How to manage a billion cycles
By Alain Raynaud, EVE
(02/12/08, 11:57:00 AM EST) -- EE Times
After years discussing verification strategies with hundreds of ASIC designers, it finally hit me: We're at the point where designers are trying to manage billions of cycles of simulation.
Take the video chip business where H.264 and high- definition TV are hot. These chip designers need to simulate hundreds of conformance streams to make sure that the chip is ready to ship. In the wireless handheld market, firmware is key. Ultimately, the device must boot Linux and run a Java application on its LCD screen. And, designers of network routers need to stress their chips through pseudo-random traffic to benchmark key performance metrics, such as packet drop rate.
All these tasks have one thing in common: they require billions of cycles of simulation. Until a designer realizes that he or she can't manage billions of cycles like any other simulation, they hit a wall that I call the "Billion-Cycle Challenge."
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Verification IP for C-PHY
- Band-Gap Voltage Reference with dual 2µA Current Source - X-FAB XT018
- 250nA-88μA Current Reference - X-FAB XT018-0.18μm BCD-on-SOI CMOS
- UCIe D2D Adapter & PHY Integrated IP
- Low Dropout (LDO) Regulator
Related Articles
- Bluetooth to reach $4.4 billion chip potential in 2005, says report
- 10-Gbit Ethernet revenues to reach $3.6 billion by '04, says Dataquest
- System-on-chip market to hit 1.3 billion units in 2004, says new report
- How to manage a derivative SoC project
Latest Articles
- SCENIC: Stream Computation-Enhanced SmartNIC
- Agentic AI-based Coverage Closure for Formal Verification
- Microarchitectural Co-Optimization for Sustained Throughput of RISC-V Multi-Lane Chaining Vector Processors
- RISC-V Functional Safety for Autonomous Automotive Systems: An Analytical Framework and Research Roadmap for ML-Assisted Certification
- Emulation-based System-on-Chip Security Verification: Challenges and Opportunities