New Version of Arteris NoC IP Library and Design Tools Enhance Productivity for Constructing On-Chip Communications Subsystems; Adds AMBA(R) 3 AXI Support
PARIS—(BUSINESS WIRE)—Feb. 27, 2006—
Arteris SA, a leading provider of Network on Chip (NoC)
solutions addressing challenges associated with on-chip
communications, today announced immediate availability of its Arteris
NoC Solution, Version 1.4. The latest release of the IP library and
accompanying tool set incorporates a range of customer feedback and
includes new productivity-oriented features and tighter integration
with EDA tool flows that will accelerate the implementation of
NoC-based methodologies in complex SoCs.
Arteris also announced support of the AMBA(R) 3 AXI(TM) protocol
from ARM as part of this release.
Specific enhancements in the Arteris NoC 1.4 solution include:
-- Improved automation in NoCexplorer(TM), the company's tool for
evaluating NoC architecture and chip topologies;
-- Improvements in how IP 'socket' standards are handled,
including support for AMBA 3 AXI with a new network interface
unit (NIU) for the Arteris solution;
-- A new NoC Self-Test Generator(TM) which helps ensure that each
NoC instance and its associated interface protocol meet
architectural specifications;
-- A new NoC Trace and Debug(TM) capability to verify performance
and behavior characteristics during SoC simulation.
"The Arteris NoC Solution 1.4 is the third production release of
the only commercially available Network on Chip SoC communications
solution and one that incorporates not only major new features but
significant user feedback as well," said Charlie Janac, President and
CEO of Arteris. "We are committed to enabling the transition to
NoC-based chip design in order for customers to obtain lower SoC unit
costs, manage system complexity and performance, and facilitate more
efficient IP integration and reuse. This latest release enhances our
ability to do that."
Arteris broke new ground when it introduced the first commercially
available NoC solution in 2005. The Arteris NoC is a three-layer
packet switching network that operates inside complex SoCs. The
solution uses an innovative IP library of switches, network interface
units, and other soft IP blocks that allow Arteris customers to
configure their own flexible SoC communication subsystems. The NoC
technology improves upon traditional bus-based approaches that must be
redesigned for each different type of SoC configuration, and typically
use more wires, consume more power with lower performance, while often
increasing die size.
The Arteris NoC Solution integrates easily with popular EDA design
flows through RTL outputs in Verilog, VHDL and System C formats,
together with synthesis scripts.
New productivity features in Arteris NoC Solution 1.4
The NoCexplorer 1.4 tool dramatically increases the automation
required to integrate IP blocks with an NoC. The intuitive and
graphically-oriented tool enables system architects to quickly
evaluate the impact of fundamental architectural alternatives to
design a NoC topology that meets their SoC specifications - at the
earliest stages of the design cycle. Even with modest amount of data,
SoC traffic parameters such as operating frequency, latency,
bandwidth, and quality of service can be quickly and accurately
analyzed. NoCexplorer 1.4 provides an analysis of the impact of
sharing hardware resources for multiple dataflows. The output of this
NoC exploration phase is the application-specific topology of the
Arteris NoC instance compatible with the specified SoC communication
constraints. The company's NoCcompiler(TM) tool then customizes and
connects the Arteris NoC Library IPs to generate an RTL version of the
NoC instance, which can then feed into existing EDA flows.
The Arteris solution enables faster and easier IP reuse by
decoupling the SoC communication protocol from the IP socket
standards, delivering a productive design methodology and enhanced IP
use flexibility. Arteris is capable of supporting multiple IP
communications protocols, a capability enhanced with the delivery of
the new AXI protocol NIU in addition to existing support for AMBA and
proprietary format NIUs.
The latest release of the Arteris solution also addresses IP
quality issues. The new Arteris NoC SelfTest Generator allows users to
test that each generated Arteris NoC instance, with its associated IP
protocols, complies with its original specification - including its
specified behavior down to its components including sockets, address
map and connection map before it is integrated in the SoC. The NoC
SelfTest Generator is able to check assertions and report performance
properties such as end-to-end, latency and peak throughput for any
Arteris NoC instance configuration.
SoC-level performance verification consumes an increasing portion
of SoC development time. The new NoC Trace and Debug tools in the
Arteris solution allow verification that SoC communication performance
objectives have been met once the NoC has been configured and inserted
in the SoC. Inserting a trace mechanism in the Arteris NoC instance
allows measurement of NoC performance results such as bandwidths and
latencies, and debugging of transaction and link-level performance
during simulation.
"Designers are looking to NoC in general, and Arteris
specifically, for a host of benefits this approach brings for on-chip
communication and IP integration and re-use - fewer global wires,
higher performance, lower power and smaller die size. With this latest
release we offer even more capabilities take advantage of the NoC
concept and improve overall designer productivity," said Pierre Huon,
vice president of engineering at Arteris. "The release of an Arteris
Network Interface Unit for the popular 3 AXI protocol further
strengthens the ability of Arteris to support market leading IP blocks
without modification and enable more efficient IP reuse."
Pricing
The Arteris NoC Solution 1.4 is available on either per project
time based license or royalty pricing models.
About Arteris
Arteris, SA, provides Network on Chip solutions to transport and
manage the on-chip communications within complex System-on-Chip (SoC)
integrated circuits, increasing performance, reducing number of global
wires, with lower power utilization while enabling the most complex,
IP-laden designs. It allows chip developers to implement efficient and
high-performance Network-on-Chip (NoC) designs, overcoming limitations
of traditional layered or pipelined bus-based architectures. Arteris'
technology is scaleable in terms of the number of IP blocks designers
can network, as well as with deep submicron silicon manufacturing
processes. The NoC solutions are compatible with existing design flows
and with IP interface standards.
The Paris-based company operates globally with offices in Boston
and San Jose, California. Arteris has raised more than $12 million in
equity investment from an international set of venture capitalists,
including Crescendo Ventures, Techno Venture Management and Ventech.
More information can be found at http://www.arteris.com.
Arteris, the Arteris logo, NoCcompiler, NoCexplorer are trademarks
of Arteris SA. All other trademarks or registered trademarks are the
property of their respective owners.
AMBA 3 AXI is a trademark of Arm Holdings
Contact:
Arteris, SA, Paris
Philippe Martin, +33 1 61 37 38 40
Email Contact
or
Wired Island, Ltd.
Mike Sottak, 408-876-4418
Email Contact