Boffins automate silicon chip debugging

University of Michigan unveils FogClear tool

Robert Jaques

US researchers have developed a technology that automates the process of debugging silicon chip designs.

Fixing design bugs and dodgy wiring connections is a lengthy trial-and-error process that often costs millions of dollars, according to the University of Michigan scientists.

Advertisement

"Today's silicon technology has reached such levels of small-scale fabrication and complexity that it is almost impossible to produce chips that work correctly in all scenarios," said Valeria Bertacco, University of Michigan assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science and co-investigator in the new technology.

"Almost all manufacturers must produce several prototypes of a given design before they attain a working chip."

The university's 'FogClear' method uses puzzle-solving search algorithms to diagnose problems early on and automatically adjust the blueprint for the chip. It reduces parts of the process from days to hours.

"Practically all complicated chips have bugs, and finding all bugs is intractable," said Igor Markov, associate professor of computer science and electrical engineering at Michigan.

"Manufacturers are producing chips that must work for almost all applications, from email to chess, but they cannot be validated for every possible condition. It is physically impossible."

In the current system, a chip design is first validated in simulations. Then a draft is cast in silicon, and this first prototype undergoes additional verification with more realistic applications.

If a bug is detected at this stage, an engineer must narrow down the cause of the problem and then craft a fix that does not disrupt the delicate balance of all other components of the system. This can take several days.

Engineers then produce new prototypes incorporating all the fixes. This process repeats until they arrive at a prototype that is free of bugs. For modern chips, the process of making sure a chip is free of bugs takes as much time as production.

FogClear automates this debugging process. Its creators say that the computer-aided design tool can catch subtle errors that several months of simulations would still miss.

Some bugs might take days or weeks before causing any miscomputation, and they might only do so under very rare circumstances, such as operating at high temperature.

The new tool searches for and finds the simplest way to fix a bug, i.e. the one that has the least impact on the working parts of the chip. The solution usually requires reconnecting certain wires, and does not affect transistors.

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Share

Tags:

Do you agree?

Further reading

Marvell showcases green power supply

Patented technology to create smaller and lighter notebook adapters

Silicon wafer shipments level off

Predicted growth of eight per cent this year

Intel plans huge data centre consolidation

Chip giant to cut down 133 data centres to eight hubs

Intel unveils 9100 series Itaniums

Dual-core processors aimed at high-end servers

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Most watched

Xperia X1

Video Review: Sony Ericsson Xperia X1

First Looks Editor Ian Williams gets hands on with the Sony Ericsson Xperia X1

iPhone

Video Review: iPhone 3GS

We put Apple's latest iPhone through its paces

IT white papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Poll

Poll: Summer smartphones

Poll: Summer smartphones

Which smartphone will you be taking to the beach this summer?

View poll results

Advertisement

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Spotlight

a padlock

Microsoft to plug security holes

Microsoft has given advance warning of a number of security...

Nokia handset

Top 10 articles, 10 July 09

No Nokia Android phone, ActiveX attacks and Google enters into...

Can Google beat Microsoft at its own game?

Google's announcement this week that it plans to step into...

iPhone

Video Review: iPhone 3GS

We put Apple's latest iPhone through its paces

Primary Navigation