Synopsys' VERA Adopted by Transmeta for Verification of Crusoe Family of Microprocessors
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 13, 2001--Synopsys,
Inc. (Nasdaq:SNPS), the technology leader for complex IC design, today
announced that Transmeta Corporation has adopted its VERA® testbench
automation tool and is widely adopting the OpenVera(TM) Hardware
Verification Language to meet their challenging verification needs.
Using the VERA testbench tool and OpenVera language, Transmeta was
able to meet their stringent verification requirements and quickly
bring to market the energy-efficient Crusoe microprocessor. After
successful use of VERA on the first generation Crusoe processors,
Transmeta is expanding its usage of VERA for the success of future
Crusoe designs.
``To design a processor that simultaneously offers long battery
life, high performance and x86 compatibility is a challenging
undertaking requiring a structured approach to verification. By using
VERA we were able to meet our stringent quality targets and greatly
improve verification productivity,'' said Godfrey D'Souza, director of
VLSI Development, Transmeta Corporation. ``Our verification team has
found the OpenVera language easy to learn, which helped them to come
up to speed quickly and be productive. We look forward to leveraging
the OpenVera language and tools in the future to develop our next
generation energy-efficient Crusoe microprocessors.''
Functional verification of microprocessors is highly resource
intensive and requires the generation of many different assembly
programs and bus transactions to exercise different aspects of the
design. VERA addresses this need with a unique stream generation
capability that automatically generates rules-driven bus transactions
and assembly programs. This capability delivers significant
productivity for verification of processor designs by generating
random combinations of legal bus transactions and instruction
sequences to verify corner cases in the design.
``We are pleased that Transmeta is expanding its usage of OpenVera
and the VERA testbench tool for the verification of the Crusoe line of
microprocessors,'' said Farhad Hayat, vice president of marketing of
the Verification Technology Group at Synopsys. ``VERA is specially
designed for verification of complex designs requiring rules-driven
stimulus generation, and for this reason, it is deployed at many
leading semiconductor, networking, and systems companies.''
Complete Functional Verification Solution
Synopsys provides a complete line of functional verification
solutions supporting Verilog, VHDL, mixed-HDL, and mixed-signal
complex SoC designs, aimed at achieving the highest functional
coverage in the shortest amount of time. These solutions include
Synopsys' VCS(TM) Verilog simulator, Scirocco(TM) VHDL simulator,
VCS/Scirocco-MX mixed-HDL simulation, VERA® testbench automation
tool, CoverMeter(TM) Verilog code coverage analysis tool,
DesignWare® verification IP, LEDA® programmable HDL checker,
NanoSim(TM) circuit simulation, and Formality® equivalence checker.
About Synopsys
Synopsys, Inc. (Nasdaq:SNPS), headquartered in Mountain View,
California, creates leading electronic design automation (EDA) tools
for the global electronics market. The company provides comprehensive
design technologies and solutions to developers of complex integrated
circuits, electronics systems, and systems on a chip. Synopsys also
provides consulting and support services to simplify the overall IC
design process and accelerate time to market for its customers. Visit
Synopsys at http://www.synopsys.com.
Note to Editors: Synopsys, Formality, DesignWare, LEDA and VERA
are registered trademarks of Synopsys, Inc. VCS, Scirocco, CoverMeter,
and NanoSim are all trademarks of Synopsys, Inc. All other trademarks
or registered trademarks mentioned in this release are the
intellectual property of their respective owners.
Contact:
Synopsys, Inc., Mountain View
Renae Cunningham, 650/584-1902
renae@synopsys.com
or
KVO Public Relations
Amy Garland, 503/221-2387
amy@kvo.com
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