Duo develop emulation solutions for automotive applications
With its high performance, capacity, scalability, and support for standard-based connectivity protocols, ZeBu Server enables full system verification of complex automotive SoCs and research of fault detection and fault recovery mechanisms. The partnership aims to shorten automotive system design cycles and increase design quality compliant with industry standards using ZeBu Server.
Systems are becoming increasingly complex, particularly in the automotive industry.
This is creating new challenges in terms of validation, whether it is for cyber-physical systems, smart power management, or electronic component safety.
CEA List researchers are already using Synopsys ZeBu. However, more powerful emulation systems will be needed to respond to the demands of next-gen cyber-physical systems, especially for automotive applications.
The new joint lab between the CEA and Synopsys will respond to this need through a relevant and strategic industrial partnership that will maintain a sharp focus on verification and hybrid emulation with the integration of ZeBu Server in a multi-physics automotive simulation environment.
It will also enable large-scale hybrid co-simulation for ADAS applications with the combination of ZeBu Server-3 and the Synopsys Virtualiser and Platform Architect virtual prototyping solutions.
"The CEA will research how high performance emulation technology can enhance advanced fault injection techniques as well as standard methods," said Philippe Watteau, Director, CEA List.
"Working with Synopsys positions us to more effectively address our automotive-industry partners' electronics development needs through state-of-the art emulation capabilities."
The joint lab will focus on three challenges:
- Validation of complex automotive systems that combine physical components (sensors and actuators) and cyber components (electronic systems and their software), and require the composition of multiple simulation domain tools leading to complex hybrid co-emulation.
- Performing online power consumption estimation without hampering emulation speed. It will factor in the energy budget and the temperature dissipation as required in modern E/E automotive architectures.
- Characterising and improving design reliability through the development of a new methodology that leverages the speed and functional accuracy offered by emulation.
"We are working with leading automotive semiconductor manufacturers, Tier 1 automotive suppliers and OEMs to advance verification and software teams using innovative verification technologies to meet aggressive time-to-market timelines," said Eshel Haritan, Vice President of R&D in the Synopsys Verification Group.
"We are excited to support an important automotive research partner to expand emulation use cases for automotive into new areas."
The partnership aims to shorten automotive system design cycles and increase design quality compliant with industry standards.
Addressing emerging needs in verification on key Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) applications, the partnership also aims to create new opportunities in the transportation industry as a whole.