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India to send navy and fleet of planes to repatriate workers stranded by coronavirus

Kuwait police break up riot by Egyptian workers after large numbers of jobs lost across the Gulf states

India is to send its navy and a fleet of planes to repatriate migrant workers stranded by the coronavirus pandemic, as mounting tensions sparked a riot in Kuwait and alarm among large numbers of laid-off employees across the Gulf states.

The riot in a migrant camp in Kuwait on Sunday night was led by Egyptian workers, some of whom brandished furniture as security forces fired tear gas and sound grenades towards them.

Continue reading...




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Where India’s government has failed in the pandemic, its people have stepped in

Civil society has outperformed the state in helping to feed India’s poorest. It should be seen as ally not enemy

The highways connecting India’s overcrowded cities to the villages had not seen anything like it since the time of partition 73 years ago. Hundreds of thousands of workers were on the move, walking back to their villages with their possessions bundled on their heads.

On 24 March, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi ordered a nationwide 21-day lockdown to contain the coronavirus pandemic. States sealed their borders, and transport came to a halt. With no trains or buses to take them home, India’s rural-to-urban migrant population, estimated at a staggering 120 million, took to the roads. On 5 April a statement from the home ministry said 1.25 million people moving between states had been put up in camps and shelters.

Related: As the wealthy quaff wine in comfort, India’s poor are thrown to the wolves

Continue reading...




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Coronavirus is a crisis for the developing world, but here's why it needn't be a catastrophe | Esther Duflo & Abhijit Banerjee

A radical new form of universal basic income could revitalise damaged economies

  • Esther Duflo and Abhijit Banerjee won the 2019 Nobel prize in economics for their work on poverty alleviation
  • Coronavirus – latest updates
  • See all our coronavirus coverage
  • While countries in east Asia and Europe are gradually taking steps towards reopening their economies, many in the global south are wondering whether the worst of the pandemic is yet to come. As economists who work on poverty alleviation in developing countries, we are often asked what the effects of coronavirus will be in south Asia and Africa. The truth is, we don’t know. Without extensive testing to map the number of cases, it’s impossible to tell how far the virus has already spread. We don’t yet have enough information about how Covid-19 behaves under different conditions such as sunlight, heat and humidity. Developing countries’ more youthful populations may spare them the worst of the pandemic, but health systems in the global south are poorly equipped to deal with an outbreak, and poverty is linked to co-morbidities that put people at a higher risk of serious illness.

    Without the information widespread testing provides, many poorer countries have taken an extremely cautious approach. India imposed a total lockdown on 24 March, by which time the country had about 500 confirmed cases. Countries such as Rwanda, South Africa and Nigeria enforced lockdowns in late March, long before the virus was expected to peak. But these lockdown measures can’t last forever. Poorer countries could have used the quarantine to buy time, gather information about how the disease behaves and develop a testing and tracing strategy. Unfortunately, not much of this has happened. And, far from coming to their aid, rich countries have outrun poorer nations in the race for PPE, oxygen and ventilators.

    Continue reading...




    av

    [Football] Haskell Football Travels to Robert Morris Saturday

    (LAWRENCE KS) Haskell Football Leaves for Robert Morris University this Saturday October 27th 2012. 




    av

    How the coronavirus is affecting college sports: Latest on NCAA cancellations, eligibility, recruiting and more

    From the start of the college football season to cutting sports to an extra year of eligibility, here is the latest information on how the coronavirus is affecting colleges.




    av

    The NHL's coronavirus pause: League memo makes early-June draft case; return-to-play talk continues

    More details have emerged on a virtual draft in early June. Plus, the latest on when, where and how the season could resume.




    av

    [Haskell Indians] Haskell Basketball Travels to Lincoln, Illinois.




    av

    [Volleyball] Volleyball Travels to Lamoni, Iowa

    Today Volleyball will travel to Lamoni, IA to play two games against Peru State College and face off with Graceland University for the second time.




    av

    [Volleyball] Haskell Volleyball Travels for A.I.I. 2019 Volleyball Championships

    Haskell women's volleyball will travel to Lincoln College today to participate in pool play Friday 11/15/19!




    av

    [Women's Outdoor Track & Field] Snelding, Hall, and Lester made the Javelin finals.

