DocumentCode
954688
Title
An approach for the formal verification of DSP designs using Theorem proving
Author
Akbarpour, Behzad ; Tahar, Sofiène
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Concordia Univ., Montreal, Que., Canada
Volume
25
Issue
8
fYear
2006
Firstpage
1441
Lastpage
1457
Abstract
This paper proposes a framework for the incorporation of formal methods in the design flow of digital signal processing (DSP) systems in a rigorous way. In the proposed approach, DSP descriptions were modeled and verified at different abstraction levels using higher order logic based on the higher order logic (HOL) theorem prover. This framework enables the formal verification of DSP designs that in the past could only be done partially using conventional simulation techniques. To this end, a shallow embedding of DSP descriptions in HOL at the floating-point (FP), fixed-point (FXP), behavioral, register transfer level (RTL), and netlist gate levels is provided. The paper made use of existing formalization of FP theory in HOL and a parallel one developed for FXP arithmetic. The high ability of abstraction in HOL allows a seamless hierarchical verification encompassing the whole DSP design path, starting from top-level FP and FXP algorithmic descriptions down to RTL, and gate level implementations. The paper illustrates the new verification framework on the fast Fourier transform (FFT) algorithm as a case study.
Keywords
digital simulation; error analysis; fast Fourier transforms; formal logic; formal verification; signal processing; theorem proving; DSP designs; conventional simulation techniques; digital signal processing; error analysis; fast Fourier transform; fixed-point; floating point; formal verification; higher order logic; netlist gate levels; register transfer level; theorem proving; Design methodology; Digital arithmetic; Digital signal processing; Digital signal processing chips; Digital systems; Fast Fourier transforms; Formal verification; Logic; Signal design; Signal processing algorithms; Design automation; digital signal processors; error analysis; fast Fourier transforms; finite wordlength effects; formal verification; higher order logic; theorem proving;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0070
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TCAD.2005.857314
Filename
1637735
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