The Open SystemC Initiative (OSCI), an independent, non-profit organization dedicated to supporting and advancing SystemC as an industry-standard language for electronic system-level (ESL) design, celebrates its 10th Anniversary this year, a decade marked by a series of major milestones for the group, including official IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) approval of the SystemC language as IEEE Std. 1666-2005, "Standard for SystemC," in December 2005, and the release of the OSCI transaction-level modeling standard, TLM-2.0, in June 2008, promoting the sharing and exchange of high-level models.
Introduced at the 1999 Embedded Systems Conference and "setting the stage for what could be a new era in electronics design," according to EE Times, a group of 35 EDA companies formed a coalition to create an "open-source C++ 'modeling platform' to allow hardware, software and systems design in C or C++."
A longtime analyst and leading provider of marketing intelligence to the global electronic design automation industry, Gary Smith, president and founder of Gary Smith EDA, indicated "SystemC will be the ESL design language of the future," when OSCI was first announced. Ten years later, he provides this perspective: "OSCI has been extremely successful building worldwide awareness and acceptance of SystemC, exemplified by its expansive user groups. At the same time, it continues to play an important role in creating the standards needed to drive ESL to the next level along with the consensus so necessary to make them a success. The people of OSCI who generously give of their time and expertise to make their success possible have my most sincere congratulations for achieving a decade of outstanding leadership."
Since the release of IEEE Std. 1666-2005, tens of thousands of users worldwide have downloaded the standard at a rate of more than 10,000 annually. And with over 60,000 registered users on its website, OSCI has built upon this strong SystemC foundation to achieve numerous milestones throughout its 10-year history.
"The IEEE-SA was honored to collaborate with OSCI on the development of IEEE 1666," said Chuck Adams, president IEEE Standards Association. "OSCI's working groups' outstanding technical contribution and cooperation with the IEEE 1666 Working Group led to a clearly defined standard for system-level design. We look forward to working with OSCI on the revision of IEEE 1666, which is anticipated to initiate in 2010."
OSCI's technical contributions are fueled by the diligent efforts of its working groups that develop and enable technology innovation, specifications, and standards to promote and advance the SystemC ecosystem. Notable among their achievements:
With thriving user groups in Japan, Europe, North America, Taiwan, and Latin America, and the full support of major companies and standards organizations worldwide, use of SystemC has become a mainstream part of ESL design and high-level model exchange. Companies around the world are using SystemC in a wide range of projects in numerous application areas including consumer electronics, wireless and automotive.
Comments
Sorry if it's not the right
Sorry if it's not the right place to post this comment. I want to start a project using sytemC and verilog. Could you please recommend me a useful book for each of them. Thanks in advance.
Arnold, md5 generator