We investigate a characterization of hard-to-detect bridging faults. For circuits with large numbers of lines (or nodes), this characterization can be used to select target faults for test generation when it is impractical to target all the bridging faults (or all the realistic bridging faults). We demonstrate that the faults selected based on the proposed characterization are indeed hard-to-detect by showing that the fault coverage of a given test set with respect to this subset is lower and more sensitive to the test set than the fault coverage obtained with respect to a random subset of the same size, with respect to the complete set of faults, and when possible, with respect to a subset of realistic bridging faults of the same size. We also demonstrate that a test set for the selected subset of faults detects other faults more effectively than when a test set is derived for a randomly selected subset of faults of the same size.
Irith Pomeranz, Sudhakar M. Reddy, Sandip Kundu