24 research outputs found

    Integrating specification and test requirements as constraints in verification strategies for 2D and 3D analog and mixed signal designs

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    Analog and Mixed Signal (AMS) designs are essential components of today’s modern Integrated Circuits (ICs) used in the interface between real world signals and the digital world. They present, however, significant verification challenges. Out-of-specification failures in these systems have steadily increased, and have reached record highs in recent years. Increasing design complexity, incomplete/wrong specifications (responsible for 47% of all non functional ICs) as well as additional challenges faced when testing these systems are obvious reasons. A particular example is the escalating impact of realistic test conditions with respect to physical (interface between the device under test (DUT) and the test instruments, input-signal conditions, input impedance, etc.), functional (noise, jitter) and environmental (temperature) constraints. Unfortunately, the impact of such constraints could result in a significant loss of performance and design failure even if the design itself was flawless. Current industrial verification methodologies, each addressing specific verification challenges, have been shown to be useful for detecting and eliminating design failures. Nevertheless, decreases in first pass silicon success rates illustrate the lack of cohesive, efficient techniques to allow a predictable verification process that leads to the highest possible confidence in the correctness of AMS designs. In this PhD thesis, we propose a constraint-driven verification methodology for monitoring specifications of AMS designs. The methodology is based on the early insertion of test(s) associated with each design specification. It exploits specific constraints introduced by these planned tests as well as by the specifications themselves, as they are extracted and used during the verification process, thus reducing the risk of costly errors caused by incomplete, ambiguous or missing details in the specification documents. To fully analyze the impact of these constraints on the overall AMS design behavior, we developed a two-phase algorithm that automatically integrates them into the AMS design behavioral model and performs the specifications monitoring in a Matlab simulation environment. The effectiveness of this methodology is demonstrated for two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) ICs. Our results show that our approach can predict out-of-specification failures, corner cases that were not covered using previous verification methodologies. On one hand, we show that specifications satisfied without specification and test-related constraints have failed in the presence of these additional constraints. On the other hand, we show that some specifications may degrade or even cannot be verified without adding specific specification and test-related constraints

    Proceedings of the First NASA Formal Methods Symposium

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    Topics covered include: Model Checking - My 27-Year Quest to Overcome the State Explosion Problem; Applying Formal Methods to NASA Projects: Transition from Research to Practice; TLA+: Whence, Wherefore, and Whither; Formal Methods Applications in Air Transportation; Theorem Proving in Intel Hardware Design; Building a Formal Model of a Human-Interactive System: Insights into the Integration of Formal Methods and Human Factors Engineering; Model Checking for Autonomic Systems Specified with ASSL; A Game-Theoretic Approach to Branching Time Abstract-Check-Refine Process; Software Model Checking Without Source Code; Generalized Abstract Symbolic Summaries; A Comparative Study of Randomized Constraint Solvers for Random-Symbolic Testing; Component-Oriented Behavior Extraction for Autonomic System Design; Automated Verification of Design Patterns with LePUS3; A Module Language for Typing by Contracts; From Goal-Oriented Requirements to Event-B Specifications; Introduction of Virtualization Technology to Multi-Process Model Checking; Comparing Techniques for Certified Static Analysis; Towards a Framework for Generating Tests to Satisfy Complex Code Coverage in Java Pathfinder; jFuzz: A Concolic Whitebox Fuzzer for Java; Machine-Checkable Timed CSP; Stochastic Formal Correctness of Numerical Algorithms; Deductive Verification of Cryptographic Software; Coloured Petri Net Refinement Specification and Correctness Proof with Coq; Modeling Guidelines for Code Generation in the Railway Signaling Context; Tactical Synthesis Of Efficient Global Search Algorithms; Towards Co-Engineering Communicating Autonomous Cyber-Physical Systems; and Formal Methods for Automated Diagnosis of Autosub 6000