    Baldwin City, Kansas - The Haskell Indian Nations University women's track and field teams competed at the Baker Relays on Saturday.




    av

    [Women's Outdoor Track & Field] Five top-5 finishes in Long Jump, Shot Put and Javelin.

    Ottawa, Kansas - The Haskell Indian Nations University Women's track and field teams competed at the Ottawa Braves Invitational on Saturday.




    av

    [Women's Outdoor Track & Field] Snelding makes the Javelin finals.

    Liberty, MO - The Haskell Indian Nations University Women's track and field teams competed at the Darrel Gourley Open on Saturday.




    av

    El coronavirus ataca las cárceles y cientos de miles de presos son liberados

    El virus se ha propagado rápidamente en prisiones sobrepobladas en el mundo, lo que ha llevado a los gobiernos a liberar a los reclusos en masa.




    av

    [Women's Cross Country] Cross Country Runner Tavia Hart Is Named A.I.I. Runner of the Week

    Haskell Women's Cross Country runner Tavia Hart comes out runner of the week after second meet of the season.




    av

    Favre: $1.1M for PSAs, not no-show speeches

    Brett Favre on Friday disputed a Mississippi state auditor's report that said the Hall of Fame quarterback received $1.1 million in welfare money for multiple speaking engagements that he didn't actually attend.




    av

    [Cross Country] Cross Country Travels to Bearcat Open 9/6/19!

    Tomorrow, September 6, 2019, Haskell XC will compete in Bearcat open against Northwest MIssouri State!




    av

    [Men's Outdoor Track & Field] Ottawa Braves Invitational Recap.

    Ottawa, Kansas - The Haskell Indian Nations University Men's track and field teams competed at the Ottawa Braves Invitational on Saturday.




    av

    One Chai and a Wills Navy Cut

    Pablo Bartholomew’s beautiful photo-show “Outside In” opened in Manhattan a few evenings ago. The exhibition is being held at Bodhi Art in Chelsea. Black-and-white photographs from the seventies and the eighties—reflecting Bartholomew’s engagement with people and places in Delhi, Bombay, and Calcutta.

    These are not the pictures that made Bartholomew famous. The undying image of the father brushing the dust from the face of the child he is burying—that was the iconic photograph from the Bhopal tragedy in 1984. It also won for Bartholomew, still in his twenties, the World Press Photo’s Picture of the Year Award.

    The images in “Outside In” do not commemorate grim tragedies or celebrate well-publicised public events. Instead, they are documents that offer intimate recall of a period and a milieu. Please click here to look at these photographs.

    People who share a context with the photographer will have their own private reading of the scenes. For me, they evoke days when happiness seemed only one chai and a Wills Navy Cut away. There is charm and candor in these scenes. And because the young believe they will live forever, there is nothing defensive or stuck-up or overly self-conscious about their faces and postures.

    Even the language of the captions is true to this spirit: “Self-portrait after a trippy night…”; “Nona writing and Alok zonked out…”; “Hanging out with the Maharani Bagh gang….” The exhibition catalogue has a fine essay by Aveek Sen that has also been published in the latest issue of Biblio.

    Rave Out © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
    India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




    av

    For this Brave New World of cricket, we have IPL and England to thank

    This is the 24th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

    Back in the last decade, I was a cricket journalist for a few years. Then, around 12 years ago, I quit. I was jaded as hell. Every game seemed like déjà vu, nothing new, just another round on the treadmill. Although I would remember her fondly, I thought me and cricket were done.

    And then I fell in love again. Cricket has changed in the last few years in glorious ways. There have been new ways of thinking about the game. There have been new ways of playing the game. Every season, new kinds of drama form, new nuances spring up into sight. This is true even of what had once seemed the dullest form of the game, one-day cricket. We are entering into a brave new world, and the team leading us there is England. No matter what happens in the World Cup final today – a single game involves a huge amount of luck – this England side are extraordinary. They are the bridge between eras, leading us into a Golden Age of Cricket.

