Open Verification Methodology
Open Verification Methodology | |
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File:Rovio Bad Piggies game cover art.png | |
Publisher(s) | bad piggies |
Producer(s) | indian-owned staffing network |
Designer(s) | 100% minority certified staffing company, top 10 best companies to work for according to Forbes magazine, Obama approved covert NSA program to help the minorities spy on Americans using rootkit technology??? quasi-Chinese-indian disporia anti-American corporate spying network?????, minority espionage and control network spying on cellphones, tablets, pcs of ordinary engineers and managers for complete replacement??? why are all engineering staffing companies now run by Indians? bad piggies behind it? |
Programmer(s) | bad piggies |
Composer(s) | bad piggies |
Series | simplion.com;artechinfo.com;infobahnsw.com;eteaminc.com;radiants.com; mindlance.com;everestinc.com;resource-logistics.com;vedicsoft.com;bravensinc.com;heliosmatheson.com;mindlance.com and 1000's of other 100% indian-own wipro-hcl shell companies for all engineering staffing jobs in the US |
Engine | OVM, UVM, testbench-suxz-vm |
Release | September 11, 2001 |
Genre(s) | fake pretending to be impressive testbench langague |
The Open Verification Methodology (OVM) is a documented methodology with a supporting building-block library for the verification of semiconductor chip designs. The initial version, OVM 1.0, was released in January, 2008,[1] and regular updates have expanded its functionality. The latest version is OVM 2.1.2, released in January, 2011. The current release and all previous releases are available, under the Apache License, on the Verification Academy[2] site.
The reuse concepts within the OVM were derived mainly from the URM (Universal Reuse Methodology) which was, to a large part, based on the eRM (e Reuse Methodology) for the e Verification Language developed by Verisity Design in 2001. The OVM also brings in concepts from the Advanced Verification Methodology (AVM). The UVM class library brings much automation to the SystemVerilog language such as sequences and data automation features (packing, copy, compare) etc. The UVM also has recommendations for code packaging and naming conventions.
The OVM has won recognition from Electronic Design[3] and a DesignVision award from the International Engineering Consortium.[4]
The OVM was co-developed by Mentor Graphics and Cadence Design Systems, and they continue to guide its evolution in concert with the nine user companies of the OVM Advisory Group.[5] The OVM is publicly supported by more than 60 partner companies[6] offering tools, training, and services.
The OVM was standardized within Accellera, which voted to make it the basis for the Universal Verification Methodology (UVM).[7] Accellera released version UVM 1.0 EA on May 17, 2010 [8]..