4 research outputs found

    Two-phase low-energy N-modular redundancy for hard real-time multi-core systems

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    This paper proposes an N-modular redundancy (NMR) technique with low energy-overhead for hard real-time multi-core systems. NMR is well-suited for multi-core platforms as they provide multiple processing units and low-overhead communication for voting. However, it can impose considerable energy overhead and hence its energy overhead must be controlled, which is the primary consideration of this paper. For this purpose the system operation can be divided into two phases: indispensable phase and on-demand phase. In the indispensable phase only half-plus-one copies for each task are executed. When no fault occurs during this phase, the results must be identical and hence the remaining copies are not required. Otherwise, the remaining copies must be executed in the on-demand phase to perform a complete majority voting. In this paper, for such a two-phase NMR, an energy-management technique is developed where two new concepts have been considered: i) Block-partitioned scheduling that enables parallel task execution during on-demand phase, thereby leaving more slack for energy saving, ii) Pseudo-dynamic slack, that results when a task has no faulty execution during the indispensable phase and hence the time which is reserved for its copies in the on-demand phase is reclaimed for energy saving. The energy-management technique has an off-line part that manages static and pseudo-dynamic slacks at design time and an online part that mainly manages dynamic slacks at run-time. Experimental results show that the proposed NMR technique provides up to 29% energy saving and is 6 orders of magnitude higher reliable as compared to a recent previous work

    Dataset supporting the article entitled "Two-Phase Low-Energy N-Modular Redundancy for Hard Real-Time Multi-Core Systems"

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    This dataset supports the article entitled &ldquo;Two-Phase Low-Energy N-Modular Redundancy for Hard Real-Time Multi-Core Systems&rdquo; published on IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PARALLEL AND DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS, 2016.</span

    A Survey of Fault-Tolerance Techniques for Embedded Systems from the Perspective of Power, Energy, and Thermal Issues

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    The relentless technology scaling has provided a significant increase in processor performance, but on the other hand, it has led to adverse impacts on system reliability. In particular, technology scaling increases the processor susceptibility to radiation-induced transient faults. Moreover, technology scaling with the discontinuation of Dennard scaling increases the power densities, thereby temperatures, on the chip. High temperature, in turn, accelerates transistor aging mechanisms, which may ultimately lead to permanent faults on the chip. To assure a reliable system operation, despite these potential reliability concerns, fault-tolerance techniques have emerged. Specifically, fault-tolerance techniques employ some kind of redundancies to satisfy specific reliability requirements. However, the integration of fault-tolerance techniques into real-time embedded systems complicates preserving timing constraints. As a remedy, many task mapping/scheduling policies have been proposed to consider the integration of fault-tolerance techniques and enforce both timing and reliability guarantees for real-time embedded systems. More advanced techniques aim additionally at minimizing power and energy while at the same time satisfying timing and reliability constraints. Recently, some scheduling techniques have started to tackle a new challenge, which is the temperature increase induced by employing fault-tolerance techniques. These emerging techniques aim at satisfying temperature constraints besides timing and reliability constraints. This paper provides an in-depth survey of the emerging research efforts that exploit fault-tolerance techniques while considering timing, power/energy, and temperature from the real-time embedded systems’ design perspective. In particular, the task mapping/scheduling policies for fault-tolerance real-time embedded systems are reviewed and classified according to their considered goals and constraints. Moreover, the employed fault-tolerance techniques, application models, and hardware models are considered as additional dimensions of the presented classification. Lastly, this survey gives deep insights into the main achievements and shortcomings of the existing approaches and highlights the most promising ones

    High Performance Real-Time Scheduling Framework for Multiprocessor Systems

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    Embedded systems, performing specific functions in modern devices, have become pervasive in today's technology landscape. As many of these systems are real-time systems, they necessitate operations with stringent time constraints. This is especially evident in sectors like automotive and aerospace. This thesis introduces a High Performance Real-time Scheduling (HPRTS) framework, which is designed to navigate the multifaceted challenges faced by multiprocessor real-time systems. To begin with, the research attempts to bridge the gap between system reliability and resource sharing in Mixed-Criticality Systems (MCS). In addressing this, a novel fault-tolerance solution is presented. Its main goal is to enhance fault management and reduce blocking time during fault tolerance. Following this, the thesis delves into task allocation in systems with shared resources. In this context, we introduce a distinct Resource Contention Model (RCM). Using this model as a foundation, our allocation strategy is formulated with the aim to reduce resource contention. Moreover, in light of the escalating system complexity where tasks are represented using Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) models, the research unveils a new Response Time Analysis (RTA) for multi-DAG systems. This particular analysis has been tailored to provide a safe and more refined bound. Reflecting on the contributions made, the achievements of the thesis highlight the potency of the HPRTS framework in steering real-time embedded systems toward high performance
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