Abstract

The high degree of miniaturization in the electronics industry has been, for several years, a driver to push embedded systems to different fields and applications. One example is safety-critical systems, where the compactness in the form factor helps to reduce the costs and allows for the implementation of new techniques. The automotive industry is a great example of a safety-critical area with a great rise in the adoption of microelectronics. With it came the creation of the ISO 26262 standard with the goal of guaranteeing a high level of dependability in the designs. Other areas in the safety-critical applications domain have similar standards. However, these standards are mostly guidelines to make sure that designs reach the desired dependability level without explicit instructions. In the end, the success of the design to fulfill the standard is the result of a thorough verification process. Naturally, the goal of any verification team dealing with such important designs is complete coverage as well as standards conformity, but as these are complex hardware, complete functional verification is a difficult task. From the several techniques that exist to verify hardware, where each has its pros and cons, we studied six well-established in academia and in industry. We can divide them into two categories: simulation, which needs extremely large amounts of time, and formal verification, which needs unrealistic amounts of resources. Therefore, we conclude that a hybrid approach offers the best balance between simulation (time) and formal verification (resources).

Highlights

  • The high degree of miniaturization in the electronics industry has been for several years a driver to push embedded systems to different fields and applications

  • In this study, we focus on the design and verification phase, which encompasses the implementation of the safety-critical system and its technical acceptance in accordance with the standards

  • The development of safety-critical systems is ruled by functional safety standards since these systems involve human lives directly or indirectly

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Summary

Introduction

The high degree of miniaturization in the electronics industry has been for several years a driver to push embedded systems to different fields and applications. Several application domains benefit from this miniaturization process. Two very prominent areas are consumer electronics, where we have the Internet-of-Things (IoT) [1] as the biggest player, and Industry 4.0, with the increase in automation in industrial processes [2,3]. Other fields that saw an increase in the adoption of embedded systems are the many different safety-critical applications that serve us daily either directly or indirectly. The most notable examples are automotive, aerospace, and medical. The automotive industry has seen a great increase in the use of systems-on-chip in recent years. Today’s luxury cars may have up to

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