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Co-Verification of Hardware and Software for arm SoC Design
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h**p://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0750677309/qid=1109913845/sr=2-1/ref=pd_bbs_b_2_1/103-2087863-1258207
Product Details
* Paperback: 288 pages
* Publisher: Newnes; Bk&CD-Rom edition (August 16, 2004)
* ISBN: 0750677309
* Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 7.5 x 0.8 inches
* Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds. (View shipping rates and policies)
* Amazon.com Sales Rank in Books: #125,321
(Publishers and authors: improve your sales)
* In-Print Editions: e-book (Adobe Reader) | All Editions |
About the Book
I have been working in co-verification since 1996. I have had the benefit and privilege of working for multiple companies and on many different products and approaches on how to verify embedded systems. Over this time I found many engineers lacking basic (and advanced) understanding of how chips and systems with microprocessors and software interact with hardware. I have always found a great need to explain these interactions and how to understand them by using techniques to verify hardware and software before a system is committed to fabrication. During this time the use of co-verification has become more common, but there are still many more engineers that can benefit from it. There are also many engineers and sales people working in the EDA industry that could use a book to really understand the products they are selling and supporting.
Nearly two years ago I got a call from Elsevier asking if I wanted to write a book. I decided it was time to just write it all down. I have always wanted to teach young engineers, but the requirement for a PhD will probably prohibit me from ever working in a university so this was the next best thing. Thanks to the monopolistic practices of Northwest Airlines a large chunk of the book was written in the Denver airport waiting for snow storms and delayed connections on my favorite airlines, Frontier (I still can't remember what animal was on the airplane tail when the kids ask when I finally reach home). The rest was whatever spare time I could get in hotels and in the middle of the night while everybody slept.
At the Embedded Systems Conference in San Francisco this year I was again amazed at how many engineers show up for a session on how to better use a logic analyzer to debug hardware and software in lab setting and how few show up for co-verification topics. My hope is this book will advance the general knowledge of the engineering community and make co-verification a better understood and more commonly used verification technique. I'll know it is a success when the room is full at ESC for co-verification and mostly empty for yet another talk about scope probes and logic analyzers.
Enjoy the book.
About the Author
Jason Andrews is currently working in the areas of hardware/software co-verification and testbench methodology for SoC design at Verisity. He has implemented multiple commercial co-verification tools as well as many custom co-verification solutions. His experience in the EDA and embedded marketplace includes software development and product management at Verisity, Axis Systems, Simpod, Summit Design, and Simulation Technologies. He has presented technical papers and tutorials at the Embedded Systems Conference, Communication Design Conference and IP/SoC and written numerous articles related to HW/SW co-verification and design verification. He has a B.S. in electrical engineering from The Citadel, Charleston, S.C., and an M.S. in electrical engineering from the University of Minnesota. He currently lives in the Minneapolis area with his wife, Deborah, and their four children.
DownloadLink: http://rapidshare.com/files/73251855/Co-Verification_of_Hardware_and_Software_for_ARM_Soc_Design_eBook.rar |
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