Optimal VLSI Architectural Synthesis [electronic resource] : Area, Performance and Testability /

Although research in architectural synthesis has been conducted for over ten years it has had very little impact on industry. This in our view is due to the inability of current architectural synthesizers to provide area-delay competitive (or "optimal") architectures, that will support interfaces to analog, asynchronous, and other complex processes. They also fail to incorporate testability. The OASIC (optimal architectural synthesis with interface constraints) architectural synthesizer and the CATREE (computer aided trees) synthesizer demonstrate how these problems can be solved. Traditionally architectural synthesis is viewed as NP hard and there­ fore most research has involved heuristics. OASIC demonstrates by using an IP approach (using polyhedral analysis), that most input algo­ rithms can be synthesized very fast into globally optimal architectures. Since a mathematical model is used, complex interface constraints can easily be incorporated and solved. Research in test incorporation has in general been separate from syn­ thesis research. This is due to the fact that traditional test research has been at the gate or lower level of design representation. Nevertheless as technologies scale down, and complexity of design scales up, the push for reducing testing times is increased. On way to deal with this is to incorporate test strategies early in the design process. The second half of this text examines an approach for integrating architectural synthesis with test incorporation. Research showed that test must be considered during synthesis to provide good architectural solutions which minimize Xlll area delay cost functions.

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Main Authors: Gebotys, Catherine H. author., Elmasry, Mohamed I. author., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Boston, MA : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1992
Subjects:Engineering., Computer-aided engineering., Electrical engineering., Electronic circuits., Circuits and Systems., Electrical Engineering., Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-4018-2
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id KOHA-OAI-TEST:178536
record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Engineering.
Computer-aided engineering.
Electrical engineering.
Electronic circuits.
Engineering.
Circuits and Systems.
Electrical Engineering.
Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design.
Engineering.
Computer-aided engineering.
Electrical engineering.
Electronic circuits.
Engineering.
Circuits and Systems.
Electrical Engineering.
Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design.
spellingShingle Engineering.
Computer-aided engineering.
Electrical engineering.
Electronic circuits.
Engineering.
Circuits and Systems.
Electrical Engineering.
Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design.
Engineering.
Computer-aided engineering.
Electrical engineering.
Electronic circuits.
Engineering.
Circuits and Systems.
Electrical Engineering.
Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design.
Gebotys, Catherine H. author.
Elmasry, Mohamed I. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Optimal VLSI Architectural Synthesis [electronic resource] : Area, Performance and Testability /
description Although research in architectural synthesis has been conducted for over ten years it has had very little impact on industry. This in our view is due to the inability of current architectural synthesizers to provide area-delay competitive (or "optimal") architectures, that will support interfaces to analog, asynchronous, and other complex processes. They also fail to incorporate testability. The OASIC (optimal architectural synthesis with interface constraints) architectural synthesizer and the CATREE (computer aided trees) synthesizer demonstrate how these problems can be solved. Traditionally architectural synthesis is viewed as NP hard and there­ fore most research has involved heuristics. OASIC demonstrates by using an IP approach (using polyhedral analysis), that most input algo­ rithms can be synthesized very fast into globally optimal architectures. Since a mathematical model is used, complex interface constraints can easily be incorporated and solved. Research in test incorporation has in general been separate from syn­ thesis research. This is due to the fact that traditional test research has been at the gate or lower level of design representation. Nevertheless as technologies scale down, and complexity of design scales up, the push for reducing testing times is increased. On way to deal with this is to incorporate test strategies early in the design process. The second half of this text examines an approach for integrating architectural synthesis with test incorporation. Research showed that test must be considered during synthesis to provide good architectural solutions which minimize Xlll area delay cost functions.
format Texto
topic_facet Engineering.
Computer-aided engineering.
Electrical engineering.
Electronic circuits.
Engineering.
Circuits and Systems.
Electrical Engineering.
Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design.
author Gebotys, Catherine H. author.
Elmasry, Mohamed I. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Gebotys, Catherine H. author.
