22 research outputs found

    Analysis and identification of possible automation approaches for embedded systems design flows

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    Sophisticated and high performance embedded systems are present in an increasing number of application domains. In this context, formal-based design methods have been studied to make the development process robust and scalable. Models of computation (MoC) allows the modeling of an application at a high abstraction level by using a formal base. This enables analysis before the application moves to the implementation phase. Different tools and frameworks supporting MoCs have been developed. Some of them can simulate the models and also verify their functionality and feasibility before the next design steps. In view of this, we present a novel method for analysis and identification of possible automation approaches applicable to embedded systems design flow supported by formal models of computation. A comprehensive case study shows the potential and applicability of our method11212

    Petri net based development of globally-asynchronous locally-synchronous distributed embedded systems

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    Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Engenharia Electrotécnica e de ComputadoresA model-based development approach (MBDA) for Globally-Asynchronous Locally- Synchronous (GALS) Distributed Embedded Systems (DESs) is proposed. This approach relies on the GALS-DESs specification through (low- or high-level) Petri net classes, which ensure that the created models are GALS, locally deterministic, distributable, networkindependent, and platform-independent and support their simulation, verification, and implementation (using simulation, model-checking, and code generation tools). The use of network- and platform-independent models enable the use of heterogeneous communication networks to support the distributed components interaction and enable the use of heterogeneous platforms to support the components and the communication nodes implementation. To enable the proposed MBDA, Petri nets are extended with a set of the concepts, most notably time-domains and asynchronous-channels. Algorithms to support the verification of GALS-DES models and their decomposition into implementable sub-models are also proposed. A tool chain framework (IOPT-tools) was extended with this work proposals, supporting their validation and the GALS-DESs development.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia - grant ref. SFRH/BD/62171/200

    Sixth international conference on application of concurrency to system design, ACSD 2006 : proceedings, 28-30 June 2006, Turku, Finland

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    The following topics are dealt with: asynchronous systems; synchronous systems; scheduling; timed systems; stochastic models; model checking; systems-on-chips algebraic approach; concurrency systems; distributed system

    Sixth international conference on application of concurrency to system design, ACSD 2006 : proceedings, 28-30 June 2006, Turku, Finland

    No full text
    The following topics are dealt with: asynchronous systems; synchronous systems; scheduling; timed systems; stochastic models; model checking; systems-on-chips algebraic approach; concurrency systems; distributed system

    Sixth international conference on application of concurrency to system design, ACSD 2006 : proceedings, 28-30 June 2006, Turku, Finland

    No full text
    The following topics are dealt with: asynchronous systems; synchronous systems; scheduling; timed systems; stochastic models; model checking; systems-on-chips algebraic approach; concurrency systems; distributed system

    Ordonnancement hybride des applications flots de données sur des systèmes embarqués multi-coeurs

