Inactive-Reserved Standard

IEEE 1850-2010

IEEE Standard for Property Specification Language (PSL)

The IEEE Property Specification Language (PSL) is defined in this standard. PSL is a formal notation for specification of electronic system behavior, compatible with multiple electronic system design languages, including IEEE Std 1076™ (VHDL®), IEEE Std 1354 (Verilog®), IEEE Std 1666™ (SystemC®), and IEEE Std 1800(TM) (SystemVerilog(R)), thereby enabling a common specification and verification flow for multi-language and mixed-language designs. PSL captures design intent in a form suitable for simulation, formal verification, formal analysis, and hybrid verification tools. PSL enhances communication among architects, designers, and verification engineers to increase productivity throughout the design and verification process. The primary audiences for this standard are the implementors of tools supporting the language and advanced users of the language.

Standard Committee
C/DA - Design Automation
Status
Inactive-Reserved Standard
PAR Approval
2008-03-27
Superseding
1850-2005
Board Approval
2010-03-25
History
ANSI Approved:
2010-08-06
Published:
2010-04-06
Inactivated Date:
2021-03-25

Working Group Details

Society
IEEE Computer Society
Standard Committee
C/DA - Design Automation
Working Group
1850_WG - Property Specification Language Working Group
Learn More About 1850_WG - Property Specification Language Working Group
IEEE Program Manager
Vanessa Lalitte
Contact Vanessa Lalitte
Working Group Chair
Harry Foster

Other Activities From This Working Group

Current projects that have been authorized by the IEEE SA Standards Board to develop a standard.


No Active Projects

Standards approved by the IEEE SA Standards Board that are within the 10-year lifecycle.


62531-2012
IEC 62531:2012(E) (IEEE Std 1850-2010): Standard for Property Specification Language (PSL)

The IEEE Property Specification Language (PSL) is defined. PSL is a formal notation for specification of electronic system behavior, compatible with multiple electronic system design languages, including IEEE Std 1076™ (VHDLu00ae), IEEE Std 1354 (Verilogu00ae), IEEE Std 1666™ (SystemCu00ae), and IEEE Std 1800™ (SystemVerilogu00ae), thereby enabling a common specification and verification flow for multi-language and mixed-language designs. PSL captures design intent in a form suitable for simulation, formal verification, formal analysis, and hybrid verification tools. PSL enhances communication among architects, designers, and verification engineers to increase productivity throughout the design and verification process. The primary audiences for this standard are the implementors of tools supporting the language and advanced users of the language

Learn More About 62531-2012

These standards have been replaced with a revised version of the standard, or by a compilation of the original active standard and all its existing amendments, corrigenda, and errata.


1850-2005
IEEE Standard for Property Specification Language (PSL)

Replaced by 62531(E):2007. The IEEE Property Specification Language (PSL) is defined in this standard. PSL is a formal notation for specification of electronic system behavior, compatible with multiple electronic system design languages, including IEEE St

Learn More About 1850-2005

62531-2007
IEC/IEEE International Standard for Property Specification Language (PSL)

(IEC 62531 Ed. 1 (2007-11) (IEEE Std 1850-2005). The IEEE Property Specification Language (PSL) is defined in this standard. PSL is a formal notation for specification of electronic system behavior, compatible with multiple electronic system design languages, including IEEE Std 1076™ (VHDLu00ae), IEEE Std 1364™ (Verilogu00ae), IEEE P1666™ (SystemCu00ae), and IEEE P1800™ (SystemVerilogu00ae), thereby enabling a common specification and verification flow for multi-language and mixed-language designs. PSL captures design intent in a form suitable for simulation, formal verification, formal analysis, and hybrid verification tools. PSL enhances communication among architects, designers, and verification engineers to increase productivity throughout the design and verification process. The primary audiences for this standard are the implementors of tools supporting the language and advanced users of the language.

Learn More About 62531-2007

These standards have been removed from active status through a ballot where the standard is made inactive as a consensus decision of a balloting group.


No Inactive-Withdrawn Standards

These standards are removed from active status through an administrative process for standards that have not undergone a revision process within 10 years.


No Inactive-Reserved Standards
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