Abstract

We present a hybrid methodology for the formal verification of arithmetic RTL designs that combines sequential logic equivalence checking with interactive theorem proving in a two-step process. First, an intermediate model of the design is extracted by hand and coded in Restricted Algorithmic C, a simple C subset augmented by the C++ register class templates of Algorithmic C, which provide the bit manipulation features of Verilog. The model is designed to mirror the RTL microarchitecture closely enough to allow efficient equivalence checking, but sufficiently abstract to be amenable to formal analysis. The model is then automatically translated to the logic of the ACL2 theorem prover, which is used to establish correctness with respect to an architectural specification. As an illustration, we describe the modeling and proof of correctness of a chained multiply-add module, designed to test techniques for area and power reduction and intended for implementation in future Arm graphics nrocessors.

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