    Instrumenting AMS assertion verification on commercial platforms

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    The industry trend appears to be moving towards designs that integrate large digital circuits with multiple analog/RF (radio frequency) interfaces. In the verification of these large integrated circuits, the number of nets that need to be monitored has been growing rapidly. Consequently, the mixed-signal design community has been feeling the need for AMS (Analog and Mixed Signal) assertions that can automatically monitor conformance with expected time-domain behavior and help in debugging deviations from the design intent. The main challenges in providing this support are (a) developing AMS assertion languages or AMS verification libraries, and (b) instrumenting existing commercial simulators to support assertion verification during simulation. In this article, we report two approaches: the first extends the Open Verification Library (OVL) to the AMS domain by integrating a new collection of AMS verification libraries; while the second extends SystemVerilog Assertions (SVA) by augmenting analog predicates into SVA. We demonstrate the use of AMS-OVL on the Cadence Virtuoso environment while emphasizing that our libraries can work in any environment that supports Verilog and Verilog-A. We also report the development of tool support for AMS-SVA using a combination of Cadence NCSIM and Synopsys VCS. We demonstrate the utility of both approaches on the verification of LP3918, an integrated power management unit (PMU) from National Semiconductors. We believe that in the absence of existing EDA (Electronic Design Automation) tools for AMS assertion verification, the proposed approaches of integrating our libraries and our tool sets with existing commercial simulators will be of considerable and immediate practical value

    Combining SOA and BPM Technologies for Cross-System Process Automation

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    This paper summarizes the results of an industry case study that introduced a cross-system business process automation solution based on a combination of SOA and BPM standard technologies (i.e., BPMN, BPEL, WSDL). Besides discussing major weaknesses of the existing, custom-built, solution and comparing them against experiences with the developed prototype, the paper presents a course of action for transforming the current solution into the proposed solution. This includes a general approach, consisting of four distinct steps, as well as specific action items that are to be performed for every step. The discussion also covers language and tool support and challenges arising from the transformation

    Efficient techniques for end-to-end bandwidth estimation: performance evaluations and scalable deployment

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    Several applications, services, and protocols are conjectured to benefit from the knowledge of the end-to-end available bandwidth on a given Internet path. Unfortunately, despite the availability of several bandwidth estimation techniques, there has been only a limited adoption of these in contemporary applications. We identify two issues that contribute to this state of affairs. First, there is a lack of comprehensive evaluations that can help application developers in calibrating the relative performance of these tools--this is especially limiting since the performance of these tools depends on algorithmic, implementation, as well as temporal aspects of probing for available bandwidth. Second, most existing bandwidth estimation tools impose a large probing overhead on the paths over which bandwidth is measured. This can be a significant deterrent for deploying these tools in distributed infrastructures that need to measure bandwidth on several paths periodically. In this dissertation, we address the two issues raised above by making the following contributions: We conduct the first comprehensive black-box evaluation of a large suite of prominent available bandwidth estimation tools on a high-speed network. In this evaluation,we also illustrate the impact that technological and implementation limitations can have on the performance of bandwidth-estimation tools. We conduct the first comprehensive evaluation of available bandwidth estimation algorithms, independent of systemic and implementation biases. In this evaluation, we also illustrate the impact temporal factor such as measurement timescales have on the observed relative performance of bandwidth-estimation tools. We demonstrate that temporal properties can significantly impact the AB estimation process. We redesign the interfaces of existing bandwidth-estimation tools to allow temporal parameters to be explicitly specified and controlled. We design AB inference schemes which can be used to scalably and collaboratively infer the available bandwidth for a large set of end-to-end paths. These schemes allow an operator to select the desired operating point in the trade-off between accuracy and overhead of AB estimation. We further demonstrate that in order to monitor the bandwidth on all paths of a network we do not need access to per-hop bandwidth estimates and can simply rely on end-to-end bandwidth estimates

    Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems

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    This open access book constitutes the proceedings of the 28th International Conference on Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems, TACAS 2022, which was held during April 2-7, 2022, in Munich, Germany, as part of the European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS 2022. The 46 full papers and 4 short papers presented in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 159 submissions. The proceedings also contain 16 tool papers of the affiliated competition SV-Comp and 1 paper consisting of the competition report. TACAS is a forum for researchers, developers, and users interested in rigorously based tools and algorithms for the construction and analysis of systems. The conference aims to bridge the gaps between different communities with this common interest and to support them in their quest to improve the utility, reliability, exibility, and efficiency of tools and algorithms for building computer-controlled systems

    Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems

    Get PDF
    This open access book constitutes the proceedings of the 28th International Conference on Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems, TACAS 2022, which was held during April 2-7, 2022, in Munich, Germany, as part of the European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS 2022. The 46 full papers and 4 short papers presented in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 159 submissions. The proceedings also contain 16 tool papers of the affiliated competition SV-Comp and 1 paper consisting of the competition report. TACAS is a forum for researchers, developers, and users interested in rigorously based tools and algorithms for the construction and analysis of systems. The conference aims to bridge the gaps between different communities with this common interest and to support them in their quest to improve the utility, reliability, exibility, and efficiency of tools and algorithms for building computer-controlled systems
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