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The original Verilog simulator, Gateway Design's Verilog-XL was the first (and only, for a time) Verilog simulator to be qualified for ASIC (validation) sign-off. After its acquisition by Cadence Design Systems, Verilog-XL changed very little over the years, retaining an interpreted language engine, and freezing language-support at Verilog-1995.
To simulate an e-testbench with a design written in VHDL/Verilog, Specman must be run in conjunction with a separate HDL simulation tool. Specman is a feature of Cadence's new Xcelium simulator, where tighter product integration offers both faster runtime performance and debugs capabilities not available with other HDL simulators.
An HDL simulator — the program that executes the testbench — maintains the simulator clock, which is the master reference for all events in the testbench simulation. Events occur only at the instants dictated by the testbench HDL (such as a reset-toggle coded into the testbench), or in reaction (by the model) to stimulus and triggering events.
Verilog/AMS is a superset of the Verilog digital HDL, so all statements in digital domain work as in Verilog (see there for examples). All analog parts work as in Verilog-A. The following code example in Verilog-AMS shows a DAC which is an example for analog processing which is triggered by a digital signal:
Verilog was later submitted to IEEE and became IEEE Standard 1364-1995, commonly referred to as Verilog-95. In the same time frame Cadence initiated the creation of Verilog-A to put standards support behind its analog simulator Spectre. Verilog-A was never intended to be a standalone language and is a subset of Verilog-AMS which encompassed ...
ModelSim is a multi-language environment by Siemens [1] (previously developed by Mentor Graphics, [2]) for simulation of hardware description languages such as VHDL, Verilog and SystemC, and includes a built-in C debugger. [3] [2] ModelSim can be used independently, or in conjunction with Intel Quartus Prime, PSIM, [4] Xilinx ISE or Xilinx ...
In 2000 Aldec released a high-performance HDL simulator working not only on Windows, but also on Solaris and Linux platforms. [2] In 2001 ALDEC added hardware to its product line: the HES (Hardware Embedded Simulation) Platform allowing hardware acceleration of HDL simulation and incremental prototyping of hardware. 2003 marked the release of Riviera-PRO supporting assertion based verification ...
VHDL, Verilog (only pure digital simulations) [9] Qt GUI; uses own SPICE-incompatible simulator Qucsator for analog Qucs-S [1] various contributors: 2024 Fork of Qucs that supports SPICE-compatible simulator backends: Ngspice, Xyce, SpiceOpus, Qucsator InfineonSpice [10] Infineon Technologies: 2024 Windows, Wine: Analog SPICE Simulation SapWin