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38, Structural dom. = 30, Functional equiv.= 23} Feb. 9, 2005. Raja Sandireddy: MS Defense ... Structural dom. = 30, Functional equiv.= 26, Functional dom.= 12} ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hierarchical%20Fault%20Collapsing


1
  • Hierarchical Fault Collapsing
  • for Logic Circuits

Masters Defense Raja K. K. R. Sandireddy Dept.
of ECE, Auburn University
Thesis AdvisorVishwani D. Agrawal Committee
MembersVictor P. Nelson, Charles E. Stroud Dept.
of ECE, Auburn University
2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Background
  • Fault Equivalence and Fault Dominance
  • Functional collapsing
  • Hierarchical fault collapsing
  • Fault Equivalence and Dominance definitions
  • Algorithm to find dominance relations
  • Results of functional collapsing
  • Hierarchical fault collapsing
  • Results of hierarchical fault collapsing
  • Conclusions and Future work

3
Introduction
Test Vector Generation Flow
  • DUT
  • Generate fault list
  • Collapse fault list
  • Generate test vectors

Fault model
Required fault coverage
4
Stuck-at Fault
  • Single stuck-at fault model is the most popular
    model.

a0 a1
a
c0 c1
c
b0 b1
b
  • Subscript fault notation a0 means stuck-at-0 on
    line a.

5
Equivalence
Structural R-equivalence1 Two faults f1 and f2
are said to be R-equivalent if they produce the
same reduced circuit graph netlist when faulty
values are implied and constant edges signals
are removed. Functional F-equivalence1 Two
faults f1 and f2 are said to be F-equivalent if
they modify the Boolean function of the circuit
in the same way, i.e., they yield the same output
functions.
1 E. J. McCluskey and F. W. Clegg, Fault
Equivalence in Combinational Logic Networks,
IEEE Trans. Computers, vol. C-20, no. 11, Nov.
1971, pp. 1286-1293.
6
Structural Equivalence
a
a
0
1
a1 b1 c1 Equivalence
c
c
0
1
b
b
0
1
Equivalent faults are indistinguishable at all
primary outputs of the circuit.
7
Structural Dominance
  • A fault fi is said to dominate fault fj if the
    faults are equivalent with respect to test set of
    fault fj.

Dominance relations a0 ? c0 b0 ? c0 a1 ? c1 a1 ?
c1 b1 ? c1 b1 ? c1 a1 ? b1 a1 ? b1
a
a
0
1
Equivalence Relations
c
c


0
1
a1 c1 b1 c1 a1 b1
a1 b1 c1
b
b
0
1
8
Fault Collapsing
  • Equivalence Collapsing It is the process of
    selecting one fault from each equivalence fault
    set.
  • Dominance Collapsing From the equivalence
    collapsed set, all the dominating faults are left
    out retaining their respective dominated faults.
  • For the OR gate,
  • Equivalence collapsed set a0, b0, c0, c1
  • Dominance collapsed set a0, b0, c1

9
Collapse Ratio
  • Example Full adder circuit.
  • Total faults 60
  • Structural equivalence collapsed set2, 3 38
    (0.63)
  • Structural dominance collapsed set3 30 (0.5)

2 Using Hitec T. M. Niermann and J. H. Patel,
HITEC A Test Generation Package for Sequential
Circuits, Proc. European Design Automation
Conference, Feb. 1991, pp. 214-218. 3 Using
Fastest T. P. Kelsey, K. K. Saluja, and S. Y.
Lee, An Efficient Algorithm for Sequential
Circuit Test Generation, IEEE Trans. Computers,
vol. 42, no. 11, pp. 1361-1371, Nov. 1993.
10
Dominance Graph
A 2-input OR gate and its dominance graph
Dominance Matrix
a
a0 a1 b0 b1 c0 c1
a0 1 0 0 0 1 0
a1 0 1 0 1 0 1
b0 0 0 1 0 1 0
b1 0 1 0 1 0 1
c0 0 0 0 0 1 0
c1 0 1 0 1 0 1
c
b
Used for fault collapsing.
11
Two Algorithms Equivalence and Dominance4
a0 a1 b0 b1 c0 c1
a0 1 0 0 0 1 0
a1 0 1 0 1 0 1
b0 0 0 1 0 1 0
b1 0 1 0 1 0 1
c0 0 0 0 0 1 0
c1 0 1 0 1 0 1
a0 b0 c0 c1
a0 1 0 1 0
b0 0 1 1 0
c0 0 0 1 0
c1 0 0 0 1
Algorithm Equivalence
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
a0 b0 c1
a0 1 0 0
b0 0 1 0
c1 0 0 1
1
Algorithm Dominance
4 A. V. S. S. Prasad, V. D. Agrawal, and M. V.
Atre, A New Algorithm for Global Fault
Collapsing into Equivalence and Dominance Sets,
Proc. International Test Conf., Oct. 2002, pp.
391-397.
12
Functional Equivalence
F1
Z
If faults in blocks F1 and F2 are equivalent,
then Z 0.
F0
F2
For the full-adder, functional equivalence
collapsed set 26 (0.43). Structural equiv.
38, Structural dom. 30
13
Functional Dominance5
F1
1
Z
F0
0
1
F2
If the fault introduced in block F1 dominates the
fault in block F2, then Z is always 0.
For the full adder, functional dominance
collapsed set 12 (0.20) Structural equiv.
38, Structural dom. 30, Functional equiv. 23
5 V. D. Agrawal, A. V. S. S. Prasad, and M. V.
Atre, Fault Collapsing via Functional
Dominance, Proc. International Test Conf., 2003,
pp. 274-280.
14
Hierarchical Circuits
  • Increasing complexity of designs is efficiently
    handled by hierarchical design process.
  • Hierarchical fault collapsing
  • Create a library
  • For smaller sub-circuits, exhaustive collapsing
    is done using the methods discussed earlier.
  • For larger sub-circuits, use structural
    collapsing.
  • At the top level, do structural collapsing using
    the library information to collapse the faults at
    lower levels.

