Simulating Different parts of design one at a time.

Discussion in 'Cadence' started by jarrett.avery, Apr 13, 2006.

  1. I'm working on a combination digital/analog project and the simulation
    time for the entire design is several days. I was told by one of my
    professors that it is possible to run two simulations to verify its
    output.

    The idea being, run the first part, and store its output to a file,
    then run the second part with its input coming from the output file of
    the first part.

    If anyone has any experience with this, I would appreciate it.

    Feel free to send email to

    Thanks,

    Jarrett
     
    jarrett.avery, Apr 13, 2006
    #1
  2. jarrett.avery

    vdvalk Guest

    Verify is an interesting word.

    I assume that the "simulation time for the entire design" is an analog
    simulation. This in itself is an approximation of what happens.

    In the "digital" space, the behaviour of interest can be simplified
    into what is known as a "digital" simulation. (i.e. 1's and 0's rather
    than
    analog voltage levels) This type of simulation is ordersof magnitude
    faster that "analog".

    Tools to partition the design into "analog" and "digital" are commonly
    refere to as analog-mixed-signal or "AMS" tools.
    The idea is that a mixed mode simulation should be orders of magnitide
    faster than the straight analog simulation.

    It is, (of course ;^), left as an exercise to the reader, to understand
    the innaccuracies introduced at each step of abstraction, and to the
    problems introduced at the analog to/from digital interface in the
    mixed mode simulation environment.

    -- Gerry
     
    vdvalk, Apr 21, 2006
    #2
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