Publication
Journal of Electronic Testing: Theory and Applications (JETTA)
Paper

Testing for function and performance: towards an integrated processor validation methodology

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Abstract

Microprocessor design teams use a combination of simulation-based and formal verification techniques to validate the pre-silicon models prior to 'tape-out' and chip fabrication. Pseudo-random test case generation to 'cover' the architectural space is still relied upon as the principal means to identify design bugs. However, such methods are limited to functional bugs only. Detection and diagnosis of timing (performance) bugs at the architectural level is largely an expert job. Architects guide the performance team to run manually generated test cases to validate the design from a performance viewpoint. In this paper, we will review some of the new approaches being tried out to automate the generation of performance test cases. We will show how this can be done within the basic framework of current functional validation and testing of pre-silicon processor models. Three categories of 'reference' specifications are used in determining the defect-free pipeline timing behavior associated with generated test cases: (a) axiomatic specifications of intrinsic machine latencies and bandwidths; (b) proven analytical models for simple basic block and loop test cases; and, (c) a stable reference behavioral/functional (pre-RTL) model of the processor under development. We report experimental results obtained in performance validation studies applied to real PowerPC processor development projects.

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Publication

Journal of Electronic Testing: Theory and Applications (JETTA)

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