31 research outputs found

    Real-Time Operating Systems and Programming Languages for Embedded Systems

    Get PDF
    In this chapter, we present the different alternatives that are available today for the development of real-time embedded systems. In particular, we will focus on the programming languages use like C++, Java and Ada and the operating systems like Linux-RT, FreeRTOS, TinyOS, etc. In particular we will analyze the actual state of the art for developing embedded systems under the WORA paradigm with standard Java [1], its Real-Time Specification and with the use of Real-Time Core Extensions and pico Java based CPUs [5]. We expect the reader to have a clear view of the opportunities present at the moment of starting a design with its pros and cons so it can choose the best one to fit its case.Fil: Orozco, Javier Dario. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages". Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica y de Computadoras. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages"; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica y de Computadoras. Laboratorio de Sistemas Digitales; ArgentinaFil: Santos, Rodrigo Martin. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages". Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica y de Computadoras. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages"; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica y de Computadoras. Laboratorio de Sistemas Digitales; Argentin

    SCIL processor : a common intermediate language processor for embedded systems

    Full text link
    Mémoire numérisé par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal

    A Co-Processor Approach for Efficient Java Execution in Embedded Systems

    Get PDF
    This thesis deals with a hardware accelerated Java virtual machine, named REALJava. The REALJava virtual machine is targeted for resource constrained embedded systems. The goal is to attain increased computational performance with reduced power consumption. While these objectives are often seen as trade-offs, in this context both of them can be attained simultaneously by using dedicated hardware. The target level of the computational performance of the REALJava virtual machine is initially set to be as fast as the currently available full custom ASIC Java processors. As a secondary goal all of the components of the virtual machine are designed so that the resulting system can be scaled to support multiple co-processor cores. The virtual machine is designed using the hardware/software co-design paradigm. The partitioning between the two domains is flexible, allowing customizations to the resulting system, for instance the floating point support can be omitted from the hardware in order to decrease the size of the co-processor core. The communication between the hardware and the software domains is encapsulated into modules. This allows the REALJava virtual machine to be easily integrated into any system, simply by redesigning the communication modules. Besides the virtual machine and the related co-processor architecture, several performance enhancing techniques are presented. These include techniques related to instruction folding, stack handling, method invocation, constant loading and control in time domain. The REALJava virtual machine is prototyped using three different FPGA platforms. The original pipeline structure is modified to suit the FPGA environment. The performance of the resulting Java virtual machine is evaluated against existing Java solutions in the embedded systems field. The results show that the goals are attained, both in terms of computational performance and power consumption. Especially the computational performance is evaluated thoroughly, and the results show that the REALJava is more than twice as fast as the fastest full custom ASIC Java processor. In addition to standard Java virtual machine benchmarks, several new Java applications are designed to both verify the results and broaden the spectrum of the tests.Siirretty Doriast

    Reification: A Process to Configure Java Realtime Processors

    Get PDF
    Real-time systems require stringent requirements both on the processor and the software application. The primary concern is speed and the predictability of execution times. In all real-time applications the developer must identify and calculate the worst case execution times (WCET) of their software. In almost all cases the processor design complexity impacts the analysis when calculating the WCET. Design features which impact this analysis include cache and instruction pipelining. With both cache and pipelining the time taken for a particular instruction can vary depending on cache and pipeline contents. When calculating the WCET the developer must ignore the speed advantages from these enhancements and use the normal instruction timings. This investigation is about a Java processor targeted to run within an FPGA environment (Java soft chip) supporting Java real-time applications. The investigation focuses on a simple processor design that allows simple analysis of WCET. The processor design has no cache and no instruction pipeline enhancements yet achieves higher performance than existing designs with these enhancements. The investigation centers on a process that translates Java byte codes and folds these translated codes into a modified Harvard Micro Controller (HMC). The modifications include better alignment with the application code and take advantage of the FPGA’s parallel capability. A prototyped ontology is used where the top level categories defined by Sowa are expanded to support the process. The proposed HMC and process are used to produce investigation results. Performance testing using the Sobel edge detection algorithm is used to compare the results with the only Java processor claiming real-time abilities

