133 research outputs found
Plug & Test at System Level via Testable TLM Primitives
With the evolution of Electronic System Level (ESL) design methodologies, we are experiencing an extensive use of Transaction-Level Modeling (TLM). TLM is a high-level approach to modeling digital systems where details of the communication among modules are separated from the those of the implementation of functional units. This paper represents a first step toward the automatic insertion of testing capabilities at the transaction level by definition of testable TLM primitives. The use of testable TLM primitives should help designers to easily get testable transaction level descriptions implementing what we call a "Plug & Test" design methodology. The proposed approach is intended to work both with hardware and software implementations. In particular, in this paper we will focus on the design of a testable FIFO communication channel to show how designers are given the freedom of trading-off complexity, testability levels, and cos
Testability Analysis and Improvements of Register-Transfer Level Digital Circuits
The paper presents novel testability analysis method applicable to register-transfer level digital circuits. It is shown if each module stored in a design library is equipped both with information related to design and information related to testing, then more accurate testability results can be achieved. A mathematical model based on virtual port conception is utilized to describe the information and proposed testability analysis method. In order to be effective, the method is based on the idea of searching two special digraphs developed for the purpose. Experimental results gained by the method are presented and compared with results of existing methods
RT-level fast fault simulator
In this paper a new fast fault simulation technique is presented for calculation of fault propagation through HLPs (High Level Primitives). ROTDDs (Reduced Ordered Ternary Decision Diagrams) are used to describe HLP modules. The technique is implemented in the HTDD RT-level fault simulator. The simulator is evaluated with some ITC99 benchmarks. A hypothesis is proved that a test set coverage of physical failures can be anticipated with high accuracy when RTL fault model takes into account optimization strategies that are used in CAE system applied
Analyse de testabilité au niveau transfert de registres
SynthÚse automatique et analyse de testabilité -- Les définitions de base -- Analyse de testabilité à haut niveau d'abstraction -- Analyse de testabilité et d'insertion de points de test au niveau transfert de registres -- Testability analysis and test-point insertion in RTL VHDL specifications for scan-based bist -- Implantation de l'algorithme et résultats expérimentaux
From FPGA to ASIC: A RISC-V processor experience
This work document a correct design flow using these tools in the Lagarto RISC- V Processor and the RTL design considerations that must be taken into account, to move from a design for FPGA to design for ASIC
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Testability considerations for implementing an embedded memory subsystem
textThere are a number of testability considerations for VLSI design,
but test coverage, test time, accuracy of test patterns and
correctness of design information for DFD (Design for debug) are
the most important ones in design with embedded memories. The goal
of DFT (Design-for-Test) is to achieve zero defects. When it comes
to the memory subsystem in SOCs (system on chips), many flavors of
memory BIST (built-in self test) are able to get high test
coverage in a memory, but often, no proper attention is given to
the memory interface logic (shadow logic). Functional testing and
BIST are the most prevalent tests for this logic, but functional
testing is impractical for complicated SOC designs. As a result,
industry has widely used at-speed scan testing to detect delay
induced defects. Compared with functional testing, scan-based
testing for delay faults reduces overall pattern generation
complexity and cost by enhancing both controllability and
observability of flip-flops. However, without proper modeling of
memory, Xs are generated from memories. Also, when the design has
chip compression logic, the number of ATPG patterns is increased
significantly due to Xs from memories. In this dissertation, a
register based testing method and X prevention logic are presented
to tackle these problems.
An important design stage for scan based testing with memory
subsystems is the step to create a gate level model and verify
with this model. The flow needs to provide a robust ATPG netlist
model. Most industry standard CAD tools used to analyze fault
coverage and generate test vectors require gate level models.
However, custom embedded memories are typically designed using a
transistor-level flow, there is a need for an abstraction step to
generate the gate models, which must be equivalent to the actual
design (transistor level). The contribution of the research is a
framework to verify that the gate level representation of custom
designs is equivalent to the transistor-level design.
Compared to basic stuck-at fault testing, the number of patterns
for at-speed testing is much larger than for basic stuck-at fault
testing. So reducing test and data volume are important. In this
desertion, a new scan reordering method is introduced to reduce
test data with an optimal routing solution. With in depth
understanding of embedded memories and flows developed during the
study of custom memory DFT, a custom embedded memory Bit Mapping
method using a symbolic simulator is presented in the last chapter
to achieve high yield for memories.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Power constrained test scheduling in system-on-chip design
With the development of VLSI technologies, especially with the coming of deep sub-micron semiconductor process technologies, power dissipation becomes a critical factor that cannot be ignored either in normal operation or in test mode of digital systems. Test scheduling has to take into consideration of both test concurrency and power dissipation constraints. For satisfying high fault coverage goals with minimum test application time under certain power dissipation constraints, the testing of all components on the system should be performed in parallel as much as possible.
