When Is Verification Done?
Ed Sperling, Semiconductor Engineering
December 20, 2013
Reaching a sufficient confidence level that SoC designs will work as designed is becoming much harder.
Verification is becoming much more difficult at 16nm/14nm, driven by the sheer complexity of SoCs, the fact that there is much more to verify, and the impact of physical effects, which now affect what used to be exclusively the realm of functional verification.
The questions these changes raise are daunting, and for many engineers rather unnerving. The whole validation, verification and debugging process keeps turning up new bugs as SoCs are rolled out. Some of them can be fixed in software, some of them can be fixed in the next rev of a chip—often a re-spin of a pre-production chip—but some of them also make their way out into the market where they can cause havoc. And it’s not just the hardware that has to be verified anymore.
Related News
Breaking News
- RISC-V International Promotes Andrea Gallo to CEO
- See the 2025 Best Edge AI Processor IP at the Embedded Vision Summit
- Andes Technology Showcases RISC-V AI Leadership at RISC-V Summit Europe 2025
- RISC-V Royalty-Driven Revenue to Exceed License Revenue by 2027
- Keysom Unveils Keysom Core Explorer V1.0
Most Popular
- RISC-V International Promotes Andrea Gallo to CEO
- See the 2025 Best Edge AI Processor IP at the Embedded Vision Summit
- Andes Technology Showcases RISC-V AI Leadership at RISC-V Summit Europe 2025
- Ceva, Inc. Announces First Quarter 2025 Financial Results
- Cadence Unveils Millennium M2000 Supercomputer with NVIDIA Blackwell Systems to Transform AI-Driven Silicon, Systems and Drug Design
|
|
E-mail This Article |
|
Printer-Friendly Page |






