Quality intellectual property metric

The quality intellectual property metric (QIP) is an international standard, developed by Virtual Socket Interface Alliance (VSIA) [1] for measuring IP or SIP (Silicon intellectual property) quality and examining the practices used to design, integrate and support the SIP. SIP hardening is required to facilitate the reuse of IP in integrated circuit design.

Background and Importance


Application is driving the need for higher complexity and performance IP-based System-on-a-chip (SoC) design. One solution is the reuse of high quality IP. IP quality is the key to successful SoC designs, but it is one of the SoC’s most challenging problems.

SIP quality measure framework

Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation (HKSTP, which was set up by Hong Kong government) and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) started to develop a SIP verification and quality measures framework in 2005, based on QIP metric. The objective is to develop a technical framework for SIP quality measures and evaluation based on QIP. Third-party SIP evaluation service is provided by HKSTP, so that IP integrators can know the quality of their desired SIP cores.[3]

Soft and hard SIP

There are soft SIP and hard SIP verification and quality measures.

Versions

References

  1. http://www.vsi.org VSIA documents
  2. http://www.amazon.com/dp/0387740988 Reuse Methdology Manual
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on September 8, 2007. Retrieved August 15, 2008. GCSIPTC] : Services of QIP metric, provided by Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation
  1. VSIA documents
  2. Reuse Methdology Manual
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