15
Hierarchical Fault Collapsing
  • Advantages
  • Fault set computed once is reused for all
    instances of the sub-circuit.
  • Exhaustive collapsing of faults in smaller
    circuits to achieve smaller collapsed sets.
  • Faster collapsing.
  • Theorem6 If two faults are functionally
    equivalent in a sub-circuit Ci that is embedded
    in a circuit Cj then they are also functionally
    equivalent in Cj .

Note Functional equivalence here means
diagnostic equivalence as defined next.
6 R. Hahn, R. Krieger, and B. Becker, A
Hierarchical Approach to Fault Collapsing, Proc.
European Design Test Conf., 1994, pp. 171176.
16
Equivalence Definitions
  • Fault Equivalence Two faults are equivalent if
    and only if the corresponding faulty circuits
    have identical output functions.
  • For multiple output circuits, this is extended
    for two possible interpretations.
  • Diagnostic Equivalence - Two faults of a Boolean
    circuit are called diagnostically equivalent if
    and only if the pair of the output functions is
    identical at each output of the circuit.
  • Detection Equivalence - Two faults are called
    detection equivalent if and only if all tests
    that detect one fault also detect the other
    fault, not necessarily at the same output.
  • For single output circuits, diagnostic and
    detection equivalence mean the same.
  • Diagnostic equivalence implies detection
    equivalence.

17
Examples to Demonstrate Detection Equivalence
s-a-1
Q
The faults P1, Q1 and R1 are detection equivalent
faults, but not diagnostic equivalent.
s-a-1
P
s-a-1
R
The faults c0 and Y0 are detection equivalent
faults, but not diagnostic equivalent.
For the full adder, diagnostic equivalence
collapsed set 26 (0.43), detection
equivalence collapsed set 23 (0.38) Structural
equiv. 38, Structural dom. 30, Functional
equiv. 26, Functional dom. 12
18
Dominance Definitions
  • Fault Dominance7 - A fault fi is said to dominate
    fault fj if (a) the set of all vectors that
    detects fault fj is a subset of all vectors that
    detects fault fi and (b) each vector that detects
    fj implies identical values at the corresponding
    outputs of faulty versions of the circuit.
  • Conventionally dominance is defined as
  • A fault fi is said to dominate fault fj if the
    faults are equivalent with respect to test set of
    fault fj.
  • If all tests of fault fj detect another fault fi,
    then fi is said to dominate fj.

7 J. F. Poage, Derivation of Optimum Tests to
Detect Faults in Combinational Circuits", Proc.
Symposium on Mathematical Theory of Automata,
1962, pp. 483-528.
19
Dominance Definitions Contd.
  • For multiple output circuits, the two possible
    interpretations of dominance
  • Diagnostic dominance - If all tests of a fault f1
    detect another fault f2 on the exact same outputs
    where f1 was detected, then f2 is said to
    diagnostically dominate f1.
  • Detection dominance - If all tests of a fault f1
    detect another fault f2, irrespective of the
    output where f1 was detected, then f2 is said to
    detection dominate f1 .
  • Diagnostic dominance implies detection dominance.
  • For the full adder, diagnostic dominance
    collapsed set 12 (0.2)
  • detection dominance collapsed set 6
    (0.1)
  • Structural equiv. 38, Structural dom. 30,
    Diagnostic equiv. 26, Detection equiv. 23

20
Functional Dominance
Faults in this circuit are checked for redundancy
F0
0
F0
1
0
F1
Fault introduced in this circuit
21
Algorithm to Find All Dominance Relations
  1. Select a fault from the given circuit and build
    the circuit as shown in previous slide with the
    fault introduced in the bottom block whose
    function is F1.
  2. Check for redundant faults in the top block, F0.
  3. For each redundant fault found in step 2, a 1 is
    placed in the dominance matrix at the
    intersection of the row corresponding to the
    redundant fault and the column corresponding to
    the fault in the bottom block. Thus, we obtain
    all values of a column of the dominance matrix in
    a single iteration.
  4. Go to step 1 until there is no fault left.
  5. Now we will have the dominance matrix with all
    the functional dominance relations included.

