2,939 research outputs found
A Flexible Framework for the Automatic Generation of SBST Programs
Software-based self-test (SBST) techniques are used to test processors and processor cores against permanent faults introduced by the manufacturing process or to perform in-field test in safety-critical applications. However, the generation of an SBST program is usually associated with high costs as it requires significant manual effort of a skilled engineer with in-depth knowledge about the processor under test. In this paper, we propose an approach for the automatic generation of SBST programs. First, we detail an automatic test pattern generation (ATPG) framework for the generation of functional test sequences. Second, we describe the extension of this framework with the concept of a validity checker module (VCM), which allows the specification of constraints with regard to the generated sequences. Third, we use the VCM to express typical constraints that exist when SBST is adopted for in-field test. In our experimental results, we evaluate the proposed approach with a microprocessor without interlocked pipeline stages (MIPS)-like microprocessor. The results show that the proposed method is the first approach able to automatically generate SBST programs for both end-of-manufacturing and in-field test whose fault efficiency is superior to those produced by state-of-the-art manual approaches
Product assurance technology for custom LSI/VLSI electronics
The technology for obtaining custom integrated circuits from CMOS-bulk silicon foundries using a universal set of layout rules is presented. The technical efforts were guided by the requirement to develop a 3 micron CMOS test chip for the Combined Release and Radiation Effects Satellite (CRRES). This chip contains both analog and digital circuits. The development employed all the elements required to obtain custom circuits from silicon foundries, including circuit design, foundry interfacing, circuit test, and circuit qualification
Methoden und Beschreibungssprachen zur Modellierung und Verifikation vonSchaltungen und Systemen: MBMV 2015 - Tagungsband, Chemnitz, 03. - 04. März 2015
Der Workshop Methoden und Beschreibungssprachen zur Modellierung und Verifikation von Schaltungen und Systemen (MBMV 2015) findet nun schon zum 18. mal statt. Ausrichter sind in diesem Jahr die Professur Schaltkreis- und Systementwurf der Technischen Universität Chemnitz und das Steinbeis-Forschungszentrum Systementwurf und Test.
Der Workshop hat es sich zum Ziel gesetzt, neueste Trends, Ergebnisse und aktuelle Probleme auf dem Gebiet der Methoden zur Modellierung und Verifikation sowie der Beschreibungssprachen digitaler, analoger und Mixed-Signal-Schaltungen zu diskutieren. Er soll somit ein Forum zum Ideenaustausch sein.
Weiterhin bietet der Workshop eine Plattform für den Austausch zwischen Forschung und Industrie sowie zur Pflege bestehender und zur Knüpfung neuer Kontakte. Jungen Wissenschaftlern erlaubt er, ihre Ideen und Ansätze einem breiten Publikum aus Wissenschaft und Wirtschaft zu präsentieren und im Rahmen der Veranstaltung auch fundiert zu diskutieren. Sein langjähriges Bestehen hat ihn zu einer festen Größe in vielen Veranstaltungskalendern gemacht. Traditionell sind auch die Treffen der ITGFachgruppen an den Workshop angegliedert.