    I know that sounds hyperbolic, so let me stun you further by saying that I give the IPL credit for this. And now, having woken up you up with such a jolt on this lovely Sunday morning, let me explain.

    Twenty20 cricket changed the game in two fundamental ways. Both ended up changing one-day cricket. The first was strategy.

    When the first T20 games took place, teams applied an ODI template to innings-building: pinch-hit, build, slog. But this was not an optimal approach. In ODIs, teams have 11 players over 50 overs. In T20s, they have 11 players over 20 overs. The equation between resources and constraints is different. This means that the cost of a wicket goes down, and the cost of a dot ball goes up. Critically, it means that the value of aggression rises. A team need not follow the ODI template. In some instances, attacking for all 20 overs – or as I call it, ‘frontloading’ – may be optimal.

    West Indies won the T20 World Cup in 2016 by doing just this, and England played similarly. And some sides began to realise was that they had been underestimating the value of aggression in one-day cricket as well.

    The second fundamental way in which T20 cricket changed cricket was in terms of skills. The IPL and other leagues brought big money into the game. This changed incentives for budding cricketers. Relatively few people break into Test or ODI cricket, and play for their countries. A much wider pool can aspire to play T20 cricket – which also provides much more money. So it makes sense to spend the hundreds of hours you are in the nets honing T20 skills rather than Test match skills. Go to any nets practice, and you will find many more kids practising innovative aggressive strokes than playing the forward defensive.

    As a result, batsmen today have a wider array of attacking strokes than earlier generations. Because every run counts more in T20 cricket, the standard of fielding has also shot up. And bowlers have also reacted to this by expanding their arsenal of tricks. Everyone has had to lift their game.

    In one-day cricket, thus, two things have happened. One, there is better strategic understanding about the value of aggression. Two, batsmen are better equipped to act on the aggressive imperative. The game has continued to evolve.

    Bowlers have reacted to this with greater aggression on their part, and this ongoing dialogue has been fascinating. The cricket writer Gideon Haigh once told me on my podcast that the 2015 World Cup featured a battle between T20 batting and Test match bowling.

    This England team is the high watermark so far. Their aggression does not come from slogging. They bat with a combination of intent and skills that allows them to coast at 6-an-over, without needing to take too many risks. In normal conditions, thus, they can coast to 300 – any hitting they do beyond that is the bonus that takes them to 350 or 400. It’s a whole new level, illustrated by the fact that at one point a few days ago, they had seven consecutive scores of 300 to their name. Look at their scores over the last few years, in fact, and it is clear that this is the greatest batting side in the history of one-day cricket – by a margin.

    There have been stumbles in this World Cup, but in the bigger picture, those are outliers. If England have a bad day in the final and New Zealand play their A-game, England might even lose today. But if Captain Morgan’s men play their A-game, they will coast to victory. New Zealand does not have those gears. No other team in the world does – for now.

    But one day, they will all have to learn to play like this.



    © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
    India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




    av

    How to dump waveform, fsdb in SimVision?

    As title,

    How to dump waveform, fsdb in SimVision? 
    (Simulation Analysis Environment  SimVision(64) 18.09-s001)
    Please help.

    Thanks.




    av

    SpectreRF Tutorials and Appnotes... Shhhh... We Have a NEW Best Kept Secret!

    It's been a while since you've heard from me...it has been a busy year for sure. One of the reasons I've been so quiet is that I was part of a team working diligently on our latest best kept secret: The MMSIM 12.1.1/MMSIM 13.1 Documentation has...(read more)




    av

    Have You Tried the New Transmission Line Library (rfTlineLib)?

