With the onset of multi-and many-core chips, the single-core market is closing down. Those chips constitute a new challenge for aerospace and safety-critical industries in general. Little is known about the certification of software running on these systems. There is therefore a strong need for developing software architectures based on multi-core architectures, yet compliant with safety-criticality constraints. This paper presents a reconfigurable multi-core architecture and the safety-criticality constraints for airborne systems. The last section uses the current certification guidance to explain how the architecture can satisfy these constraints even with dynamic features activated
Software applications in which failure may result in possible catastrophic consequences on human lif...
The adoption of multi- and many-core processors in avionic applications is still limited by certific...
Poster presented in Work in Progress Session, The 28th GI/ITG International Conference on Architectu...
With the onset of multi-and many-core chips, the single-core market is closing down. Those chips con...
With the onset of multi-core chips, the single-core market is closing down. Developing avionics syst...
International audienceThe transition from conventional federated archi-tectures to integrated archit...
In real-time and safety-critical systems, the move towards multi-cores is becoming unavoidable to sa...
Multi-core processors pervade numerous industries but they still represent a challenge for the aeros...
Current and upcoming avionics systems must be able to accommodate expected growing application softw...
Safety-critical systems and certification standards are the bare essential elements for the developm...
Aviation electronics (avionics) are sophisticated and distributed systems aboard an airplane. The co...
With the onset of multi-core chips, the single-core market is closing down. Those chips constitute a...
International audienceFuture avionic applications will require higher computation performance while ...
In the safety critical domain such as in avionics, existing embedded solutions based on single-core ...
In this paper we propose a hybrid solution to ensure results correctness when deploying several appl...
Software applications in which failure may result in possible catastrophic consequences on human lif...
The adoption of multi- and many-core processors in avionic applications is still limited by certific...
Poster presented in Work in Progress Session, The 28th GI/ITG International Conference on Architectu...
With the onset of multi-and many-core chips, the single-core market is closing down. Those chips con...
With the onset of multi-core chips, the single-core market is closing down. Developing avionics syst...
International audienceThe transition from conventional federated archi-tectures to integrated archit...
In real-time and safety-critical systems, the move towards multi-cores is becoming unavoidable to sa...
Multi-core processors pervade numerous industries but they still represent a challenge for the aeros...
Current and upcoming avionics systems must be able to accommodate expected growing application softw...
Safety-critical systems and certification standards are the bare essential elements for the developm...
Aviation electronics (avionics) are sophisticated and distributed systems aboard an airplane. The co...
With the onset of multi-core chips, the single-core market is closing down. Those chips constitute a...
International audienceFuture avionic applications will require higher computation performance while ...
In the safety critical domain such as in avionics, existing embedded solutions based on single-core ...
In this paper we propose a hybrid solution to ensure results correctness when deploying several appl...
Software applications in which failure may result in possible catastrophic consequences on human lif...
The adoption of multi- and many-core processors in avionic applications is still limited by certific...
Poster presented in Work in Progress Session, The 28th GI/ITG International Conference on Architectu...