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2284 Results

  • Design Topologies

    This session covers the 2 main design topologies in mixed-signal SoC: analog-centric mixed-signal designs and digital-centric mixed-signal designs. In each case, the design nature and constraints are presented along with the various available approaches that can be used with their merits and demerits.

  • What Can Metrics Tell Us?

    This session expands our discussion on what metrics can tell us by providing examples for various common processes within today’s SoC verification flow.

  • Mixing Languages

    This session defines the language choices available in a mixed-signal design structure and how each choice impacts the performance and quality of the process. Then, introduces the concept of design reconfiguration and the available schemes to alter the design structure in constructive manners to help the mixed-signal verification performance which directly helps improve the quality of the design by allowing the designer to cover/test more areas of the design.

  • What's Needed to Address the Problem?

    This session discusses four important aspects of a successful metrics-driven process: understanding the landscape, categorization, run-time control and reporting.

  • Questa ADMS: AMS Configuration

    This session introduces Questa ADMS, and how this tool can be adapted in various topologies supporting the available methodologies with little or no impact on the design flow. Questa ADMS features and capabilities are explored to show how they can address the various challenges in mixed-signal SoC design. Customer success stories and testimonials are provided to show how successful Questa ADMS is being used in various design environments.

  • What's Needed to Adopt Metrics?

    This session discusses important aspects of an implementation that should be considered when architecting a solution.

  • Evolving Trends in Functional Verification

    2012 Wilson Research Group Functional Verification Study Results

  • What to Expect After Adopting the Metrics

    This session provides a conclusion of what benefits to expect after you adopt metrics-driven processes.

  • Metrics in SoC Verification

    In this track, we take a broader view of metrics—beyond traditional coverage measurements—that identify a range of metrics across multiple aspects of today’s SoC functional verification process. We then discuss other important considerations when integrating metrics into a project flow, such as metric categorization, run-time control, data management, and reporting and analysis.

  • Analog Mixed-Signal Verification

    Today’s ICs increasingly rely on complex mixed-signal functionality with stringent performance and low power requirements for applications in segments including IoT, Automotive, Communications, and Industrials. Verification of these complex mixed-signal ICs is challenging due to the need to ensure that they meet demanding specifications with correct connectivity, functionality, and adequate system performance across analog/digital (A/D) interfaces on the chip. To address these challenges, verification teams need to run an increasing number of mixed-signal simulations at the top level as well as at the sub-system level. These mixed-signal simulation solutions need to be fast, accurate, easy to use, and seamlessly integrate into existing analog and digital verification flows.

  • Introduction to UVM Connect

    This session introduces UVM Connect and explains the benefits of adoption. It also reviews the principles and concepts behind the TLM1 and TLM2 standards and reviews the basic connection syntax and semantics of both SystemVerilog and SystemC.

  • Introduction to UVM Connect

  • Connections

  • Connections

    This session shows how to establish TLM-based connections between components in SystemVerilog and SystemC.

  • Converters

    This session shows how to write the converters that are needed to transfer transaction data across the language boundary.

  • Converters

  • UVM Command API

    This session shows how to access and control key aspects of UVM simulation from SystemC.

  • UVM Command API

  • UVM Connect User Guide

  • UVM 1.1b Class Reference

    v1.1b The UVM Class Library provides the building blocks needed to quickly develop well-constructed and reusable verification components and test environments in SystemVerilog. This UVM Class Reference provides detailed reference information for each user-visible class in the UVM library. For additional information on using UVM, see the UVM User’s Guide located in the top level directory within the UVM kit.

  • UVM Connect 2.1.4 Kit

  • Verification Horizons - Volume 8, Issue 1

    "Our kitchen renovation is nearly complete... Just as with verification, the key is to have a plan... take as many contingencies into account as you can... and... be able to handle constrained random stimulus.”

  • UVM 1.1a Class Reference

    v1.1a The UVM Class Library provides the building blocks needed to quickly develop well-constructed and reusable verification components and test environments in SystemVerilog. This UVM Class Reference provides detailed reference information for each user-visible class in the UVM library. For additional information on using UVM, see the UVM User’s Guide located in the top level directory within the UVM kit.

  • Verification Horizons - Volume 7, Issue 3

    "I find myself thinking of how this (kitchen upgrade) relates to upgrading a verification methodology because I’m sure that, by now, you know that that’s how my mind works.”

  • Testbench Co-Emulation: SystemC & TLM-2.0

    This track advocates that functional verification through modern SystemC testbenches paired with co-emulation enables further verification productivity improvements.