Elmasry, Mohamed I. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Gebotys, Catherine H. author.
title Optimal VLSI Architectural Synthesis [electronic resource] : Area, Performance and Testability /
title_short Optimal VLSI Architectural Synthesis [electronic resource] : Area, Performance and Testability /
title_full Optimal VLSI Architectural Synthesis [electronic resource] : Area, Performance and Testability /
title_fullStr Optimal VLSI Architectural Synthesis [electronic resource] : Area, Performance and Testability /
title_full_unstemmed Optimal VLSI Architectural Synthesis [electronic resource] : Area, Performance and Testability /
title_sort optimal vlsi architectural synthesis [electronic resource] : area, performance and testability /
publisher Boston, MA : Springer US : Imprint: Springer,
publishDate 1992
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-4018-2
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AT elmasrymohamediauthor optimalvlsiarchitecturalsynthesiselectronicresourceareaperformanceandtestability
AT springerlinkonlineservice optimalvlsiarchitecturalsynthesiselectronicresourceareaperformanceandtestability
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:1785362018-07-30T22:57:42ZOptimal VLSI Architectural Synthesis [electronic resource] : Area, Performance and Testability / Gebotys, Catherine H. author. Elmasry, Mohamed I. author. SpringerLink (Online service) textBoston, MA : Springer US : Imprint: Springer,1992.engAlthough research in architectural synthesis has been conducted for over ten years it has had very little impact on industry. This in our view is due to the inability of current architectural synthesizers to provide area-delay competitive (or "optimal") architectures, that will support interfaces to analog, asynchronous, and other complex processes. They also fail to incorporate testability. The OASIC (optimal architectural synthesis with interface constraints) architectural synthesizer and the CATREE (computer aided trees) synthesizer demonstrate how these problems can be solved. Traditionally architectural synthesis is viewed as NP hard and there­ fore most research has involved heuristics. OASIC demonstrates by using an IP approach (using polyhedral analysis), that most input algo­ rithms can be synthesized very fast into globally optimal architectures. Since a mathematical model is used, complex interface constraints can easily be incorporated and solved. Research in test incorporation has in general been separate from syn­ thesis research. This is due to the fact that traditional test research has been at the gate or lower level of design representation. Nevertheless as technologies scale down, and complexity of design scales up, the push for reducing testing times is increased. On way to deal with this is to incorporate test strategies early in the design process. The second half of this text examines an approach for integrating architectural synthesis with test incorporation. Research showed that test must be considered during synthesis to provide good architectural solutions which minimize Xlll area delay cost functions.I: Introduction -- 1. Global VLSI Design Cycle -- 2. Behavioral and Structural Interfaces -- II: Review And Background -- 3. State of the Art Synthesis -- 4. Introduction to Integer Programming -- III: Optimal Architectural Synthesis With Interfaces -- 5. A Methodology for Architectural Synthesis -- 6. Simultaneous Scheduling, and Selection and Allocation Of Functional Units -- 7. Oasic: Area-Delay Constrained Architectural Synthesis -- 8. Support for Algorithmic Constructs -- 9. Interface Constraints -- 10. Oasic Synthesis Results -- IV: Testable Architectural Synthesis -- 11. Testability in Architectural Synthesis -- 12. The Catree Architectural Synthesis With Testability -- V: Summary and Future Research -- 13. Summary and Future Research -- References.Although research in architectural synthesis has been conducted for over ten years it has had very little impact on industry. This in our view is due to the inability of current architectural synthesizers to provide area-delay competitive (or "optimal") architectures, that will support interfaces to analog, asynchronous, and other complex processes. They also fail to incorporate testability. The OASIC (optimal architectural synthesis with interface constraints) architectural synthesizer and the CATREE (computer aided trees) synthesizer demonstrate how these problems can be solved. Traditionally architectural synthesis is viewed as NP hard and there­ fore most research has involved heuristics. OASIC demonstrates by using an IP approach (using polyhedral analysis), that most input algo­ rithms can be synthesized very fast into globally optimal architectures. Since a mathematical model is used, complex interface constraints can easily be incorporated and solved. Research in test incorporation has in general been separate from syn­ thesis research. This is due to the fact that traditional test research has been at the gate or lower level of design representation. Nevertheless as technologies scale down, and complexity of design scales up, the push for reducing testing times is increased. On way to deal with this is to incorporate test strategies early in the design process. The second half of this text examines an approach for integrating architectural synthesis with test incorporation. Research showed that test must be considered during synthesis to provide good architectural solutions which minimize Xlll area delay cost functions.Engineering.Computer-aided engineering.Electrical engineering.Electronic circuits.Engineering.Circuits and Systems.Electrical Engineering.Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-4018-2URN:ISBN:9781461540182