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Reuse methodology manual for system-on-a-chip designs: Reuse methodology manual for system-on-a-chip designs.part3.rar

 

Reuse methodology manual for system-on-a-chip designs:
【作 者】Michael Keating, Pierre Bricaud
【出 版 社】 Springer-Verlag New York, LLC   
【书 号】 0387740988  
【出版日期】 Sep. 2007
【开 本】 9.5 x 6.1 x 0.8 inches
【页 码】 292     
【版 次】3  
【封面】

                               
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【内容简介】
Reuse Methodology Manual for System-on-a-Chip Designs, Third Editionoutlines a set of best practices for creating reusable designs for usein an SoC design methodology. These practices are based on the authors'experience in developing reusable designs, as well as the experience ofdesign teams in many companies around the world. Silicon and tooltechnologies move so quickly that many of the details ofdesign-for-reuse will undoubtedly continue to evolve over time. But thefundamental aspects of the methodology described in this book havebecome widely adopted and are likely to form the foundation of chipdesign for some time to come. Development methodology necessarilydiffers between system designers and processor designers, as well asbetween DSP developers and chipset developers. However, there is acommon set of problems facing everyone who is designing complexchips.In response to these problems, design teams have adopted ablock-based design approach that emphasizes design reuse. Reusingmacros (sometimes called "cores") that have already been designed andverified helps to address all of the problems above. However, inadopting reuse-based design, design teams have run into a significantproblem. Reusing blocks that have not been explicitly designed forreuse has often provided little or no benefit to the team. The effortto integrate a pre-existing block into new designs can becomeprohibitively high, if the block does not provide the right views, theright documentation, and the right functionality. From this experience,design teams have realized that reuse-based design requires an explicitmethodology for developing reusable macros that are easy to integrateinto SoCdesigns. This manual focuses on describing these techniques.Features of the Third Edition: Up to date; State of the art; Reuse as asolution for circuit designers; A chronicle of "best practices"; Allchapters updated and revised; Generic guidelines - non tool specific;Emphasis on hard IP and physical design.
【目录】
Foreword     xiii
Preface to the Third Edition     xv
Acknowledgements     xvii
Introduction     1
Goals of This Manual     2
Assumptions     3
Definitions     3
Virtual Socket Interface Alliance     4
Design for Reuse: The Challenge     4
Design for Use     5
Design for Reuse     5
The Emerging Business Model for Reuse     6
The System-on-Chip Design Process     9
A Canonical SoC Design     9
System Design Flow     11
Waterfall vs. Spiral     11
Top-Down vs. Bottom-Up     15
Construct by Correction     15
Summary     16
The Specification Problem     17
Specification Requirements     17
Types of Specifications     18
The System Design Process     19
System-Level Design Issues: Rules and Tools     23
The Standard Model     23
Soft IP vs. Hard IP     25
The Role of Full-Custom Design in Reuse     27
Design for Timing Closure: Logic Design Issues     28
Interfaces and Timing Closure     28
Synchronous vs. Asynchronous Design Style     33
Clocking     35
Reset     36
Timing Exceptions and Multicycle Paths     37
Design for Timing Closure: Physical Design Issues     38
Floorplanning     38
Synthesis Strategy and Timing Budgets     39
Hard Macros     39
Clock Distribution     40
Design for Verification: Verification Strategy     40
System Interconnect and On-Chip Buses     42
Basic Interface Issues     43
Tristate vs. Mux Buses     47
Synchronous Design of Buses     47
Summary     47
IP-to-IP Interfaces     48
Design for Bring-Up and Debug: On-Chip Debug Structures     51
Design for Low Power     52
Lowering the Supply Voltage     53
Reducing Capacitance and Switching Activity     54
Sizing and Other Synthesis Techniques     56
Summary     57
Design for Test: Manufacturing Test Strategies     57
System-Level Test Issues     57
Memory Test     58
Microprocessor Test     58
Other Macros     59
Logic BIST      59
Prerequisites for Reuse     60
Libraries     60
Physical Design Rules     61
The Macro Design Process     63
Overview of IP Design     63
Characteristics of Good IP     64
Implementation and Verification IP     65
Overview of Design Process     67
Key Features     68
Planning and Specification     69
Functional Specification     69
Verification Specification     71
Packaging Specification     71
Development Plan     71
High-Level Models as Executable Specifications     72
Macro Design and Verification     73
Summary     77
Soft Macro Productization     78
Productization Process     78
Activities and Tools     78
RTL Coding Guidelines     81
Overview of the Coding Guidelines     81
Basic Coding Practices     82
General Naming Conventions     82
Naming Conventions for VITAL Support     84
State Variable Names     85
Include Informational Headers in Source Files     85
Use Comments     87
Keep Commands on Separate Lines      87
Line Length     87
Indentation     88
Do Not Use HDL Reserved Words     89
Port Ordering     89
Port Maps and Generic Maps     92
VHDL Entity, Architecture, and Configuration Sections     93
Use Functions     93
Use Loops and Arrays     94
Use Meaningful Labels     96
Coding for Portability     97
Use Only IEEE Standard Types (VHDL)     97
Do Not Use Hard-Coded Numeric Values     98
Packages (VHDL)     98
Constant Definition Files (Verilog)     98
Avoid Embedding Synthesis Commands     99
