Abstract

Many built-in self-testing (BIST) schemes compress the test responses from a k-output circuit to q signature streams, where q/spl Lt/k, a process termed space compaction. The effectiveness of such a compaction method can be measured by its compaction ratio c=k/q. A high compaction ratio can introduce aliasing, which occurs when a faulty test response maps to the fault-free signature. We investigate the problem of designing zero-aliasing space compaction circuits with maximum compaction ratio c/sub max/. We introduce a graph representation of test responses to study the space compaction process and relate space compactor design to a graph coloring problem. Given a circuit under test, a fault model, and a test set, we determine q/sub min/, which yields c/sub max/=k/q/sub min/. This provides a fundamental bound on the cost of signature-based BIST. We show that q/sub min//spl les/2 for all the ISCAS 85 benchmark circuits. We develop a systematic design procedure for the synthesis of space compaction circuits and apply it to a number of ISCAS 85 circuits. Finally, we describe multistep compaction, which allows zero aliasing to be achieved with any q, even when q/sub min/>1.

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