    Happy New Year! Have you tried the new Transmission Line Library (rfTlineLib) yet? In case you missed it, rfTlineLib was introduced in IC 6.1.6 ISR1 plus MMSIM 12.1.1 -or- MMSIM13.1. You may wonder....Why should I use the new rfTlineLib ? Well...(read more)




    av

    See Cadence RF Technologies at IEEE International Microwave Symposium 2014

    RF Enthusiasts, Come connect with Cadence RF experts and discover the latest advances in Cadence RF technologies, including Spectre RF at the IEEE International Microwave Symposium (IMS) 2014. This year, IMS will be held in Tampa, Florida. Cadence...(read more)




    av

    Default param values not saved in OA cell property.

    When I place a pcell and do not change the W parameter (default is used) the value is not saved in the OA cell property.

    When I change the default value of the super master now, the old pcell will get the new default value automatically because there is nothing saved inside the OA cell for this parameter.

    Do you have any Idea, that how we can save the default values in the OA cell properties so that this value doesn't get updated if the default values are updated in the new PDKs




    av

    How to save the cellview of all instances in a top cell faster?

    I have a top cell & need to revise all the instances' cellview & export top cell as a new GDS file.

    So I write a SKILL code to do so and I find out it will be a little bit slow by using the dbSave to save the cellview of each instance.

    Code as below:

    let( (topCV subCV )
    topCV = dbOpenCellViewByType(newLibName topCellName "layout" "maskLayout" "a")
    foreach(inst topCV->instances
    subCV = dbOpenCellViewByType(newLibName inst->cellName "layout" "maskLayout" "a")
    ;;;revise code content
    ;;;...
    ;;;revise code content
    dbSave(subCV)
    dbClose(subCV)
    )
    dbSave(topCV)
    dbClose(topCV)
    system(strcat( "strmout -library " newLibName " -topCell " topCellName " -view layout -strmFile " resultFolder "/" topCellName ".gds -techLib " srcLibName " -enableColoring -logFile " topCellName "_strmOut.log" ) )
    )

    Even if the cell content is not revised, the run time of dbSave will be 2 minutes when there are ~ 1000 instances in topcell. The exported GDS file size is ~2MB.

    And the dbSave becomes the bottle neck of the code runtime...

    Is there any better way to do such a thing? 




    av

    How to check a cluster of same net vias spacing, with have no shape or cline covered

     

    Hi all,

    I have a question regarding the manufacture : how to check a cluster of same net vias spacing, with have no shape or cline covered




    av

    Library Characterization Tidbits: Recharacterize What Matters - Save Time!

    Recently, I read an article about how failure is the stepping stone to success in life. It instantly struck a chord and a thought came zinging from nowhere about what happens to the failed arcs of a...

    [[ Click on the title to access the full blog on the Cadence Community site. ]]




    av

    2019 HF1 Release for Clarity, Celsius, and Sigrity Tools Now Available

    The 2019 HF1 production release for Clarity, Celsius, and Sigrity Tools is now available for download at Cadence Downloads . SIGRITY2019 HF1 For information about supported platforms, compatibility...

    [[ Click on the title to access the full blog on the Cadence Community site. ]]




    av

    Low-Power IEEE 1801 / UPF Simulation Rapid Adoption Kit Now Available

    There is no better way other than a self-help training kit -- (rapid adoption kit, or RAK) -- to demonstrate the Incisive Enterprise Simulator's IEEE 1801 / UPF low-power features and its usage. The features include:

    • Unique SimVision debugging 
    • Patent-pending power supply network visualization and debugging
    • Tcl extensions for LP debugging
    • Support for Liberty file power description
    • Standby mode support
    • Support for Verilog, VHDL, and mixed language
    • Automatic understanding of complex feedthroughs
    • Replay of initial blocks
    • ‘x' corruption for integers and enumerated types
    • Automatic understanding of loop variables
    • Automatic support for analog interconnections

     

    Mickey Rodriguez, AVS Staff Solutions Engineer has developed a low power UPF-based RAK, which is now available on Cadence Online Support for you to download.

    • This rapid adoption kit illustrates Incisive Enterprise Simulator (IES) support for the IEEE 1801 power intent standard. 

