'To BIST' or 'Not To BIST?'
Fundamental changes in the SoC design and test arenas are beginning to accelerate as chip design methodologies migrate towards the reusable IP model and the devices become ever more complex. Some leading edge companies such as IBM, Motorola, LSI Logic and others have anticipated the testing challenges associated with multi-million gate deep sub-micron ICs and have incorporated DFT and BIST techniques for several years.
Almost every IDM, fabless design house and foundry now accepts IEEE-Std-1149.1 (JTAG) boundary scan as a given, and the use of the test access port has been expanded for on-chip debugging, in-system programming, control of internal scan chains and activation of BIST circuitry. A search on the topic of built-in self-test on the Internet yields almost 10,000 hits. But market researchers peg the BIST market -- for both IP and the tools to implement it -- at well under $100 million.
The third party functional IP market -- processors, DSPs, etc. -- in contrast, is expected to reach $3 billion by 2005. A March 2000, survey of a dozen or so IP vendors at DesignCon in Santa Clara, Calif., revealed that only two of the twelve even knew what the acronym BIST stood for. So it seems that there is still a significant disconnect between the companies that want to use BIST and the people who must supply it to the circuit designers.
Related Semiconductor IP
- Flexible Pixel Processor Video IP
- Bluetooth Low Energy 6.0 Digital IP
- MIPI SWI3S Manager Core IP
- Ultra-low power high dynamic range image sensor
- Neural Video Processor IP
Related White Papers
- It's Not My Fault! How to Run a Better Fault Campaign Using Formal
- How a voltage glitch attack could cripple your SoC or MCU - and how to securely protect it
- Agile Analog's Approach to Analog IP Design and Quality --- Why "Silicon Proven" is NOT What You Think
- Add Security And Supply Chain Trust To Your ASIC Or SoC With eFPGAs
Latest White Papers
- Enabling Space-Grade AI/ML with RISC-V: A Fully European Stack for Autonomous Missions
- CANDoSA: A Hardware Performance Counter-Based Intrusion Detection System for DoS Attacks on Automotive CAN bus
- How Next-Gen Chips Are Unlocking RISC-V’s Customization Advantage
- Efficient Hardware-Assisted Heap Memory Safety for Embedded RISC-V Systems
- Automatically Retargeting Hardware and Code Generation for RISC-V Custom Instructions