Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 September 2009
The state of digital ASIC design methodologies
Digital ASIC design methodologies are now mature technologies. While EDA tools continue to progress and improve, the basic algorithms on which they are based have been well optimized. In addition, the high-speed needs in an ASIC often tend to be focused on small or medium-sized blocks of logic, while the current focus for EDA tools is on dealing with the massive complexity of systems on-chip. Static logic libraries, like EDA tools, have also improved in the last few years, especially with the introduction of pulse-based flip-flops [1, 2]. Beyond that there does not appear to be very much one can do to improve performance significantly beyond the incremental work of increasing the number of cells and type of libraries provided for the synthesis tool. This is common for many maturing industries, where once the low-hanging fruit has been picked further improvements require considerable effort, often for limited gain.
Before the reader decides to accept the limitations in ASIC design flows with the calm serenity with which it is best to accept the unalterable frailties of the human condition, and other such phenomena, it is perhaps useful to remember that custom designs still remain significantly faster than ASIC implementations in the same process generation [3]. This suggests that there still remains scope for further speed improvements in ASIC flows by using custom design techniques.
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