3 research outputs found

    A mixed discrete-continuous optimization scheme for Cyber-Physical System architecture exploration

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    We propose a methodology for architecture exploration for Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) based on an iterative, optimization-based approach, where a discrete architecture selection engine is placed in a loop with a continuous sizing engine. The discrete optimization routine proposes a candidate architecture to the sizing engine. The sizing routine optimizes over the continuous parameters using simulation to evaluate the physical models and to monitor the requirements. To decrease the number of simulations, we show how balance equations and conservation laws can be leveraged to prune the discrete space, thus achieving significant reduction in the overall runtime. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our methodology on an industrial case study, namely an aircraft environmental control system, showing more than one order of magnitude reduction in optimization time

    Optimization-Based Methodology for the Exploration of Cyber-Physical System Architectures

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    In this thesis, we address the design space exploration of cyber-physical system architectures to select correct-by-construction configuration and interconnection of system components taken from pre-defined libraries. We formulate the exploration problem as a mapping problem and use optimization to solve it by searching for a minimum cost architecture that meets system requirements. Using a graph-based representation of a system architecture, we define a set of generic mixed integer linear constraints over graph vertices, edges and paths, and use these constraints to instantiate a variety of design requirements (e.g., interconnection, flow, workload, timing, reliability, routing). We implement a comprehensive toolbox that supports all steps of the proposed methodology. It provides a pattern-based formal language to facilitate requirements specification and a set of scalable algorithms for encoding and solving exploration problems. We prove our concepts on a set of case studies for different cyber-physical system domains, such as electrical power distribution networks, reconfigurable industrial production lines and wireless sensor networks
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