Content area

Abstract

Multicore technology has the potential for drastically increasing productivity of embedded real-time computing. However, joint use of hardware, e.g., caches, memory banks and on-chip buses makes the integration of multiple real-time applications into a single system difficult: resource accesses are exclusive and need to be sequenced. Moreover, resource access schemes of modern off-the-shelf multicore chips are commonly optimized for the average-case, rather than being timing predictable. Real-time analysis for such architectures is complex, as execution times depend on the deployed hardware, as well as on the software executing on other cores. This will ask for significant abstractions in the timing analysis, where the resulting pessimism will lead to over-provisioned system designs and a lowered productivity as the number of applications to be put together into a single architecture needs to be decreased. In response to this, (a) we present a formal approach for bounding the worst-case response time of concurrently executing real-time tasks under resource contention and almost arbitrarily complex resource arbitration policies, with a focus on main memory as shared resource, (b) we present a simulation framework which allows for detailed modeling and empirical evaluation of modern multicore platforms and applications running on top of them, and (c) we present experiments to demonstrate the advantages and disadvantages of the presented methodologies and compare their accuracy. For limiting non-determinism inherent to the occurrence of cache misses, we particularly take advantage from the predictable execution model as discussed in recent works.

Details

Title
A formal approach to the WCRT analysis of multicore systems with memory contention under phase-structured task sets
Author
Lampka, Kai 1 ; Giannopoulou, Georgia 2 ; Pellizzoni, Rodolfo 3 ; Wu, Zheng 3 ; Stoimenov, Nikolay 2 

 Department of Information Technology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden 
 Computer Engineering and Networks Lab, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland 
 Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada 
Pages
736-773
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Nov 2014
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
09226443
e-ISSN
15731383
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2259406463
Copyright
Real-Time Systems is a copyright of Springer, (2014). All Rights Reserved.