    Patent-Pending Power Supply Network Browser. (Only available with the LP option to IES)

    • In addition to an overview of IES features, SimVision and Tcl debug features, a lab is provided to give the user an opportunity to try these out.

    The complete RAK and associated overview presentation can be downloaded from our SoC and Functional Verification RAK page:

    Rapid Adoption Kits

    Overview

    RAK Database

    Introduction to IEEE-1801 Low Power Simulation

    View

    Download (2.3 MB)

     

    We are covering the following technologies through our RAKs at this moment:

    Synthesis, Test and Verification flow
    Encounter Digital Implementation (EDI) System and Sign-off Flow
    Virtuoso Custom IC and Sign-off Flow
    Silicon-Package-Board Design
    Verification IP
    SOC and IP level Functional Verification
    System level verification and validation with Palladium XP

    Please visit https://support.cadence.com/raks to download your copy of RAK.

    We will continue to provide self-help content on Cadence Online Support, your 24/7 partner for learning more about Cadence tools, technologies, and methodologies as well as getting help in resolving issues related to Cadence software. If you are signed up for e-mail notifications, you're likely to notice new solutions, application notes (technical papers), videos, manuals, etc.

    Note: To access the above documents, click a link and use your Cadence credentials to log on to the Cadence Online Support https://support.cadence.com/ website.

    Happy Learning!

    Sumeet Aggarwal and Adam Sherer




    av

    QPSS with non-50% dutycycle square wave clocks (For sample and hold)

    Hello,

    Would anyone know how to setup a PSS or QPSS simulation with 25% dutycycle clock sources or if such a thing is possible with QPSS.

    Fig1 (below) is a snapshot of the circuit I am trying to characterize. This has 4 clock ports each with 25%duty cycle in the ON state. Fig2 below shows two of these clocks.

    Each path in the circuit consists of two switches with a low pass RC sandwiched in between. The Input is a 50Ohm port sine wave and the output is a 1K resistor. The output nets of all paths are connected together.

    I am trying to determine the swept frequency response from input to output (voltage) when the input is from 500Mhz to  510MHz. The Period (T=1/Fp) of each of the pulses is such that Fp=500MHz. The first pulse source has a delay=0, second has delay=T/4, third delay=2T/4, etc...

    I am currently getting it working and seeing the correct result (bandpass response) with Transient but the problem is doing a dft at 500MHz with 10KHz spacings needs at least 100us and takes up a lot of time and disk space.

    Many Thanks,
    Chris.



    Fig1


    Fig2




    av

    Inconsistent behaviour of warn() between Virtuoso and Allegro

    For a project, we depend on capturing warnings. This works fine in Virtuoso but behaves differently in Allegro.

    In our observations

    Virtuoso:

    >>> warn("Hello")

    *WARNING* Hello

    Allegro:

    >>> warn("Hello")

    *WARNING* Hello

    But when we capture the warning:

    Virtuoso:

    >>> warn("Hello") getWarn()

    "Hello"

    Allegro:

    >>> warn("Hello") getWarn()

    "*WARNING* Hello"

    This is a Problem for because we put an empty String in the warn and depend on the fact that no Warning results in an empty String but on Allegro the output always begins with *WARNING*

    Is there a way to make the behavior consistent in both versions?




    av

    For this Brave New World of cricket, we have IPL and England to thank

    This is the 24th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

    Back in the last decade, I was a cricket journalist for a few years. Then, around 12 years ago, I quit. I was jaded as hell. Every game seemed like déjà vu, nothing new, just another round on the treadmill. Although I would remember her fondly, I thought me and cricket were done.

    And then I fell in love again. Cricket has changed in the last few years in glorious ways. There have been new ways of thinking about the game. There have been new ways of playing the game. Every season, new kinds of drama form, new nuances spring up into sight. This is true even of what had once seemed the dullest form of the game, one-day cricket. We are entering into a brave new world, and the team leading us there is England. No matter what happens in the World Cup final today – a single game involves a huge amount of luck – this England side are extraordinary. They are the bridge between eras, leading us into a Golden Age of Cricket.

