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 Agnisys Automation Review

Posts Tagged ‘ISS’

A Quick Look Back at a Virtual DAC

Tuesday, August 4th, 2020

In my last blog post, I talked a bit about the history of the annual Design Automation Conference (DAC) and mentioned that this year it would be a virtual event due to the ongoing pandemic. The show concluded about ten days ago and so we’ve now had time to assess the results. I thought that some of you who were unable to attend might be curious how it went, so I’d like to provide a quick summary.

The first thing to say is that virtual events are still novel and a bit daunting for both exhibitors and attendees. This was the first virtual show for Agnisys, so it took some adjustment to our usual preparation and promotional efforts. The good news is that we had an impressive number of visitors to our DAC virtual booth, so lots of you were able to find out about us, our products, and our customers. We also had a quiz that proved quite popular. The less-good news is that some visitors didn’t navigate to the deeper engagement options. It seemed that the concept of the virtual booth was unclear, plus many users (including our own engineers) were stymied by technical issues on the DAC site.
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Setting the Stage for the Next Abstraction

Sunday, March 31st, 2019

As generations of designs evolved from a few hundred transistors to hundreds of billions, our industry abstracted the problem space from transistors to schematics to gates, and from RTL bit-level to transaction-level. Using abstraction, designers were able to focus on the high-level design and tests while the tools took care of the automation and calculations at the low-level – this certainly made the design flow more efficient and engineers more productive. Over the years abstraction has allowed the EDA industry to manage the ever-increasing complexity and scale of ASIC/SoC designs.

On a related note, check out Mark Glasser’s blog regarding his perspective on abstraction(while your there check out his great photography too).

The strategy behind the Portable Test and Stimulus Standard (PSS) is again to raise this level of abstraction to the next level. PSS will enable SoC teams specify stimulus and tests at a high-level. PSS has constructs for modeling high-level test scenarios such as data flow (buffer, streams, states), behavior (actions, activities, components, resource, pooling), constraints, randomization and coverage. The PSS tool generates the downstream code reusable from block, subsystem and system-level, which can be re-targeted for various verification platforms such as simulation, emulation, prototyping or post-silicon validation.

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