22
Algorithm Contd.
  • Transitive closure of the dominance matrix is
    computed, which is then reduced using algorithm
    equivalence4. This reduced matrix still consists
    of dominance relations within an equivalence
    collapsed set of faults.
  • If dominance collapsing is required, then the
    reduced matrix of the previous step is further
    reduced according to algorithm dominance4.
  • For simplicity, the redundant faults of the given
    circuit (stand-alone F0) are not considered in
    step 1.

4 A. V. S. S. Prasad, V. D. Agrawal, and M. V.
Atre, A New Algorithm for Global Fault
Collapsing into Equivalence and Dominance Sets,
Proc. International Test Conf., Oct. 2002, pp.
391-397.
23
For Multiple Output Circuits
For a circuit with 2 outputs, the schemes used to
find the dominance relations
F0
F0
F0
F0
F1
F1
Diagnostic collapsing
Detection collapsing
24
Results Functional Collapsing
Circuit Name All Faults Number of Collapsed Faults (Collapse Ratio) Number of Collapsed Faults (Collapse Ratio) Number of Collapsed Faults (Collapse Ratio) Number of Collapsed Faults (Collapse Ratio) Number of Collapsed Faults (Collapse Ratio) Number of Collapsed Faults (Collapse Ratio) Number of Collapsed Faults (Collapse Ratio) Number of Collapsed Faults (Collapse Ratio)
Circuit Name All Faults Structural Structural Functional5 Functional5 Functional Collapsing New Results Functional Collapsing New Results Functional Collapsing New Results Functional Collapsing New Results
Circuit Name All Faults Structural Structural Functional5 Functional5 Diagnostic Criterion Diagnostic Criterion Detection Criterion Detection Criterion
Circuit Name All Faults Equiv.2 Dom.3 Equiv. Dom. Equiv. Dom. Equiv. Dom.
XOR 24 16 (0.67) 13 (0.54) 10 (0.42) 4 (0.17) 10 (0.42) 4 (0.17) 10 (0.42) 4 (0.17)
Full Adder 60 38 (0.63) 30 (0.50) 26 (0.43) 14 (0.23) 26 (0.43) 12 (0.20) 23 (0.38) 6 (0.10)
8-bit Adder 466 290 (0.62) 226 (0.49) 194 (0.42) 112 (0.24) 194 (0.42) 96 (0.21) 191 (0.41) 48 (0.10)
ALU (74181) 502 301 (0.60) 248 (0.49) -- -- 253 (0.50) 155 (0.31) 234 (0.47) 92 (0.18)
2 Using Hitec (obtained from Univ. of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign) 3 Using Fastest (obtained from
Univ. of Wisconsin at Madison) 5 Agrawal, et al.
ITC03
25
Results Test Vectors
Test vectors obtained using Gentest ATPG8.
Circuit No. of test vectors (no. of target faults) No. of test vectors (no. of target faults) No. of test vectors (no. of target faults) No. of test vectors (no. of target faults)
Circuit Structural Structural Functional New Results Functional New Results
Circuit Equivalence Dominance Diagnostic Dominance Detection Dominance
Full Adder 6 (38) 6 (30) 7 (12) 6 (6)
8-bit Adder 33 (290) 28 (226) 32 (96) 28 (48)
ALU 44 (293) 44 (240) 39 (147) 38 (84)
8 W. T. Cheng and T. J. Chakraborty, Gentest An
Automatic Test Generation System for Sequential
Circuits, Computer, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 4349,
April 1989.
26
Hierarchical Fault Collapsing
  • Line Oriented Structural Fault Collapsing9

Type of gate the line feeds into Put this (these) fault (s) on the line
INV, BUF None
OR, NOR s-a-0
AND, NAND s-a-1
Sub-circuit, Fanout s-a-0, s-a-1
Primary Output s-a-0, s-a-1
9 M. Nadjarbashi, Z. Navabi, and M. R. Movahedin,
Line Oriented Structural Equivalence Fault
Collapsing, IEEE Workshop on Model and Test,
2000.
27
Hierarchical Fault Collapsing
G
1
0
1
A
M
1
0
1
0
B
G
4
1
0
1
0
G
2
G
3
1
0
C
  • Algorithm to find the dominance matrix and its
    transitive closure
  • Consider a fault (f1) stuck-at-b at the input of
    a Boolean gate.
  • If the gate is of inverting type (NOT, NOR,
    NAND), then invert b.
  • If the equivalent set has s-a-b on this gate
    output, say f2, then return this fault place a
    1 at the intersection of the row corresponding to
    f1 and column corresponding to f2 use Update10
    for transitive closure. End.
  • Move one gate forward towards the primary output
    and go to step 2.