    I know that sounds hyperbolic, so let me stun you further by saying that I give the IPL credit for this. And now, having woken up you up with such a jolt on this lovely Sunday morning, let me explain.

    Twenty20 cricket changed the game in two fundamental ways. Both ended up changing one-day cricket. The first was strategy.

    When the first T20 games took place, teams applied an ODI template to innings-building: pinch-hit, build, slog. But this was not an optimal approach. In ODIs, teams have 11 players over 50 overs. In T20s, they have 11 players over 20 overs. The equation between resources and constraints is different. This means that the cost of a wicket goes down, and the cost of a dot ball goes up. Critically, it means that the value of aggression rises. A team need not follow the ODI template. In some instances, attacking for all 20 overs – or as I call it, ‘frontloading’ – may be optimal.

    West Indies won the T20 World Cup in 2016 by doing just this, and England played similarly. And some sides began to realise was that they had been underestimating the value of aggression in one-day cricket as well.

    The second fundamental way in which T20 cricket changed cricket was in terms of skills. The IPL and other leagues brought big money into the game. This changed incentives for budding cricketers. Relatively few people break into Test or ODI cricket, and play for their countries. A much wider pool can aspire to play T20 cricket – which also provides much more money. So it makes sense to spend the hundreds of hours you are in the nets honing T20 skills rather than Test match skills. Go to any nets practice, and you will find many more kids practising innovative aggressive strokes than playing the forward defensive.

    As a result, batsmen today have a wider array of attacking strokes than earlier generations. Because every run counts more in T20 cricket, the standard of fielding has also shot up. And bowlers have also reacted to this by expanding their arsenal of tricks. Everyone has had to lift their game.

    In one-day cricket, thus, two things have happened. One, there is better strategic understanding about the value of aggression. Two, batsmen are better equipped to act on the aggressive imperative. The game has continued to evolve.

    Bowlers have reacted to this with greater aggression on their part, and this ongoing dialogue has been fascinating. The cricket writer Gideon Haigh once told me on my podcast that the 2015 World Cup featured a battle between T20 batting and Test match bowling.

    This England team is the high watermark so far. Their aggression does not come from slogging. They bat with a combination of intent and skills that allows them to coast at 6-an-over, without needing to take too many risks. In normal conditions, thus, they can coast to 300 – any hitting they do beyond that is the bonus that takes them to 350 or 400. It’s a whole new level, illustrated by the fact that at one point a few days ago, they had seven consecutive scores of 300 to their name. Look at their scores over the last few years, in fact, and it is clear that this is the greatest batting side in the history of one-day cricket – by a margin.

    There have been stumbles in this World Cup, but in the bigger picture, those are outliers. If England have a bad day in the final and New Zealand play their A-game, England might even lose today. But if Captain Morgan’s men play their A-game, they will coast to victory. New Zealand does not have those gears. No other team in the world does – for now.

    But one day, they will all have to learn to play like this.

    The India Uncut Blog © 2010 Amit Varma. All rights reserved.
    Follow me on Twitter.




    av

    How do we use the concept of Save and Restore during real developing(debugging)???/

    Hi All,

    I'm trying to understand checkpoint concept. When I found save and restart concept in cdnshelp, There is just describing about "$save" and "xrun -r "~~~".

    and I found also the below link about save restart and it saves your time.

    But I can't find any benefits from my experiment from save&restart article( I fully agree..the article)

    Ok, So I'v got some experiment  Here.

    1. I declared $save and got the below result as I expected within the simple UVM code.

    In UVM code...

    $display("TEST1");
    $display("TEST2");
    $save("SAVE_TEST");
    $display("TEST3");
    $display("TEST4");

    And I restart at "SAVE_TEST" point by xrun -r "SAVE_TEST", I've got the below log

    xcelium> run
    TEST3
    TEST4

    Ok, It's Good what I expected.(The concept of Save and Restore is simple: instead of re-initializing your simulation every time you want to run a test, only initialize it once. Then you can save the simulation as a “snapshot” and re-run it from that point to avoid hours of initialization times. It used to be inconvenient. I agree..)

