History of VHDL

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The Very High Speed Integrated Circuit (VHSIC) Hardware Description Language (VHDL) is the product of a US Government request for a new means of describing digital hardware. The Very High Speed Integrated Circuit (VHSIC) Program was an initiative of the Defense Department to push the state of the art in VLSI technology, and VHDL was proposed as a versatile hardware description language.

The contract for the first VHDL implementation was awarded to the team of Intermetrics, IBM, and Texas Instruments in July 1983. However, development of the language was not a closed process and was subjected to public review throughout the process (accounting for Versions 1 through 7.1). The final version of the language, developed under government contract, was released as VHDL Version 7.2.

In March 1986, IEEE proposed a new standard VHDL to extend and modify the language to fix identified problems. In December 1987, VHDL became IEEE Standard 1076-1987. VHDL was again modified in September 1993 to further refine the language. These refinements both clarified and enhanced the language. The major changes included much improved file handling and a more consistent syntax and resulted in VHDL Standard 1076-1993.