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2019-06-28
Plasencia-Balabarca, F., Mitacc-Meza, E., Raffo-Jara, M., Silva-Cárdenas, C..  2018.  Robust Functional Verification Framework Based in UVM Applied to an AES Encryption Module. 2018 New Generation of CAS (NGCAS). :194-197.

This Since the past century, the digital design industry has performed an outstanding role in the development of electronics. Hence, a great variety of designs are developed daily, these designs must be submitted to high standards of verification in order to ensure the 100% of reliability and the achievement of all design requirements. The Universal Verification Methodology (UVM) is the current standard at the industry for the verification process due to its reusability, scalability, time-efficiency and feasibility of handling high-level designs. This research proposes a functional verification framework using UVM for an AES encryption module based on a very detailed and robust verification plan. This document describes the complete verification process as done in the industry for a popular module used in information-security applications in the field of cryptography, defining the basis for future projects. The overall results show the achievement of the high verification standards required in industry applications and highlight the advantages of UVM against System Verilog-based functional verification and direct verification methodologies previously developed for the AES module.

2017-03-08
Konstantinou, C., Keliris, A., Maniatakos, M..  2015.  Privacy-preserving functional IP verification utilizing fully homomorphic encryption. 2015 Design, Automation Test in Europe Conference Exhibition (DATE). :333–338.

Intellectual Property (IP) verification is a crucial component of System-on-Chip (SoC) design in the modern IC design business model. Given a globalized supply chain and an increasing demand for IP reuse, IP theft has become a major concern for the IC industry. In this paper, we address the trust issues that arise between IP owners and IP users during the functional verification of an IP core. Our proposed scheme ensures the privacy of IP owners and users, by a) generating a privacy-preserving version of the IP, which is functionally equivalent to the original design, and b) employing homomorphically encrypted input vectors. This allows the functional verification to be securely outsourced to a third-party, or to be executed by either parties, while revealing the least possible information regarding the test vectors and the IP core. Experiments on both combinational and sequential benchmark circuits demonstrate up to three orders of magnitude IP verification slowdown, due to the computationally intensive fully homomorphic operations, for different security parameter sizes.