    2. But The Problem is that I can't restart with modified code. Let's see the below example.

    I just modified TEST5 instead of "TEST3"

    $display("TEST1");
    $display("TEST2");
    $save("SAVE_TEST");
    $display("TEST5"); //$display("TEST3");
    $display("TEST4");

    and I rerun with xrun -r "SAVE_TEST", then I've got the same log

    xcelium> run
    TEST3
    TEST4

    There is no "TEST5". Actually I expected "TEST5" in the log.From here We know $save can't support partially modified code after $save. 

    Actually, through this, we can approach to our goal about saving developing time. 

    So I want to know Is there any possible way that instead of re-initializing our simulation every time we want to run a test, only initialize it once and keep developing(debugging) our code ?

    If we do, Could you let me know the simple example?




    av

    How to run a regressive test and merge the ncsim.trn file of all test into a single file to view the waveform in simvision ?

    Hi all,

             I want to know how to run a regressive test in cadence and merge all ncsim .trn file of each test case into a single file to view all waveform in simvision. I am using Makefile to invoke the test case.

             eg:-

                   test0:

                         irun -uvm -sv -access +rwc $(RTL) $(INTER) $(PKG) $(TOP) $(probe) +UVM_VERBOSITY=UVM_MEDIUM +UVM_TESTNAME=test0

                 test1:

                       irun -uvm -sv -access +rwc $(RTL) $(INTER) $(PKG) $(TOP) $(probe) +UVM_VERBOSITY=UVM_MEDIUM +UVM_TESTNAME=test1

              I just to call test0 followed by test1 or parallel both test and view the waveform for both tests case.

            I new to this tool and help me with it

                         




    av

    IC Packagers: Time-Saving Alternatives to Show Element

    In the Allegro back-end layout products like Allegro Package Designer Plus, it would be reasonable to assume that the most often used command is none other than “show element” (shortcut key F4). This command, runnable at nearly any t...(read more)



    • Allegro Package Designer
    • Allegro PCB Editor

    av

    IC Packagers: You Can Leave Your (Molding) Cap On…

    Molding caps aren’t something we talk about too frequently around here. We all know they exist, and they serve an important purpose of protecting the delicate die from potentially harsh environmental conditions. They impact how well heat can be...(read more)



    • Allegro Package Designer

    av

    error in output waveform

     hi,

    i am doing a project on synchronous fifo design using verilog. below written is my coding. after simulation the waveform is showing error regarding its not giving value of rdata_valid and is showing a red line in waveform and due to it address is also not being taken.i have attached the waveform also. the logic for write logic is also not accepting the address(no change occurs while changing value of read_ptr). i have attached my file with it so plz refer to it.

    plz help me out in this. your guidance and solns will help me in completing my project work.

    thank you

    lov sareen




    av

    Regarding Save/Restore Settings for Transient Simulation

    Hello,

    I am running a transient simulation on my circuit and usually my simulation time took me more than a day (The circuit is quite big). I am usually saving specific nodes to decrease the simulation time. My problem is, since it usually took me one day to finish I need to save my trans simulation just in case something bad happens. I am aware that the transient simulation have the options for save/restore. But, when I tried to use it I have some problem. Whenever I restore the save file, it starts where it ends before (expected function) but my data is incomplete. It doesn't save the previous data. Its kind of my data is incomplete. What I did is set the saveperiod and savefile. I hope someone can help me. Thank you!


    Regards,

    Kiel




    av

    Library Characterization Tidbits: Over the Clouds and Beyond with Arm-Based Graviton and Cadence Liberate Trio

    Cadence Liberate Trio Characterization Suite, ARM-based Graviton Processors, and Amazon Web Services (AWS) Cloud have joined forces to cater to the High-Performance Computing, Machine Learning/Artificial Intelligence, and Big Data Analytics sectors. (read more)




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