In diesem Jahr nutzen zwei im Rahmen der InnoProfile-Transfer-Initiative durch das Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung geförderte Projekte den Workshop, um in zwei eigenen Tracks ihre Forschungsergebnisse einem breiten Publikum zu präsentieren. Vertreter der Projekte Generische Plattform für Systemzuverlässigkeit und Verifikation (GPZV) und GINKO - Generische Infrastruktur zur nahtlosen energetischen Kopplung von Elektrofahrzeugen stellen Teile ihrer gegenwärtigen Arbeiten vor. Dies bereichert denWorkshop durch zusätzliche Themenschwerpunkte und bietet eine wertvolle Ergänzung zu den Beiträgen der Autoren. [... aus dem Vorwort
Understanding multidimensional verification: Where functional meets non-functional
Abstract Advancements in electronic systems' design have a notable impact on design verification technologies. The recent paradigms of Internet-of-Things (IoT) and Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) assume devices immersed in physical environments, significantly constrained in resources and expected to provide levels of security, privacy, reliability, performance and low-power features. In recent years, numerous extra-functional aspects of electronic systems were brought to the front and imply verification of hardware design models in multidimensional space along with the functional concerns of the target system. However, different from the software domain such a holistic approach remains underdeveloped. The contributions of this paper are a taxonomy for multidimensional hardware verification aspects, a state-of-the-art survey of related research works and trends enabling the multidimensional verification concept. Further, an initial approach to perform multidimensional verification based on machine learning techniques is evaluated. The importance and challenge of performing multidimensional verification is illustrated by an example case study
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On Co-Optimization Of Constrained Satisfiability Problems For Hardware Software Applications
Manufacturing technology has permitted an exponential growth in transistor count and density. However, making efficient use of the available transistors in the design has become exceedingly difficult. Standard design flow involves synthesis, verification, placement and routing followed by final tape out of the design. Due to the presence of various undesirable effects like capacitive crosstalk, supply noise, high temperatures, etc., verification/validation of the design has become a challenging problem. Therefore, having a good design convergence may not be possible within the target time, due to a need for a large number of design iterations.
Capacitive crosstalk is one of the major causes of design convergence problems in deep sub-micron era. With scaling, the number of crosstalk violations has been increasing because of reduced inter-wire distances. Consequently only the most severe crosstalk faults are fixed pre-silicon while the rest are tested post-silicon. Testing for capacitive crosstalk involves generation of input patterns which can be applied post-silicon to the integrated circuit and comparison of the output response. These patterns are generated at the gate/ Register Transfer Level (RTL) of abstraction using Automatic Test Pattern Generation (ATPG) tools. In this dissertation, anInteger Linear Programming (ILP) based ATPG technique for maximizing crosstalk induced delay increase at the victim net, for multiple aggressor crosstalk faults, is presented. Moreover, various solutions for pattern generation considering both zero as well as unit delay models is also proposed.
With voltage scaling, power supply switching noise has become one of the leading causes of signal integrity related failures in deep sub-micron designs. Hence, during power supply network design and analysis of power supply switching noise, computation of peak supply current is an essential step. Traditional peak current estimation approaches involve addition of peak current associated with all the CMOS gates which are switching in a combinational circuit. Consequently, this approach does not take the Boolean and temporal relationships of the circuit into account. This work presents an ILP based technique for generation of an input pattern pair which maximizes switching supply currents for a combinational circuit in the presence of integer gate delays. The input pattern pair generated using the above approach can be applied post-silicon for power droop testing.
With high level of integration, Multi-Processor Systems on Chip (MPSoC) feature multiple processor cores and accelerators on the same die, so as to exploit the instruction level parallelism in the application. For hardware-software co-design, application programming model is based on a Task Graph, which represents task dependencies and execution/transfer times for various threads and processes within an application. Mapping an application to an MPSoC traditionally involves representing it in the form of a task graph and employing static scheduling in order to minimize the schedule length. Dynamic system behavior is not taken into consideration during static scheduling, while dynamic scheduling requires the knowledge of task graph at runtime. A run-time task graph extraction heuristic to facilitate dynamic scheduling is also presented here. A novel game theory based approach uses this extracted task graph to perform run-time scheduling in order to minimize total schedule length.
With increase in transistor density, power density has gone up substantially. This has lead to generation of regions with very high temperature called Hotspots. Hotspots lead to reliability and performance issues and affect design convergence. In current generation Integrated Circuits (ICs) temperature is controlled by reducing power dissipation using Dynamic Thermal Management (DTM) techniques like frequency and/or voltage scaling. These techniques are reactive in nature and have detrimental effects on performance. Here, a look-ahead based task migration technique is proposed, in order to utilize the multitude of cores available in an MPSoC to eliminate thermal emergencies. Our technique is based on temperature prediction, leveraging upon a novel wavelet based thermal modeling approach.
Hence, this work addresses several optimization problems that can be reduced to constrained max-satisfiability, involving integer as well as Boolean constraints in hardware and software domains. Moreover, it provides domain specific heuristic solutions for each of them
Exploring formal verification methodology for FPGA-based digital systems.
Abstract Not Provide
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