Analog mixed-signal (AMS) verification is one of the essential tasks in the development process of modern systems-on-chip (SoC). Most parts of the AMS verification flow are already automated, except for stimuli generation, which has been performed manually. It is thus challenging and time-consuming. Hence, automation is a necessity. To generate stimuli, subcircuits or subblocks of a given analog circuit module should be identified/classified. However, there currently needs to be a reliable industrial tool that can automatically identify/classify analog sub-circuits (eventually in the frame of a circuit design process) or automatically classify a given analog circuit at hand. Besides verification, several other processes would profit enormously from the availability of a robust and reliable automated classification model for analog circuit modules (which may belong to different levels). This paper presents how to use a Graph Convolutional Network (GCN) model and proposes a novel data augmentation strategy to automatically classify analog circuits of a given level. Eventually, it can be upscaled or integrated within a more complex functional module (for a structure recognition of complex analog circuits), targeting the identification of subcircuits within a more complex analog circuit module. An integrated novel data augmentation technique is particularly crucial due to the harsh reality of the availability of generally only a relatively limited dataset of analog circuits' schematics (i.e., sample architectures) in practical settings. Through a comprehensive ontology, we first introduce a graph representation framework of the circuits' schematics, which consists of converting the circuit's related netlists into graphs. Then, we use a robust classifier consisting of a GCN processor to determine the label corresponding to the given input analog circuit's schematics. Furthermore, the classification performance is improved and robust by involving a novel data augmentation technique. The classification accuracy was enhanced from 48.2% to 76.6% using feature matrix augmentation, and from 72% to 92% using Dataset Augmentation by Flipping. A 100% accuracy was achieved after applying either multi-Stage augmentation or Hyperphysical Augmentation. Overall, extensive tests of the concept were developed to demonstrate high accuracy for the analog circuit's classification endeavor. This is solid support for a future up-scaling towards an automated analog circuits' structure detection, which is one of the prerequisites not only for the stimuli generation in the frame of analog mixed-signal verification but also for other critical endeavors related to the engineering of AMS circuits.
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