An Introduction to Symbolic Simulation

Publication: eeDesign (EE Times EDA News)
Contributor: ARM

December 19, 2005 -- Three methods for testing functional equivalence are currently available to designers — conventional simulation, cone-based equivalence checking, and symbolic simulation. Most designers are familiar with the first two, while symbolic simulation is newer and has only been commercially available for a few years. Each method has its strengths, and the most effective approach depends on the specific application.

The use of symbolic simulation removes the RTL restrictions and circuit limitations inherent with today’s cone-based equivalence checking tools. This production-proven technology offers circuit designers the ability to directly verify the functionality of large complex memories and macro cells without having to re-code their RTL or modify their circuits as with other approaches.

Another key advantage is that designers can verify their RTL vs. Spice models much sooner in the design flow. Today’s symbolic simulation tools automatically create test benches, so designers can begin design verification earlier without waiting until RTL test benches and Spice test vectors are developed.

These new techniques can handle the complex netlists typically found in today’s gigabit memories because one symbolic vector can replace 2n binary vectors, where n is the number of inputs. Huge capacity, coupled with the ability to directly read Verilog RTL and Spice netlists, makes this approach ideal for memory verification applications. This article outlines the key challenges of memory verification, and goes on to describe how symbolic simulation and its underlying technologies offer advantages for verifying full-custom circuit designs, such as memories and macro-cells. Application examples are provided along with a few examples of the types of problems that are often uncovered by using symbolic simulation early in the design flow.

By Paul Hoxey, Clayton McDonald, and David Guinther. (Hoxey is a VLSI Design Engineer at ARM; McDonald is an R&D Circuit Manager at Synopsys, Inc.; Guinther is a Product Marketing Manager at Synopsys, Inc.)


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