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Cambridge Tracts in Theoretical Computer Science

Higher Order Logic and Hardware Verification (Cambridge Tracts in Theoretical Computer Science) by T. F. Melham

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Dr. Melham shows here how formal logic can be used to specify the behavior of hardware designs and reason about their correctness. A primary theme of the book is the use of abstraction in hardware specification and verification. The author describes how certain fundamental abstraction mechanisms for hardware verification can be formalized in logic and used to express assertions about design correctness and the relative accuracy of models of hardware behavior. His approach is pragmatic and driven by examples. He also includes an introduction to higher-order logic, which is a widely used formalism in this subject, and describes how that formalism is actually used for hardware verification. The book is based in part on the author's own research as well as on graduate teaching. Thus it can be used to accompany courses on hardware verification and as a resource for research workers.

Mass Market Paperback

First published November 11, 1993

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T.F. Melham

2 books

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2 reviews1 follower
June 18, 2018
Well written and carefully explained. It might be a little dated, focusing on things like refinements between different models of CMOS, but I think that's not really a problem. It just makes the examples easier to follow. I'd probably regard it as a taster that shows you which books and papers to read next, but gives you a good overview of what formally verifying a digital block might mean.
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