19 research outputs found

    Hard Real-Time Java:Profiles and Schedulability Analysis

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    Safety-critical Java for embedded systems

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    This paper presents the motivation for and outcomes of an engineering research project on certifiable Java for embedded systems. The project supports the upcoming standard for safety-critical Java, which defines a subset of Java and libraries aiming for development of high criticality systems. The outcome of this project include prototype safety-critical Java implementations, a time-predictable Java processor, analysis tools for memory safety, and example applications to explore the usability of safety-critical Java for this application area. The text summarizes developments and key contributions and concludes with the lessons learned

    Safety-Critical Java for Embedded Systems

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    The 3rd AAU Workshop on Robotics:Proceedings

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    Safety Critical Java for Robotics Programming

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    Robots and Art:Interactive Art and Robotics Education Program in the Humanities

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    Instrumentation of the da Vinci Robotic Surgical System

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    Advanced flow-based type systems for object-oriented languages

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Actor-Oriented Programming for Resource Constrained Multiprocessor Networks on Chip

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    Multiprocessor Networks on Chip (MPNoCs) are an attractive architecture for integrated circuits as they can benefit from the improved performance of ever smaller transistors but are not severely constrained by the poor performance of global on-chip wires. As the number of processors increases it becomes ever more expensive to provide coherent shared memory but this is a foundational assumption of thread-level parallelism. Threaded models of concurrency cannot efficiently address architectures where shared memory is not coherent or does not exist. In this thesis an extended actor oriented programming model is proposed to enable the design of complex and general purpose software for highly parallel and decentralised multiprocessor architectures. This model requires the encapsulation of an execution context and state into isolated Machines which may only initiate communication with one another via explicitly named channels. An emphasis on message passing and strong isolation of computation encourages application structures that are congruent with the nature of non-shared memory multiprocessors, and the model also avoids creating dependences on specific hardware topologies. A realisation of the model called Machine Java is presented to demonstrate the applicability of the model to a general purpose programming language. Applications designed with this framework are shown to be capable of scaling to large numbers of processors and remain independent of the hardware targets. Through the use of an efficient compilation technique, Machine Java is demonstrated to be portable across several architectures and viable even in the highly constrained context of an FPGA hosted MPNoC
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