AMD Selects Atrenta's SpyGlass to Predict Downstream Design Issues Early in the Design Cycle; Predictive Analysis Technique Saves Months of Re-Design
SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 4, 2003--Atrenta(R) Inc.,
the Predictive Analysis Company(R) announced that AMD's Personal
Connectivity Solutions Group (PCS) has selected Atrenta's SpyGlass(R)
Predictive Analyzer and SpyGlass Design For Testability (DFT) to
predict critical testability and Register Transfer Language (RTL)
handover issues right up front at RTL, before lengthy synthesis and
simulation runs, thereby saving months of re-coding, re-synthesis and
re-verification cycles. AMD chose SpyGlass because of its unique
predictive analysis technique, which enables it to perform detailed
structural analysis at RTL and to identify complex issues such as
clock domain crossings, synchronization and testability issues early
in the design cycle.
"SpyGlass allows us to immediately and efficiently check a wide
range of problems before moving into subsequent design phases, where
corrections are time consuming and costly," said Peggy Nissen, AMD's
computer aided design manager for PCS. "With SpyGlass, the DFT team
now has an automated, less intrusive way to communicate DFT
requirements to the design teams and to apply DFT checks early to find
bugs that had previously caused schedule delays. SpyGlass offers an
automated approach to check the downstream design requirements at RTL
creation."
"By identifying complex design issues such as clock domain
crossings and testability problems early at RTL, SpyGlass reduces late
gate level to RTL iterations and helps AMD minimize development costs
and achieve more predictable schedules," said Ghulam Nurie, Senior
Vice President of Marketing and Business Development at Atrenta.
About SpyGlass
SpyGlass employs a unique predictive analysis technique that looks
at the structure of the design and finds downstream problems that are
not detectable by other methods including other rule checkers,
simulators and formal verifiers. Atrenta has developed an advanced
technology that uses fast synthesis to create a flat gate-level
representation so true structural analysis can be performed during the
RTL design phase. This enables SpyGlass to detect, at the RT level,
very complex design problems such as clock domain crossings,
synchronization, tri-state bus decoding, combinational loops, logic
cone depth, and complex testability issues. Design errors are reported
back to the original RTL and a graphical debugging environment helps
in quick problem isolation.
Users can efficiently utilize Atrenta provided pre-packaged rules,
which represent the best design practices in the industry as well as
create new proprietary and customized checks that address their
company specific guidelines in both VHDL and Verilog.
About Atrenta
Atrenta offers a new approach in accelerating the design of
complex SoCs, ASICs, and FPGAs through predictive analysis. Its
award-winning SpyGlass software is the first tool that performs
detailed structural analysis on register-transfer-level Verilog and
VHDL code in order to check for complex problems, which include coding
styles, RTL-handoff, design re-use, clock/reset requirements, DFT and
much more. Its breakthrough and innovative "look-ahead" capability
incorporates a fast-synthesis engine, logic evaluator, and testability
technologies. Atrenta has over fifty customers, including Agere,
Agilent, Apple, ARM, Canon, Compaq, Fujitsu, Hitachi, Motorola,
National Semiconductor, Nortel, Olympus, and Toshiba, who are using
SpyGlass to achieve shorter overall design cycles, increased design
productivity and lower costs. SpyGlass was selected by EDN magazine as
one of the Top 100 products for 2002 and the tool received the "LSI
Design of The Year 2002" award by Japan's Semiconductor Industry News.
Additionally, Atrenta was chosen by Venture Reporter as one of the top
100 venture-backed companies for 2002.
Atrenta is headquartered in San Jose, California, with European
offices in England and France, a research and development center in
India, and sales and support distributors in India, Israel, Japan,
Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan. For further information, visit the
Atrenta website at http://www.atrenta.com or call 408/453-3333.
Note to Editors: Atrenta and SpyGlass are registered trademarks of
Atrenta Inc. All other trademarks belong to their respective owners.
LR/sf
CONTACT: Atrenta Inc.
Mona Singh, 408/467-4248
mona@atrenta.com
or
Atrenta PR Counsel
Paula Jones, 650/967-3711
paula@newiic.com