Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
545744 Microelectronics Reliability 2008 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

In order to design a fault tolerant digital system, it is necessary to understand its behavior with the presence of faults in early design stage. Fault simulation is a process to purposely inject faults into a software circuit model and observe its faulty behavior. However, such simulation’s runtime tends to grow exponentially when test circuit becomes large. FPGA-based fault emulation, which is fault simulation implemented in FPGA, is an efficient way to accelerate fault simulation process. This paper introduces a novel FPGA-based switch-level fault emulation system utilizing module-based dynamic partial reconfiguration. In this approach, faults are modeled at switch-level and mapped to gate-level description for efficient FPGA implementation. The circuit under test is partitioned using unbalanced partitioning structure so that faults are injected only in a small sub-circuit. Using module-based dynamic partial reconfiguration, faulty circuit partition can be downloaded to FPGA without erasing the fault-free part of the circuit. The resulting system’s runtime increases linearly with circuit size, therefore indicating high efficiency of this system when emulating large and complex circuits.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Hardware and Architecture
Authors
, ,