Use of random simulation in formal verification
Florian Krohm, Andreas Kuehlmann, et al.
ICCD 1996
In this paper we describe a hardware design method for memory and register arrays that allows the application of formal equivalence checking for comparing a high-level register transfer level (RTL) specification with a low-level transistor implementation. Equivalence checking is increasingly applied in practical design flows to verify regular logic components. However, because of their specific organization and circuit techniques, high-performance implementations of large storage arrays require particular modifications to the general flow that make them suitable for formal equivalence checking. Two techniques are outlined in this paper. First, a special hierarchical verification scheme is described that allows the application of a partitioned comparison approach of the bit-wise organized transistor-level model with the word-wise organized RTL model. Second, a modified switch-level extraction technique is presented that extends the applicability of equivalence checking from regular dynamic CMOS circuits to self-resetting CMOS (SRCMOS) circuits.
Florian Krohm, Andreas Kuehlmann, et al.
ICCD 1996
R.V. Joshi, Y. Chan, et al.
IEEE SOI 2006
W.H. Henkels, W. Hwang, et al.
VLSI Circuits 1997
W.H. Henkels, N.C.-C. Lu, et al.
VLSI-TSA 1989