Use of an IP-core Development Process to Achieve Time-to-Market and Quality Assurance In a Multi-Project Environment

Publication: Design & Reuse

October 14, 2010 -- Nowadays, the usage of intellectual property cores has been an alternative to the increasing gap between design productivity and chip complexity of system-on-chip (SOC) designs. To support this approach, it is mandatory to deliver complete systems in short time-to-market. Thus, IP-core design organizations must assure high quality IP-cores delivering, in short time frames. In the most of the cases, these cores are produced in a multi project environment.

Our work proposes an iterative process for developing IP-cores with prototyping in FPGA in a multi-project environment, based on the mainly market standards as VSIA, RUP, PMBOK and RMM ones. The process was applied successfully in an organization context with many projects parallel development.

By Francielle Santos, André Aziz, Daniele Santos, Millena Almeida and Edna Barros. (All are with the Informatics Center, Federal University of Pernambuco, Recife, Brazil.


Reprinted from SOCcentral.com, your first stop for ASIC, FPGA, EDA, and IP news and design information.
Copyright 2002 - 2011 Tech Pro Communications, 1209 Colts Circle, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648