The main objective of this thesis is to address the test-scheduling problem faced by SOC designers at system level. Through the analysis of several existing scheduling approaches, we enlarge the basis that current approaches based on to minimize test application time and propose an efficient and integrated technique for the test scheduling of SOCs under power-constraint. The proposed merging approach is based on a tree growing technique and can be used to overlay the block-test sessions in order to reduce further test application time. A number of experiments, based on academic benchmarks and industrial designs, have been carried out to demonstrate the usefulness and efficiency of the proposed approaches
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Behavioral synthesis from VHDL using structured modeling
This dissertation describes work in behavioral synthesis involving the development of a VHDL Synthesis System VSS which accepts a VHDL behavioral input specification and performs technology independent synthesis to generate a circuit netlist of generic components. The VHDL language is used for input and output descriptions. An intermediate representation which incorporates signal typing and component attributes simplifies compilation and facilitates design optimization.A Structured Modeling methodology has been developed to suggest standard VHDL modeling practices for synthesis. Structured modeling provides recommendations for the use of available VHDL description styles so that optimal designs will be synthesized.A design composed of generic components is synthesized from the input description through a process of Graph Compilation, Graph Criticism, and Design Compilation. Experiments were performed to demonstrate the effects of different modeling styles on the quality of the design produced by VSS. Several alternative VHDL models were examined for each benchmark, illustrating the improvements in design quality achieved when Structured Modeling guidelines were followed
A Very High Level Logic Synthesis
The evolution of Computer Aided Design (CAD) calls for the incorporation of design specifications into a microelectronics system development cycle. This expansion requires the establishment of a new generation of CAD procedures, defined as Very High Level Logic Synthesis (VHLLS). The fundamental characteristics of open-ended VHLLS are: (1) front-end graphical interface; (2) time encapsulation; and (3) automatic translation into a behavioral description. Consequently, the VHLLS paradigm represents an advanced category of CAD-based microelectronics system design, built on a deep usage of expert systems and intelligent methods. Artificial Intelligence (AI) formalisms such as Knowledge Representation System (KRS) are necessary to model properties related to the very high level of specification such as: dealing with ambiguities and inconsistencies, reasoning, computing high-level specification, etc. A prototype VHLLS design suite, called Specification Procedure for Electronic Circuits in Automation Language (SPECIAL), is defined, compared with today\u27s commercial tools and verified using numerous design examples. As a result, a new family of formal and accelerated development methodologies has become feasible with a better understanding of formalized knowledge driving these design processes
Doctor of Philosophy
dissertationThe design of integrated circuit (IC) requires an exhaustive verification and a thorough test mechanism to ensure the functionality and robustness of the circuit. This dissertation employs the theory of relative timing that has the advantage of enabling designers to create designs that have significant power and performance over traditional clocked designs. Research has been carried out to enable the relative timing approach to be supported by commercial electronic design automation (EDA) tools. This allows asynchronous and sequential designs to be designed using commercial cad tools. However, two very significant holes in the flow exist: the lack of support for timing verification and manufacturing test. Relative timing (RT) utilizes circuit delay to enforce and measure event sequencing on circuit design. Asynchronous circuits can optimize power-performance product by adjusting the circuit timing. A thorough analysis on the timing characteristic of each and every timing path is required to ensure the robustness and correctness of RT designs. All timing paths have to conform to the circuit timing constraints. This dissertation addresses back-end design robustness by validating full cyclical path timing verification with static timing analysis and implementing design for testability (DFT). Circuit reliability and correctness are necessary aspects for the technology to become commercially ready. In this study, scan-chain, a commercial DFT implementation, is applied to burst-mode RT designs. In addition, a novel testing approach is developed along with scan-chain to over achieve 90% fault coverage on two fault models: stuck-at fault model and delay fault model. This work evaluates the cost of DFT and its coverage trade-off then determines the best implementation. Designs such as a 64-point fast Fourier transform (FFT) design, an I2C design, and a mixed-signal design are built to demonstrate power, area, performance advantages of the relative timing methodology and are used as a platform for developing the backend robustness. Results are verified by performing post-silicon timing validation and test. This work strengthens overall relative timed circuit flow, reliability, and testability
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