformations can be applied to an object and their listed order
is the sequence that will be used to apply them.
Figure B.4 shows some examples, illustrating the importance of ordering the
transformations.
Defining subroutines for use in a
CALL
statement is quite simple.The statements to be packaged are enclosed between
DS
and DF
statements.Arguments to the
DS
statement are the subroutine number and a subroutine scaling factor.There are no arguments to the
DF
statement.The scaling factor for a subroutine consists of a numerator followed by a denominator
that will be applied to all values inside the subroutine.
This scaling allows large numbers to be expressed with fewer digits and allows ease
of rescaling a design.
The scale factor cannot be changed for each invocation of the subroutine since it
is applied to the definition.
As an example, the subroutine of Fig. B.4 can be described formally as follows:
DS 10 20 2;
B10 20 5 5;
W1 5 5 10 15;
DF;
Note that the scale factor is 20/2, which allows the trailing zero to be dropped
from all values inside the subroutine.
Arbitrary depth of hierarchy is allowed in CIF subroutines.
Forward references are allowed provided that a subroutine is defined before it is used.
Thus the sequence:
DS 10;
...
C 11;
DF;
DS 11;
...
DF;
C 10;
is legal, but the sequence:
C 11;
DS 11;
...
DF;
is not. This is because the actual invocation of subroutine 11 does
not occur until after its definition in the first example.
Control
CIF subroutines can be overwritten by deleting them and then redefining them.The
DD
statement takes a single parameter anddeletes every subroutine that has a number greater than or equal to this value.
The statement is useful when merging multiple CIF files because designs can be
defined, invoked, and deleted without causing naming conflicts.
However, it is not recommended for general use by CAD systems.
Extensions to CIF can be done with the numeric statements
0
through 9
.Although not officially part of CIF, certain conventions have evolved for the
use of these extensions.
The final statement in a CIF file is the
END
statement.It takes no parameters and typically does not include a semicolon.
BNF grammar
The following is the grammar for the CIF format with cifFile being the top level grammar node.cifFile ::= * endCommand blank*
command ::= primCommand | defDeleteCommand | defStartCommand semi * defFinishCommand
primCommand ::= polygonCommand | boxCommand | roundFlashCommand | wireCommand | layerCommand | callCommand | userExtensionCommand | commentCommand
polygonCommand ::= "P" path
boxCommand ::= "B" integer sep integer sep point ?
roundFlashCommand ::= "R" integer sep point
wireCommand ::= "W" integer sep path
layerCommand ::= "L" blank* shortname
defStartCommand ::= "D" blank* "S" integer ?
defFinishCommand ::= "D" blank* "F"
defDeleteCommand ::= "D" blank* "D" integer
callCommand ::= "C" integer transformation
userExtensionCommand ::= digit userText
commentCommand ::= ""
endCommand ::= "E"
transformation ::= *
path ::= point *
point ::= sInteger sep sInteger
sInteger ::= sep* "-"? integerD
integer ::= sep* integerD
integerD ::= digit+
shortname ::= c c? c? c?
c ::= digit | upperChar
userText ::= userChar*
commentText ::= commentChar* | commentText "" commentText
semi ::= blank* ";" blank*
sep ::= upperChar | blank
digit ::= "0" | "1" |... | "9"
upperChar ::= "A" | "B" |... | "Z"
blank ::= any ASCII character except digit, upperChar, "-", "", or ";"
userChar ::= any ASCII character except ";"
commentChar ::= any ASCII character except ""