Memory concepts for enabling adaptivity in distributed embedded systems
Author(s) -
Philipp Schleiß,
Marc Zeller,
Gereon Weiß
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
acm sigbed review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.27
H-Index - 5
ISSN - 1551-3688
DOI - 10.1145/2692385.2692398
Subject(s) - dependability , computer science , nand gate , distributed computing , embedded system , resilience (materials science) , block (permutation group theory) , process (computing) , flash (photography) , software engineering , operating system , logic gate , art , physics , geometry , mathematics , algorithm , visual arts , thermodynamics
Establishing cost and resource efficient dependability through means of adaptivity in safety-critical distributed embedded systems is a strenuous endeavour, as the varying requirements on resilience, control and efficiency across domains prohibits a single solution to suit all needs. To assist the process of determining a safe and efficient system architecture with satisfactory precision, this work exemplifies the importance of differentiation by only addressing distributed embedded systems that perform multiple functions with alternating levels of criticality. Further, they do not require full fail-operational behaviour, thus allowing to sacrifice less important functions in the pursuit of preserving safety. Herein, a dynamic instantiation and graceful degradation strategy is developed to subsequently study its effect on cost when implemented in conjunction with execute-in-place (NOR-flash) or block-addressable (NAND-flash) memory concepts. Even though NOR-flash is generally considered to be a better candidate for such systems, this qualitative research produces evidence that NAND-flash memory concepts are likely to financially outperform traditional architectures when considering adaptivity
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