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    Les systèmes embarqués sont de plus en plus présents dans l'industrie comme dans la vie quotidienne. Une grande partie de ces systèmes comprend des applications effectuant du traitement intensif des données: elles utilisent de nombreux filtres numériques, où les opérations sur les données sont répétitives et ont un contrôle limité. Les graphes "flots de données", grâce à leur déterminisme fonctionnel inhérent, sont très répandus pour modéliser les systèmes embarqués connus sous le nom de "data-driven". L'ordonnancement statique et périodique des graphes flot de données a été largement étudié, surtout pour deux modèles particuliers: SDF et CSDF. Dans cette thèse, on s'intéresse plus particulièrement à l'ordonnancement périodique des graphes CSDF. Le problème consiste à identifier des séquences périodiques infinies d'actionnement des acteurs qui aboutissent à des exécutions complètes à buffers bornés. L'objectif est de pouvoir aborder ce problème sous des angles différents : maximisation de débit, minimisation de la latence et minimisation de la capacité des buffers. La plupart des travaux existants proposent des solutions pour l'optimisation du débit et négligent le problème d'optimisation de la latence et propose même dans certains cas des ordonnancements qui ont un impact négatif sur elle afin de conserver les propriétés de périodicité. On propose dans cette thèse un ordonnancement hybride, nommé Self-Timed Périodique (STP), qui peut conserver les propriétés d'un ordonnancement périodique et à la fois améliorer considérablement sa performance en terme de latence.One of the most important aspects of parallel computing is its close relation to the underlying hardware and programming models. In this PhD thesis, we take dataflow as the basic model of computation, as it fits the streaming application domain. Cyclo-Static Dataflow (CSDF) is particularly interesting because this variant is one of the most expressive dataflow models while still being analyzable at design time. Describing the system at higher levels of abstraction is not sufficient, e.g. dataflow have no direct means to optimize communication channels generally based on shared buffers. Therefore, we need to link the dataflow MoCs used for performance analysis of the programs, the real time task models used for timing analysis and the low-level model used to derive communication times. This thesis proposes a design flow that meets these challenges, while enabling features such as temporal isolation and taking into account other challenges such as predictability and ease of validation. To this end, we propose a new scheduling policy noted Self-Timed Periodic (STP), which is an execution model combining Self-Timed Scheduling (STS) with periodic scheduling. In STP scheduling, actors are no longer strictly periodic but self-timed assigned to periodic levels: the period of each actor under periodic scheduling is replaced by its worst-case execution time. Then, STP retains some of the performance and flexibility of self-timed schedule, in which execution times of actors need only be estimates, and at the same time makes use of the fact that with a periodic schedule we can derive a tight estimation of the required performance metrics

    The Signal Synchronous Multiclock Approach to the Design of Distributed Embedded System

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    International audienceThis paper presents the design of distributed embedded systems using the synchronous multiclock model of the Signal language. It proposes a methodology that ensures a correct-by-construction functional implementation of these systems from high-level models. It shows the capability of the synchronous approach to apply formal techniques and tools that guarantee the reliability of the designed systems. Such a capability is necessary and highly worthy when dealing with safety-critical systems. The proposed methodology is demonstrated through a case study consisting of a simple avionic application, which aims to pragmatically help the reader to understand the manipulated formal concepts, and to apply them easily in order to solve system correctness issues encountered in practice. The application functionality is first modeled as well as its distribution on a generic hardware architecture. This relies on the endochrony and endo-isochrony properties of Signal specifications, defined previously. The considered architectures include asynchronous communication mechanisms, which are also modeled in Signal and proved to achieve message exchanges correctly. Furthermore, the synchronizability of the different parts in the resulting system is addressed after its deployment on a specific execution platform with multirate clocks. After all these steps, a distributed code can be automatically generated

    Formal Power Analysis of Systems-on-Chip

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    The design methods and languages targeted to modern System-on-Chip designs are facing tremendous pressure of the ever-increasing complexity, power, and speed requirements. To estimate any of these three metrics, there is a trade-off between accuracy and abstraction level of detail in which a system under design is analyzed. The more detailed the description, the more accurate the simulation will be, but, on the other hand, the more time consuming it will be. Moreover, a designer wants to make decisions as early as possible in the design flow to avoid costly design backtracking. To answer the challenges posed upon System-on-chip designs, this thesis introduces a formal, power aware framework, its development methods, and methods to constraint and analyze power consumption of the system under design. This thesis discusses on power analysis of synchronous and asynchronous systems not forgetting the communication aspects of these systems. The presented framework is built upon the Timed Action System formalism, which offer an environment to analyze and constraint the functional and temporal behavior of the system at high abstraction level. Furthermore, due to the complexity of System-on-Chip designs, the possibility to abstract unnecessary implementation details at higher abstraction levels is an essential part of the introduced design framework. With the encapsulation and abstraction techniques incorporated with the procedure based communication allows a designer to use the presented power aware framework in modeling these large scale systems. The introduced techniques also enable one to subdivide the development of communication and computation into own tasks. This property is taken into account in the power analysis part as well. Furthermore, the presented framework is developed in a way that it can be used throughout the design project. In other words, a designer is able to model and analyze systems from an abstract specification down to an implementable specification.Siirretty Doriast
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