All, The simulated behavior of an IBIS model with properly trimmed IBIS curves shouldn't change - that's the definition of "proper trimming". The only time you should see a difference in behavior is when you switch the buffer's state before the full time in the V-T curve has elapsed (usually referred to as "overclocking"). V-T curves with extra dead time in the start of the curve will overclock at lower speeds than trimmed curves will, which is why we trim V-T curves in the first place. We trim curves based on the understanding that a device really will operate at a target speed, but that V-T curves with extra dead time will give the incorrect results. You're correct that [Ramp] data is generally not used for simulation when V-T curves are present, but that doesn't mean it's not important. Some tools use [Ramp] data to choose what drivers to use for crosstalk simulations (based on the theory that the fastest edge rate will produce the greatest crosstalk). Some tools will also use [Ramp] data as a fallback if they encounter problems using V-T curves for analysis. Hope that helps, Todd Todd Westerhoff VP, Software Products SiSoft 6 Clock Tower Place, Suite 250 Maynard, MA 01754 (978) 461-0449 x24 twesterh@sisoft.com www.sisoft.com _____ From: owner-ibis-users@eda.org [mailto:owner-ibis-users@eda.org] On Behalf Of Ummalaneni, Venu Babu (Venu) Sent: Wednesday, December 05, 2007 5:17 AM To: Amit KUMAR Cc: Dimitry Eisenshtat; ibis@eda-stds.org; ibis-users@eda.org; Todd Westerhoff Subject: RE: [IBIS-Users] RE: Trimming V-t curves - IBIS model behavior in over clocking mode Amit Kumar, Thanks for your response. I too experienced the similar results with the hspice on "before trimming vs after trimming the V-t curves". Regards, Venu _____ From: Amit KUMAR [mailto:amit-hpc.kumar@st.com] Sent: Thursday, November 29, 2007 4:59 PM To: Ummalaneni, Venu Babu (Venu) Cc: Dimitry Eisenshtat; ibis@eda-stds.org; ibis-users@eda.org; Todd Westerhoff Subject: Re: [IBIS-Users] RE: Trimming V-t curves - IBIS model behavior in over clocking mode Hello Dmitry I have been using Hspice to simulate IBIS models for a while and i have observed that there is no difference(or let me say miniscule diffrences) after trimming V-t curves. It can make difference only if you have missed many intermediate points before trimming and after trimming they are included. But if you have been careful enough to extract your V-t waveforms i feel trimming does not bring any improvement in the results. Also i have felt that Ramp data is also not important if you have given V-t waveforms. No matter how weird your ramp data may look simulation results will be good if your V-t waveforms are extracted properly. One parameter which changes the waveform considerably is C_comp. One should be careful in extracting C_comp as wrong calculation of C_comp can lead to bad results. I leave to the experts to comment on my observations. Regards Amit Kumar ST Microelectronics-Noida Ummalaneni, Venu Babu (Venu) wrote: Dmitry and all, I am curious to know your experiences on the experiments with "trimming V-t curves". Could some one please comment on the behavior of IBIS model with Hspice simulator before and after trimming? I mean, whether the correlation of the IBIS vs golden model in over clocking mode improved after trimming the V-t curves? Thanks & Best Regards, Venu -----Original Message----- From: owner-ibis-users@eda.org [mailto:owner-ibis-users@eda.org] On Behalf Of Dimitry Eisenshtat Sent: Tuesday, January 16, 2007 3:32 AM To: Todd Westerhoff Cc: ibis@eda-stds.org; ibis-users@eda.org Subject: Re: [IBIS-Users] RE: [IBIS] Ibis open drain strange behaviour Hi Todd, first of all - thanks for your reply, as I said, I'm writing script for trimming V/T tables in order to satisfy Cookbook recommendation, so your explanation is really useful. Thank you :) Ok, I see from your virtual DDR example that "over clocking" should require special treatment on IBIS simulator side, and I finally decide to avoid such situations and create IBIS models with V/T tables time window up to half of minimum signal period the buffer designed for. Now some words about HOW I will do it. I think the most important point you mentioned is "time correlation" of all given corner curves. I want use simple algorithm for automatically trimming V/T curves, let me explain. Lets say we have 12 transients, exactly as in your (most common) example of push-pull buffer simulated in 3 corners with load of 50 ohm once to supply, once to ground. The steps will be: 1) Run spice simulations (with s2ibis* or manually, does not matter) with as small time step as it possible for simulation time large enough for weakest conditions (corner/load) transition to be finally completed. The idea is to begin with "ideal" time resolution for all transitions regions in our 12 curves. 