"Sugar" Sweetens System-Level Verficiation Flow

July 7, 2003
It's shaping up as the summer of assertion-based verification. Summit Design has debuted an assertion-based flow linking the Property Specification Language (formerly IBM's Sugar 2.0) with its Visual Elite functional modeling and verification...

It's shaping up as the summer of assertion-based verification. Summit Design has debuted an assertion-based flow linking the Property Specification Language (formerly IBM's Sugar 2.0) with its Visual Elite functional modeling and verification tool.

Combining Visual Elite and IBM's "FoCs" tool, the new flow accelerates HDL and SystemC design and verification. Assertion-based verification lets designers define high-level functional rules (assertions or properties) that can be applied throughout the design process. It also helps find missed coverage at various abstraction levels.

Visual Elite is a C/C++ and SystemC functional modeling and verification environment that enables engineers to quickly capture and analyze complex hardware architectures and effectively map them to RTL implementation. FoCs takes Sugar assertions and transforms them to efficient assertion checking code, which can be integrated into the simulation environment. Combining FoCs and Visual Elite provides for dynamic assertion checking that greatly improves verification effectiveness.

Visual Elite is now in version 4.0. Major enhancements include Visual Elite Embedded System Co-design (ESC), a SystemC solution for target processors; and SystemC fast simulation and coding style utilizing FastC, a native SystemC text environment.

Visual Elite 4.0 is available now for beta trial with prices starting at $15,000.

Summit Design Inc.www.sd.com

About the Author

David Maliniak | MWRF Executive Editor

In his long career in the B2B electronics-industry media, David Maliniak has held editorial roles as both generalist and specialist. As Components Editor and, later, as Editor in Chief of EE Product News, David gained breadth of experience in covering the industry at large. In serving as EDA/Test and Measurement Technology Editor at Electronic Design, he developed deep insight into those complex areas of technology. Most recently, David worked in technical marketing communications at Teledyne LeCroy. David earned a B.A. in journalism at New York University.

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