The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time analysis (RTA). However, as systems become complex (e.g., parallel tasks running on a multicore platform), most existing RTAs either become pessimistic or do not scale well. To make a trade-off between accuracy and scalability, recently, a new reachability-based RTA, called schedule-abstraction graph (SAG), has been proposed. The analysis is at least three orders of magnitude faster than other exact RTAs based on UPPAAL.One fundamental limitation of the SAG analysis is that it suffers from state-space explosion when there are large uncertainties in the timing parameters of the input jobs, which may impede its applicability to some industrial use ...
Abstract—In this paper we address the problem of schedulabil-ity analysis for a set of sporadic task...
Real-time systems usually consist of a set of periodic and sporadic tasks. Periodic tasks can be div...
For the development of complex software systems, we often resort to component-based approaches that ...
The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time anal...
Response-time analysis (RTA) has been a means to evaluate the temporal correctness of real-time syst...
The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time anal...
The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time anal...
The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time anal...
For any real-time system, being predictable with respect to time is a basic necessity. The combinati...
This paper provides an exact and sustainable schedulability test for a set of non-preemptive jobs sc...
Abstract—A recent trend in the theory of real-time scheduling is to consider generalizations of the ...
The requirements for real-time systems in safety-critical applications typically contain strict timi...
Most recurrent real-time applications can be modeled as a set of sequential code segments (or blocks...
Most recurrent real-time applications can be modeled as a set of sequential code segments (or blocks...
Abstract. Traditional timing analysis techniques rely on composing system-level worst-case behavior ...
Abstract—In this paper we address the problem of schedulabil-ity analysis for a set of sporadic task...
Real-time systems usually consist of a set of periodic and sporadic tasks. Periodic tasks can be div...
For the development of complex software systems, we often resort to component-based approaches that ...
The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time anal...
Response-time analysis (RTA) has been a means to evaluate the temporal correctness of real-time syst...
The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time anal...
The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time anal...
The temporal correctness of safety-critical systems is typically guaranteed via a response-time anal...
For any real-time system, being predictable with respect to time is a basic necessity. The combinati...
This paper provides an exact and sustainable schedulability test for a set of non-preemptive jobs sc...
Abstract—A recent trend in the theory of real-time scheduling is to consider generalizations of the ...
The requirements for real-time systems in safety-critical applications typically contain strict timi...
Most recurrent real-time applications can be modeled as a set of sequential code segments (or blocks...
Most recurrent real-time applications can be modeled as a set of sequential code segments (or blocks...
Abstract. Traditional timing analysis techniques rely on composing system-level worst-case behavior ...
Abstract—In this paper we address the problem of schedulabil-ity analysis for a set of sporadic task...
Real-time systems usually consist of a set of periodic and sporadic tasks. Periodic tasks can be div...
For the development of complex software systems, we often resort to component-based approaches that ...