Bridging the gap between ESL and RTL by linking simulation environments
July 11, 2012 // Nick Flaherty
Aldec and Agilent Technologies are aiming to bridge the gap between high level language design and implementation by linking their simulation environments.
The two companies have developed a new co-simulation interface between the latest version of Aldec's Riviera-PRO design simulation and verification platform used by FPGA, ASIC, and SoC development teams, and SystemVue, Agilent’s ESL design and signal processing environment used by system architects and algorithm developers in physical layer designs of wireless, RF and DSP applications. The new interface enables users to efficiently integrate algorithm and system-level designs with hardware implementations.
“Agilent system-level design products are now integrated into the hardware design flow, which enables system engineers to troubleshoot Verilog and VHDL hardware implementations, while still maintaining a higher-level view of physical layer (PHY) system performance,” said Daren McClearnon, Agilent’s SystemVue Product Marketing Manager. “Our respective R&D teams worked closely together to create a high-performance yet cost-efficient co-simulation interface that unites baseband, RF, simulations, and measurements in single, system-level cockpit.”
The new co-simulation interface requires only one instance of Riviera-PRO (regardless of the number of HDL blocks on a SystemVue diagram), supports a range of data types, and provides extensive cross-domain debugging capabilities. This tight, bi-directional integration reduces development time and effort by enabling continuous test and system-level verification throughout the development process.
“The Agilent SystemVue co-simulation interface brings several exciting new features to hardware design verification engineers, our traditional customers,” said Dmitry Melnik, Riviera-PRO Product Manager. “It enables the link to a powerful RF System simulator, RF EDA tools and models, trusted references for emerging communications standards, and even test and measurement equipment if necessary. Now engineers can re-use SystemVue components in hardware simulations while respective HDL blocks are being coded, or use SystemVue as a testbench to verify HDL implementation.”
www.agilent.com
www.aldec.com
-
Technology News
Lithium-ion batteries withstand 10.000 charging cycles
May 22, 2013
Scientists from the Centre for Solar Energy and Hydrogen Research Baden Wuerttemberg (ZSW) have developed lithium-ion-batteries ...
-
Technology News
Microsemi begins shipping production-qualified SmartFusion2 SoC FPGAs
-
Market News
Market researcher sees Samsung and Osram in price war
-
Business News
EPC offers GaN power library online
-
Technology News
Cockpit concept learns driver's habits
-
Technology News
Automotive MCU benchmark takes energy efficiency into account
May 21, 2013
Today, cars are crammed with microprocessors, and many of them are not completely switched off when the driver parks and ...
-
Business News
EnSilica partners Cross Border Technologies to boost sales growth in key European markets
-
Technology News
Industry's first ultra-wideband Doherty amplifiers support broadband operation
-
Technology News
Graphics chip recognizes nearby pedestrians and bicycles
Technical papers
Filter Wizard
Linear video channel
READER OFFER
Read more
The development platform for i.MX 6Quad from element14 (built to the Freescale SABRE Lite design) is an evaluation platform featuring the powerful i.MX 6Q, a multimedia application processor with Quad ARM Cortex-A9 cores at 1.2 GHz from Freescale Semiconductor.
This month, Freescale and element14 are giving away five such platforms, worth £128.06 each, for EETimes Europe's readers to win. The platform helps evaluate the rich set of peripherals and includes a 10/100/Gb Ethernet port, SATA-II, HDMI v1.4, LVDS, parallel RGB interface, touch screen interface, analog headphone/microphone, micro TF and SD card interface, USB, serial port, JTAG, camera interface, and input keys for Android.
And the winners are...
In our previous reader offer, Pico Technology was giving away one of its recently launched PicoScope 3207B, a 2-channel USB 3.0 oscilloscope worth 1451 Euros. Lucky winner Mr L. Sanchez-Gonzalez from Spain should be receiving his PicoScope 3207B soon. Let's wish them some interesting findings with his projects.
Read more
Design centers
Automotive
December 15, 2011 | Texas instruments | 222901974
Unique Ser/Des technology supports encrypted video and audio content with full duplex bi-directional control channel over a single wire interface.
Lithium-ion batteries withstand 10.000 charging cycles
Microsemi begins shipping production-qualified SmartFusion2 SoC FPGAs
Market researcher sees Samsung and Osram in price war
EPC offers GaN power library online
Cockpit concept learns driver's habits
Automotive MCU benchmark takes energy efficiency into account
EnSilica partners Cross Border Technologies to boost sales growth in key European markets
Industry's first ultra-wideband Doherty amplifiers support broadband operation
Graphics chip recognizes nearby pedestrians and bicycles
EMS boom for medical industry says analyst
Gemalto teams with Encore Networks for mission critical M2M communications as US shifts to wireless
Apple's overseas tax evasion stirs debate over US tax code
Could Intel enable USD200 Ultrabook?

Follow us