Title :
Proving transaction and system-level properties of untimed SystemC TLM designs
Author :
Grosse, Daniel ; Le, Hoang M. ; Drechsler, Rolf
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Bremen, Bremen, Germany
Abstract :
Electronic System Level (ESL) design manages the enormous complexity of todays systems by using abstract models. In this context Transaction Level Modeling (TLM) is state-of-the-art for describing complex communication without all the details. As ESL language, SystemC has become the de facto standard. Since the SystemC TLM models are used for early software development and as reference for hardware implementation their correct functional behavior is crucial. Admittedly, the best possible verification quality can be achieved with formal approaches. However, formal verification of TLM models is a hard task. Existing methods basically consider local properties or have extremely high run-time. In contrast, the approach proposed in this paper can verify “true” TLM properties, i.e. major TLM behavior like for instance the effect of a transaction and that the transaction is only started after a certain event can be proven. Our approach works as follows: After a fully automatic SystemC-to-C transformation, the TLM property is mapped to monitoring logic using C assertions and finite state machines. To detect a violation of the property the approach uses a BMC-based formulation over the outermost loop of the SystemC scheduler. In addition, we improve this verification method significantly by employing induction on the C model forming a complete and efficient approach. As shown by experiments state-of-the-art proof techniques allow proving important non-trivial behavior of SystemC TLM designs.
Keywords :
C++ language; digital systems; discrete event simulation; electronic engineering computing; finite state machines; abstract models; electronic system level design; finite state machines; monitoring logic; system level properties; transaction level modeling; untimed SystemC TLM designs; Monitoring; Object oriented modeling; Resumes; Safety; Time domain analysis; Time varying systems; Unified modeling language;
Conference_Titel :
Formal Methods and Models for Codesign (MEMOCODE), 2010 8th IEEE/ACM International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Grenoble
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7885-9
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7886-6
DOI :
10.1109/MEMCOD.2010.5558643