Industry Support Builds for Intel's Formal Property Verification Language Initiative; Synopsys, Verisity Design and Co-Design Automation to Adopt Intel's ForSpec.Business Editors/High Tech Writers SANTA CLARA Santa Clara, city, Cuba Santa Clara (sän`tä klä`rä), city (1994 est. pop. 217,000), capital of Villa Clara prov., central Cuba. , Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 5, 2001 Intel Corporation (company) Intel Corporation - A US microelectronics manufacturer. They produced the Intel 4004, Intel 8080, Intel 8086, Intel 80186, Intel 80286, Intel 80386, Intel 486 and Pentium microprocessor families as well as many other integrated circuits and personal computer networking today announced that three electronic design automation (EDA (1) (Electronic Design Automation) Using the computer to design, lay out, verify and simulate the performance of electronic circuits on a chip or printed circuit board. ) companies have agreed to adopt Intel's functional verification assertion language (ForSpec). Synopsys, Verisity Design and Co-Design Automation will adopt ForSpec for their future functional verification EDA tools. Intel has extensive expertise in formal verification and has submitted ForSpec to the formal standards organization, Accellera, which is chartered with defining a standard formal property verification language for consideration, adoption and eventual transfer to IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, New York, www.ieee.org) A membership organization that includes engineers, scientists and students in electronics and allied fields. . "Formal property verification represents the next major advancement in functional verification for complex integrated circuits," said Greg Spirakis, vice president of Intel's Design Technology. "The electronic design community is looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. a standard formal assertion language to begin deploying new tools and methodology. Having a standard language will enable design reuse and speed tool integration." Synopsys will incorporate the ForSpec language into OpenVera* to provide the OpenVera community with a powerful verification solution based on Synopsys' testbench automation tool, VERA VERA Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms VERA Virtual Electronic Resource Access VERA Vienna Environmental Research Accelerator VERA Verzeichnis Edv-Relevanter Akronyme (German: Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms; website) *. OpenVera is an open source hardware verification language A Hardware Verification Language, or HVL, is a programming language used to verify the designs of electronic circuits written in a hardware description language. HVLs typically include features of a high-level programming language like C++ or Java as well as features for that enables seamless interoperability among verification tools, ease of use through an integrated verification methodology, and open distribution of verification intellectual property. The addition of ForSpec includes Intel's formal verification capabilities in an open language that drives both property verification and Synopsys' high performance simulators, VCS (1) (Verilog Computer Simulator) See Verilog. (2) (Version Control System) See version control. * and Scirocco sci·roc·co n. Variant of sirocco. *. Verisity Design also plans to incorporate the temporal logic portion of ForSpec into the e verification language. By incorporating the ForSpec temporal logic into the e language, Verisity will enable a more powerful, streamlined verification methodology combining Intel's formal verification capabilities and Specman Elite*. Verification of today's complex systems, system-on-chip (SoC) and large ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit) Pronounced "a-sick." A chip that is custom designed for a specific application rather than a general-purpose chip such as a microprocessor. designs requires a single specification of intended behavior to integrate these verification technologies into a workable system. Such a verification environment enables engineers to get the best leverage from both formal and simulation engines. Co-Design Automation has agreed to merge the ForSpec temporal constructs into their SUPERLOG* design and verification language. This will enable a powerful property verification mechanism implemented in a manner recognizable and usable by Verilog designers as well as verification engineers. SUPERLOG, incorporating ForSpec, will enable an effective combined simulation and property verification methodology that can be applied across the entire design and verification flow, while improving the ease of use of property verification technologies in practical design processes. As part of the ensuing development of ForSpec, Synopsys, Verisity and Co-Design Automation are contributing enhancements to the new formal property verification language that will be submitted to Accellera for the final phase of its standards selection process. Intel, the world's largest chip maker, is also a leading manufacturer of computer, networking and communications products. Additional information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom. *Third party marks and brands are property of their respective holders. Intel is a trademark of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries. |
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