2) For each curve find largest time interval (T1,T2) which satisfy voltage tolerance of delta from initial and final DC solutions, i.e. |(V(T1)-Vstart)/VDD| < Vtol, |(V(T2)-Vend)/VDD| < Vtol where Vtol tolerance chosen smaller than IBISCHK's one so the checker will not report "DC endpoints" warning on trimmed tables latter. All data points outside of this interval (T1,T2) are declared "dead zones" and have no importance. So the Vtol value actually plays as "dead zones" definition criteria and should be the parameter to be changed if needed. 3) For all curves (rising/falling/load) of given corner find the minimum T1 value, lets define it as T1_typ, T1_slow, T1_fast or T1_<corner>. 4) Calculate maximum interval dT_max = max {|T2-T1_<corner>|} for ALL curves. 5) Shift all curves for given corner left in time by T1_<corner> value. 6) Truncate all curves at time dT_max (from new 0 time after shifting) 7) Add one points to end of each curve in order to form a line with zero slope for case of some simulators extrapolation will be needed. 8) Remember, we start from "the best" time resolution, so it is possible that we get desire time window from overclocking point of view, but number of points in final V/T tables still exceeds the maximum allowed by IBIS spec. In this case I suggest to use "greatest change algorithm" in order to decrease the number of tables points, as it described in Cookbook (pages 63-64). As the result, if I have no mistake, we will get "corner time- correlated" tables. However, across corners correlation is not guaranteed. My assumption is that the user will be interested in analyzing the buffer's (buffer itself, I mean not control logic but pullup/pulldown devices which actually drive the pad) corner-specific behavioral/differences, so I at least do not worsen the model quality, or even improve it. Anyway, in some cases there will be no possibility to satisfy "overclocking free" condition without shifting the corner's curves one to each other, in other words without trimming different amounts from different corners. Does it make sense? I like to complete realizing this algorithm in perl and try it on last DDR2 model I produced. Only IBIS simulator I have is HSpice, so the plan is to compare the behavioral of IBIS model before and after trimming. I hope the HSpice is bad enough in "over clocking" scenario, otherwise I will see no difference/improvements anyway :) Regards, Dmitry Todd Westerhoff wrote: Sorry for the delay in reply - I took the weekend off ;-) As far as non-time correlation between IBIS and transistor models goes - no, it isn't a problem at all. It's just important that people understand what a model represents and what it doesn't, so that they can draw the right conclusions from their simulations. I was just re-iterating one of my favorite points with "time 0 in an IBIS model is arbitrary". To your point, it's worth noting that time 0 in a spice model-based simulation is often arbitrary as well. A spice model represents only the output buffer at most, so if you're analyzing a device with a clock-to-out timing specification, you still need to figure out how to combine the delays measured in simulation with the timing spec for the device. I think people often ascribe too much credibility to spice models. The model you receive is a function of how the netlist and parasitics for the buffer were extracted - it's far too easy to become confused about what part of the overall device the spice model represents. As to page 70 of the IBIS cookbook - I agree with what it says. That particular page is assuming a DDR device, so that a 100 MHz clock yields 200M transfers/sec, each with a 5 ns UI. Let's suppose you have a model with a 6ns rising V-T curve for this case. The simulator will trigger the curve, begin sweeping the output, and then get retriggered at the 5ns point - before the rising edge is complete. What should the simulator do? - should it just jump to the start of the falling curve (if it does, you may get a discontinuity on the output that can either glitch the output or cause a convergence problem) - should the simulator "pipeline" the waveform results, and just remember the next edge starts 1 ns later - and if the input edges keep coming faster than the curve length, how long should the simulator keep this up before it starts clipping data? ... my earlier point was that the IBIS spec has no guidance on how a simulator should handle "overclocking" and different simulators DO handle this issue different ways. That being the case, it's best to avoid the problem by complying with the strong recommendation on page 70. As far as curve trimming goes, allow me to provide a *brief* overview, although I'm sure this subject has been discussed previously. Pointers into the archive for this subject from others would be appreciated. Let's consider a push-pull output stage instead of open drain - open-drain will just be a simpler case. Each output should have the following V-T curves [Corners] x [Edge] x [Loading] [Min / Typ / Max] x [Rising / Falling] x [50 ohms GND / 50 ohms VDDQ] ... for a total of 12 sets of V-T curves. ... for each [Corner]/[Loading] combination, it is ESSENTIAL that if you trim dead time off one curve, you trim the SAME amount of dead time off the other. As an example, if you trim 1ns off the start of the [Min]/[Rising]/[50 ohms GND] curve, you MUST trim 1ns off the [Min]/[Rising]/[50 ohms VDDQ] curve. If the second curve was already rising at that point, well, you need to trim less. This is what's called "time correlation" between curves, and it must be maintained. ... good practice dictates that you coordinate your trimming across all four of the V-T waveforms for any corner. If you don't do this, you'll introduce duty cycle distortion into the simulated waveform without meaning to. I believe this is now considered to be required practice. So, if you trim 1ns off the start of the [Min]/[Rising]/[50 ohms GND] curve, you really, really should trim 1ns off the following curves: [Min]/[Rising]/[50 ohms VDDQ] [Min]/[Falling]/[50 ohms GND] [Min]/[Falling]/[50 ohms VDDQ] ... so that time correlation is maintained across all the [Min] curves. As before, if you go to trim any of the curves and find the transition was already starting, you need to trim less. I don't believe IBIS requires that you coordinate trimming across corners. Thus, you can trim different amounts from the [Min] and [Typ] curve sets. In practice, you'll find this is useful because if you try to coordinate trimming across a 3 corners, the amount you are able to trim may be sharply limited. It's important to understand, though, that if you trim different amounts from the different corners, the time correlation between the corners will be lost. Strictly speaking, that's not a problem, as time 0 in an IBIS simulation is arbitrary. HOWEVER - if users of the model simulate the [Min] and [Typ] cases and overlay the results, they will draw incorrect conclusions if they assume the curves are time-correlated. It probably goes without saying, but - you can trim any amount of dead time you want off the END of a curve once the slope is zero. Good practice says the last two points should form a line with zero slope, so that any extrapolation the simulator performs does what you expect. As in all modeling - knowing what you've got is the first step in understanding what conclusions you can draw. Arpad & others - please correct me if I've gotten any of this wrong ... Todd. Todd Westerhoff VP, Software Products SiSoft 6 Clock Tower Place, Suite 250 Maynard, MA 01754 (978) 461-0449 x24 twesterh@sisoft.com www.sisoft.com -----Original Message----- From: owner-ibis-users@eda.org [mailto:owner-ibis-users@eda.org] On Behalf Of Dimitry Eisenshtat Sent: Saturday, January 13, 2007 3:58 AM To: Todd Westerhoff Cc: ibis@eda-stds.org; ibis-users@eda.org Subject: Re: [IBIS-Users] RE: [IBIS] Ibis open drain strange behaviour Todd, ok, we understand that time correlation between IBIS and HSpice is not guaranteed, but is it really problem? I mean, in the most often situation there is no place for such comparison at all, because you have only IBIS model, no spice netlist is available. This is the first reason for making IBIS (if simulator speed is not an issue), is it right? Lets say, I'm with semiconductor vendor side, I have the netlist of the buffer, I make the IBIS model based on spice simulations, not lab measurements, so on final step when the model is ready I like to check it vs. original spice behavioral. This is the only situation I agree the comparison is important. But in such case there is no REAL problem - I know exactly about the delay, and if it is the only difference between the IBIS & spice - I don't care. I want ask you about IBIS simulator aspect of the point we are talking about. Look, I find in "Cookbook for ver4" strongly recommendation to trim IBIS model time tables at least to half of max buffer frequency period. (http://www.vhdl.org/pub/ibis/cookbook/cookbook-v4.pdf page 70, 5.4.2 V-T Table Windowing). Can you please prefer from simulator software side - is it really problem for the simulator if the time table window is more then such time interval? And one additional point, you wrote "There are specific restrictions on how the dead time may be trimmed, which is a longer discussion" - right now I writes perl script which will trim tables in order to leave only transition region and decrease the time window as the Cookbook recommends to do. So, can you please explain about these restrictions? Thanks, Dmitry ... (previous thread clipped) -- +---------------------------------------------------------+ | Dmitry Aizenshtat Circuit Design Engineer, NSTA | | Tel : 972-9-9702-020 Fax : 972-9-9702-001 | | mailto:dimita@taux01.nsc.com | +---------------------------------------------------------+ ======================================================================== =================== The privileged confidential information contained in this email is intended for use only by the addressees as indicated by the original sender of this email. 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