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Weighted Transition Based Reordering, Columnwise Bit Filling, and Difference Vector: A Power-Aware Test Data Compression Method
Author(s) -
Usha Mehta,
K. S. Dasgupta,
N. M. Devashrayee
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
vlsi design
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1065-514X
pISSN - 1026-7123
DOI - 10.1155/2011/756561
Subject(s) - overhead (engineering) , test compression , computer science , benchmark (surveying) , algorithm , compression ratio , hamming distance , test set , test vector , test data , compression (physics) , code (set theory) , data compression , parallel computing , chip , fault coverage , electronic circuit , set (abstract data type) , engineering , artificial intelligence , telecommunications , materials science , electrical engineering , geodesy , internal combustion engine , geography , automotive engineering , composite material , programming language , operating system
Test data compression is the major issues for the external testing of IP core-based SoC. From a large pool of diverse available techniques for compression, run length-based schemes are most appropriate for IP cores. To improve the compression and to reduce the test power, the test data processing schemes like “don't care bit filling” and “reordering” which do not require any modification in internal structure and do not demand use of any test development tool can be used for SoC-containing IP cores with hidden structure. The proposed “Weighted Transition Based Reordering-Columnwise Bit Filling-Difference Vector (WTR-CBF-DV)” is a modification to earlier proposed “Hamming Distance based Reordering—Columnwise Bit Filling and Difference vector.” This new method aims not only at very high compression but also aims at shift in test power reduction without any significant on-chip area overhead. The experiment results on ISCAS89 benchmark circuits show that the test data compression ratio has significantly improved for each case. It is also noteworthy that, in most of the case, this scheme does not involve any extra silicon area overhead compared to the base code with which it used. For few cases, it requires an extra XOR gate and feedback path only. As application of this scheme increases run length of zeroes in test set, as a result, the number of transitions during scan shifting is reduced. This may lower scan power. The proposed scheme can be easily integrated into the existing industrial flow

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