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Novel Spectral Methods for Built-In Self-Test in a System-on-a-Chip Environment
Marina Del Rey, CA March 29-April 03
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/VTS.2001.92343419th IEEE VLSI Test Symposium
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Ashish Giani, Intel Corporation
Shuo Sheng, Rutgers University
Michael S. Hsiao, Rutgers University
V. Agrawal, Bell Labs
This new method of built-in self-test (BIST) for sequential cores on a system-on-a-chip (SOC)generates test patterns using a real-time program that runs on an embedded processor. Alternatively, the same program can be run on an external low-cost tester. This program generates patterns using circuit-specific spectral information in the form of one or more Hadamard coefficients. The coefficients are extracted from high fault-coverage compacted pattern sets. When an embedded processor is available on SOC, the overhead is negligible. Also, sequential cores are tested in the functional mode, avoiding activation of non- functional timing paths. We present experimental results to show that for hard to test circuits, with any given test time, spectral patterns provide significantly higher fault coverage than weighted-random patterns.
Citation:
Ashish Giani, Shuo Sheng, Michael S. Hsiao, V. Agrawal, "Novel Spectral Methods for Built-In Self-Test in a System-on-a-Chip Environment," vts, pp.0163, 19th IEEE VLSI Test Symposium, 2001
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