Use Technology-Independent Libraries     99
Coding For Translation     100
Guidelines for Clocks and Resets     101
Avoid Mixed Clock Edges     102
Avoid Clock Buffers     103
Avoid Gated Clocks     103
Avoid Internally Generated Clocks     104
Gated Clocks and Low-Power Designs     105
Avoid Internally Generated Resets     106
Reset Logic Function     107
Single-Bit Synchronizers     108
Multiple-Bit Synchronizers     108
Coding for Synthesis     108
Infer Registers     109
Avoid Latches     110
If you must use a latch     113
Avoid Combinational Feedback     113
Specify Complete Sensitivity Lists     114
Blocking and Nonblocking Assignments (Verilog)     117
Signal vs. Variable Assignments (VHDL)     119
Case Statements vs. if-then-else Statements     120
Coding Sequential Logic     122
Coding Critical Signals     124
Avoid Delay Times     124
Avoid full_case and parallel_case Pragmas     124
Partitioning for Synthesis     125
Register All Outputs     125
Locate Related Combinational Logic in a Single Module     126
Separate Modules That Have Different Design Goals     127
Asynchronous Logic     128
Arithmetic Operators: Merging Resources     128
Partitioning for Synthesis Runtime     130
Avoid Timing Exceptions     130
Eliminate Glue Logic at the Top Level     133
Chip-Level Partitioning     134
Designing with Memories     135
Code Profiling     136
Macro Synthesis Guidelines     137
Overview of the Synthesis Problem     137
Macro Synthesis Strategy     138
Macro Timing Constraints     139
Subblock Timing Constraints     139
Synthesis in the Design Process     140
Subblock Synthesis Process     141
Macro Synthesis Process     141
Wire Load Models     142
Preserve Clock and Reset Networks     142
Code Checking Before Synthesis     143
Code Checking After Synthesis     143
Physical Synthesis     144
Classical Synthesis     144
Physical Synthesis     145
Physical Synthesis Deliverables     145
RAM and Datapath Generators     145
Memory Design     146
RAM Generator Flow     147
Datapath Design     148
Coding Guidelines for Synthesis Scripts     150
Macro Verification Guidelines     153
Overview of Macro Verification     153
Verification Plan     154
Verification Strategy     155
Inspection as Verification     159
Adversarial Testing     160
Testbench Design     161
Transaction-Based Verification     161
Component-Based Verification      163
Automated Response Checking     165
Verification Suite Design     166
Design of Verification Components     169
Bus Functional Models     169
Monitors     171
Device Models     171
Verification Component Usage     172
Getting to 100%     172
Functional and Code Coverage     172
Prototyping     172
Limited Production     173
Property Checking     173
Code Coverage Analysis     174
Timing Verification     177
Developing Hard Macros     179
Overview     179
Why and When to Use Hard Macros     180
Design Process for Hard vs. Soft Macros     181
Design Issues for Hard Macros     181
Full-Custom Design     181
Interface Design     182
Design For Test     183
Clock     184
Aspect Ratio     185
Porosity     186
Pin Placement and Layout     187
Power Distribution     187
Antenna Checking     188
The Hard Macro Design Process     190
Productization of Hard Macros      190
Physical Design     190
Verification     193
Model Development for Hard Macros     194
Functional Models     194
Timing Models     199
Power Models     200
Test Models     201
Physical Models     204
Porting Hard Macros     204
Macro Deployment: Packaging for Reuse     207
Delivering the Complete Product     207
Soft Macro Deliverables     208
Hard Macro Deliverables     210
Software     212
The Design Archive     213
Contents of the User Guide     214
System Integration with Reusable Macros     217
Integration Overview     217
Integrating Macros into an SoC Design     218
Problems in Integrating IP     218
Strategies for Managing Interfacing Issues     219
Interfacing Hard Macros to the Rest of the Design     220
Selecting IP     221
Hard Macro Selection     221
Soft Macro Selection     221
Soft Macro Installation     222
Soft Macro Configuration     223
Synthesis of Soft Macros     223
Integrating Memories     223
Physical Design     224
Design Planning and Synthesis     226
Physical Placement     230
Timing Closure     234
Verifying the Physical Design     237
Summary     238
System-Level Verification Issues     239
The Importance of Verification     239
The Verification Strategy     240
Interface Verification     241
Transaction Verification     241
Data or Behavioral Verification     242
Standardized Interfaces     244
Functional Verification     244
Random Testing     247
Application-Based Verification     249
Software-Driven Application Testbench     250
Rapid Prototyping for Testing     251
Gate-Level Verification     253
Sign-Off Simulation     253
Formal Verification     254
Gate-Level Simulation with Full Timing     255
Specialized Hardware for System Verification     256
Accelerated Verification Overview     258
RTL Acceleration     259
Software Driven Verification     260
Traditional In-Circuit Verification      260
Design Guidelines for Emulation     261
Testbenches for Emulation     261
Data and Project Management     265
Data Management     265
Revision Control Systems     265
Bug Tracking     267
Regression Testing     267
Managing Multiple Sites     267
Archiving     268
Project Management     269
Development Process     269
Functional Specification     269
Project Plan     270
Implementing Reuse-Based SoC Designs     271
Alcatel     272
Atmel     274
Infineon Technologies     276
LSI Logic     278
Philips Semiconductor     280
STMicroelectronics     282
Conclusion     284
Bibliography     285
Index     287
3个包,part1~part3......
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