• Genere: Libro
  • Lingua: Inglese
  • Editore: CRC Press
  • Pubblicazione: 09/2009
  • Edizione: 1° edizione

System Level Design with .Net Technology

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149,98 €
142,48 €
AGGIUNGI AL CARRELLO
NOTE EDITORE
The first book to harness the power of .NET for system design, System Level Design with .NET Technology constitutes a software-based approach to design modeling verification and simulation. World class developers, who have been at the forefront of system design for decades, explain how to tap into the power of this dynamic programming environment for more effective and efficient management of metadata—and introspection and interoperability between tools. Using readily available technology, the text details how to capture constraints and requirements at high levels and describes how to percolate them during the refinement process. Departing from proprietary environments built around System Verilog and VHDL, this cutting-edge reference includes an open source environment (ESys.NET) that readers can use to experiment with new ideas, algorithms, and design methods; and to expand the capabilities of their current tools. It also covers: Modeling and simulation—including requirements specification, IP reuse, and applications of design patterns to hardware/software systems Simulation and validation—including transaction-based models, accurate simulation at cycle and transaction levels, cosimulation and acceleration technique, as well as timing specification and validation Practical use of the ESys.NET environment Worked examples, end of chapter references, and the ESys.NET implementation test bed make this the ideal resource for system engineers and students looking to maximize their embedded system designs.

SOMMARIO
Introduction Needs of a complete and efficient design environment Design flow with ESys.NET Simulation flow with ESys.NET Observer based verification flow with ESys.NET Conclusion and book organization References Part I: MODELING AND SPECIFICATION l. H-level requirements engineering for electronic system-level design 1.1. Introduction 1.2. Background 1.2.1 Framework 1.2.2 Software Engineering Approaches 1.3. Proposed Solution 1.3.1 Formalism 1.3.2 Linguistic Pre-Processing 1.3.3 Consistency Validation 1.3.4 Elicitation of Missing Functionalities 1.4. Experimental Results 1.4.1 Automatic Door Controller 1.4.2 Industrial Router 1.4.3 RapidIO 1.5. Linking to a UML-Based Methodology 1.5.1 Integrated Methodology 1.5.2 Case Study 1.6. Conclusion 2. Transaction Level Modeling with .Net 2.1. Introduction 2.2. Transaction Level Modeling 2.3. Abstract Model 2.4. XML Abstract Model Representation 2.5. Simulation Model Generation 2.6. TLM Expression with .NET 2.7. Conclusion 3. Matching Design Patterns Concepts with Hardware Concepts 3.1. Introduction 3.2. Related Work & Background 3.2.1 Original Patterns 3.2.2 Patterns and Hardware 3.3. Patterns and our Classification System 3.4. Object-Oriented Translations 3.4.1 Translations of Object Properties 3.4.2 Translations of Object Methods 3.4.3 Translations of Polymorphism 3.5. Constraints and Assumptions 3.5.1 Constraint: Dynamism of the Hardware 3.5.2 Assumptions: Pattern Automatic Recognition Problem 3.6. Design Pattern Mappings 3.6.1 Creational Patterns 3.6.2 Structural Patterns 3.6.3 Behavioral Patterns 3.7. Conclusion PART II: SIMULATION 4. A Service Oriented Simulation framework Using .Net Technologies 4.1. Introduction 4.2. Earlier versions of ESyS.Net 4.3. SoCML 4.3.1 Separation of Concerns 4.3.2 Service Oriented Modeling Language 4.3.3 MOC Modeling 4.4. ESyS.Net 3 4.4.1 Model Elaboration 4.4.2 Simulation Core 4.5. Conclusion 5. Co-simulation of Multi-Language Descriptions of Heterogeneous Systems 5.1. Introduction 5.2. Methods Overview for Co-simulation 5.2.1 TCP/IP 5.2.2 Shared Memory 5.2.3 Pinvoke DLL 5.2.4 Component Object Model (COM) 5.2.5 Static Function 5.2.6 The Managed Wrapper 5.3. Simulation of Multi-Language Descriptions of Heterogeneous Systems 5.3.1 Simulation Flow 5.3.2 RTL level 5.3.3 TLM level 5.3.4 Example for Compiled Model 5.3.5 Comparison between New Methodologies and Standard Co-Simulation 5.4. Conclusion PART III VERIFICATION 6. Implementing LTL Based Verification Through Reflection 6.1. Introduction 6.2. Conclusion 7. Timing Constraints Verification 7.1. Introduction 7.2. Timing Specification 7.3. MiniMax Timing Specification 7.4. Realizability of Min/Max Timing Specification 7.5. TLM and Timing in TLM 7.6. Conclusion 8. Extension of Esys.net by System Verilog Assertions 8.1. Introduction 8.2. Representing System Verilog Assertions 3.1 in HOL 8.2.1 The HOL System 8.2.2 Representing Letters and Words in HOL 8.2.3 Representing Syntax in HOL 8.2.4 Formal Semantics in HOL 8.2.5 Proofs in HOL 8.2.6 Mapping from SVA 3.1 to PSL 1.1. 8.3. Translating SVA to w-Automata in HOL 804. Integration of Verification Environment based in SVA in Esys.net 8.5. Conclusion PART VI: SYNTHESIS AND IMPLEMENTATION 9. OS Space Exploration and Software Synthesis 9.1. Introduction 9.2. OS Selection 9.3. OS Services' Refinement 9 A. Writing Modem and Portable OS 9.5. Abstracting the OS 9.6. Conclusion 10. Design and Implementation of a CIL Processor for Embedded Applications 10.1. Introduction 10.2. The Conception of Micro-Architecture, Micro-Program and Micro-Instructions 10.3. An Implementation of Micro-Architecture for CIL 10.3.1 CIL and SCIL 10.3.2 Micro-program (Micro-Instructions) for this Implementation 10.3.3 The Architecture of CIL processor 10.3.4 Performance 11. Conclusion References Index

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI
  • Condizione: Nuovo
  • ISBN: 9781439812112
  • Dimensioni: 9.25 x 6.25 in
  • Formato: Copertina rigida
  • Illustration Notes: 129 b/w images, 28 tables and 1-100 equations
  • Pagine Arabe: 320