10 K. K. Dave, V. D. Agrawal, and M. L. Bushnell,
Using Contrapositive Law in an Implication Graph
to Identify Logic Redundancies, Proc. 18th
International Conf. VLSI Design, Jan. 2005, pp.
723-729.
28
Collapsed Information File as Saved in Library
RELATIONs 1 4 5 12 0 2 6 13 0 3 9 13 0 4 1
5 12 0 5 1 4 12 0 6 2 13 0 9 13 0 12 1 4 5
0 13 0 REDUNDANT g1(b,0) 14
INPUTs a 1 2 b 3 4 OUTPUTs g3 12
13 TOTAL 14 FAULTs g1(0) 5 g1(1) 6 g2(1) 9
Collapsed fault set sizes
Flat Hierarchical
Equivalence 12 11
Dominance 8 8
29
Results Collapse Ratios
Total Faults Full adder 60, 64-bit Adder 3714,
1024-bit Adder 59394, c4321116, c4992646
Detection collapsing can be used only for those
sub-circuits whose outputs are POs at the
top-level.
30
CPU Time (s) for Different Sections of Our
Program for Flattened Circuits
CPU time clocked on a 360MHz Sun UltraSparc 5_10
machine with 128MB memory.
31
CPU Time (s) for Different Sections of Our
Program for Flattened Circuits
32
CPU Time (s) of Different Commands of Hitec for
Fault Collapsing
Total
Equivalence Collapsing (equiv)
Structure Processing (level)
0.57
0.16
0.32
64-bit
1.47
0.34
1.03
128-bit
5.09
0.88
4.0
256-bit
19.5
3.15
16.0
512-bit
77.7
12.2
64.9
1024-bit
326
50.4
275.1
2048-bit
1258
210
1045
4096-bit
33
Comparison of CPU Times (s) Taken by Hitec and
Our Program
34
CPU Time (s) of Different Sections of Our Program
for Hierarchical Circuits
Total
Library
Equiv.Dom.Collapsing
Structure Processing
0.10
0.07
0.01
0.01
64-bit
0.19
0.13
0.02
0.03
128-bit
0.39
0.19
0.02
0.05
256-bit
0.81
0.36
0.04
0.17
512-bit
1.82
0.73
0.08
0.55
1024-bit
4.72
1.52
0.20
2.10
2048-bit
14.3
3.1
0.37
9.25
4096-bit
50.2
6.0
0.79
40.1
8192-bit
35
CPU Time (s) of Our Program for Hierarchical and
Flattened Circuits
36
CPU Time (s) Improvement by Hierarchy
Hierarchical circuit
Flattened circuit
Multi-level
Two-level
Our Program
Hitec
0.10
0.16
0.24
0.57
64-bit
0.24
0.32
0.75
1.47
128-bit
0.49
0.69
2.49
5.09
256-bit
1.05
1.52
9.38
19.5
512-bit
2.31
3.60
39.9
77.7
1024-bit
4.80
10.3
166.4
326
2048-bit
16.6
35.1
674.1
1258
4096-bit
55.0
127.2
2676
--
8192-bit
37
CPU Time (s) for Hierarchical Collapsing
38
Conclusions
  • Diagnostic and detection collapsing should be
    used only with smaller circuits.
  • Collapse ratios using detection dominance
    collapsing is about 10-20.
  • For larger circuits described hierarchically, use
    hierarchical fault collapsing.
  • Hierarchical fault collapsing
  • Better (lower) collapse ratios due to functional
    collapsed library
  • Order of magnitude reduction in collapse time.
  • Smaller fault sets
  • Fewer test vectors
  • Reduced fault simulation effort
  • Easier fault diagnosis.
  • Use caution when using dominance collapsing!!

8192-bit Adder
Dom. Collapsed Set Size (Collapse Ratio) Dom. Collapsed Set Size (Collapse Ratio) CPU s CPU s
Flat Hierarchical Flat Hier.
229378 (0.48) 98304 (0.21) 2676 55
39
Future Work
  • Generate fault collapsing library of standard
    cells (Mentor Graphics, etc.)
  • Incorporate VHDL or Verilog input for
    hierarchical netlist.
  • Efficient redundancy detection program.
  • Customized ATPG to obtain minimal test vector
    set.
  • Extend the work for sequential circuits.
  • Extend the work for other fault models.

40
  • THANK YOU
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