    JAVA-BASED MICROPROCESSOR

    Get PDF
    Java-based Microprocessor is a project aimed to develop a processor that implements Java virtual machine (JVM) instruction set into the hardware. The objective ofthe project is enabling a Java application to be executed without the need ofJVM, but in a more specific term, it is aimed to be an alternative non commercial processor as a supporting base for educational research and development of embedded systems. With the current application of Java, the Java Runtime Edition (JRE), an inter medium Java OS, must be installed in every machine that is intended to execute Java bytecode. This proved to be inefficient, especially in embedded system where the resources are limited and upgrading is highly expensive. The project was developed to be an easily comprehensible HDL, allowing others to pursue with advancement without complications. Thus, the HDL design were coded with behavioural style. In order to be more transparent for others to view the project development, the entire design is being developed by bottom-up approach. Four modules comprises the entire design - ALU, stacks, program counter and datapath. These modules were designed individually, allowing a separate test bench and test parameters, which also provided a betterperspective of the microprocessor design. The project has already progressed from an 8-bit processor in mind towards a 32- bit computer. The JVM has strict rules, allowing only certain instructions to execute with proper operands with the right data type. The project was not planned to allow operations of floating point number and doubles. In conclusion, as for the use for supportingeducational research and development, Java-based Microprocessor shall provide a solid foundation to embedded systems, where more enhancements would be needed before it can be utilized reliably

    Effiziente Mehrkernarchitektur fĂĽr eingebettete Java-Bytecode-Prozessoren

    Get PDF
    Die Java-Plattform bietet viele Vorteile für die schnelle Entwicklung komplexer Software. Für die Ausführung des Java-Bytecodes auf eingebetteten Systemen eignen sich insbesondere Java-(Bytecode)-Prozessoren, die den Java-Bytecode als nativen Befehlssatz unterstützen. Die vorliegende Arbeit untersucht detailliert die Gestaltung einer Mehrkernarchitektur für Java-Prozessoren zur effizienten Nutzung der auf Thread-Ebene ohnehin vorhandenen Parallelität eines Java-Programms. Für die Funktionalitäts- und Leistungsbewertung eines Prototyps wird eine eigene Trace-Architektur eingesetzt. Es wird eine hohe Leistungssteigerung bei nur geringem zusätzlichem Hardwareaufwand erzielt sowie eine höhere Leistung als bekannte alternative Ansätze erreicht

    Fast, Interactive Worst-Case Execution Time Analysis With Back-Annotation

    Get PDF
    Abstract—For hard real-time systems, static code analysis is needed to derive a safe bound on the worst-case execution time (WCET). Virtually all prior work has focused on the accuracy of WCET analysis without regard to the speed of analysis. The resulting algorithms are often too slow to be integrated into the development cycle, requiring WCET analysis to be postponed until a final verification phase. In this paper we propose interactive WCET analysis as a new method to provide near-instantaneous WCET feedback to the developer during software programming. We show that interactive WCET analysis is feasible using tree-based WCET calculation. The feedback is realized with a plugin for the Java editor jEdit, where the WCET values are back-annotated to the Java source at the statement level. Comparison of this treebased approach with the implicit path enumeration technique (IPET) shows that tree-based analysis scales better with respect to program size and gives similar WCET values. Index Terms—Real time systems, performance analysis, software performance, software reliability, software algorithms, safety I

    Implementation of an AMIDAR-based Java Processor

    Get PDF
    This thesis presents a Java processor based on the Adaptive Microinstruction Driven Architecture (AMIDAR). This processor is intended as a research platform for investigating adaptive processor architectures. Combined with a configurable accelerator, it is able to detect and speed up hot spots of arbitrary applications dynamically. In contrast to classical RISC processors, an AMIDAR-based processor consists of four main types of components: a token machine, functional units (FUs), a token distribution network and an FU interconnect structure. The token machine is a specialized functional unit and controls the other FUs by means of tokens. These tokens are delivered to the FUs over the token distribution network. The tokens inform the FUs about what to do with input data and where to send the results. Data is exchanged among the FUs over the FU interconnect structure. Based on the virtual machine architecture defined by the Java bytecode, a total of six FUs have been developed for the Java processor, namely a frame stack, a heap manager, a thread scheduler, a debugger, an integer ALU and a floating-point unit. Using these FUs, the processor can already execute the SPEC JVM98 benchmark suite properly. This indicates that it can be employed to run a broad variety of applications rather than embedded software only. Besides bytecode execution, several enhanced features have also been implemented in the processor to improve its performance and usability. First, the processor includes an object cache using a novel cache index generation scheme that provides a better average hit rate than the classical XOR-based scheme. Second, a hardware garbage collector has been integrated into the heap manager, which greatly reduces the overhead caused by the garbage collection process. Third, thread scheduling has been realized in hardware as well, which allows it to be performed concurrently with the running application. Furthermore, a complete debugging framework has been developed for the processor, which provides powerful debugging functionalities at both software and hardware levels
    corecore