The study presents a hardware-based approach to modelling and design of time-predictable electronic embedded systems. It addresses multithread and multitask problems of contemporary real-time systems. Authors propose a universal template of the reconfigurable system architectures that can be flexibly accommodated to a given application. The synthesisable and parametrised model of the system architecture has been implemented in VERILOG. The architecture is based on ARM-like RISC solutions and its heart, the main core, is built of 8-12 stage reconfigurable pipelining with the interleaving mechanism. This core is a basic building block of the system and it can be replicated. Each core can handle several hardware threads with replicated register files. The entire structure has a deadline controlling mechanism that is responsible for tasks' evaluation predictability. The authors analyse the coherency of the proposed memory system and interoperability between hardware threads. Three different static scheduling algorithms have been developed and presented in examples. This study contains the results of the simulation experiments and the summary of the hardware implementation in Virtex-7 FPGA platforms. Authors have investigated the timing parameters of the system and pointed out the areas for further research.
This work was supported in part by the European Social Funds through ''CyPhiS-the program of modern Ph.D. studies in the field of cyber-physical systems'' under Project POWR.03.02.00-00-I007/17-00, and in part by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education under Grant BKM-573/RAu-11/2022 and Grant BK-246/RAu-11/2022.
The paper concerns research on electronics-embedded safety systems. The authors focus on the optimization of the energy consumed by multitasking real-time systems. A new flexible and reconfigurable multi-core architecture based on pipeline processing is proposed. The presented solution uses thread-interleaving mechanisms that allow avoiding hazards and minimizing unpredictability. The proposed architecture is compared with the classical solutions consisting of many processors and based on the scheme using one processor per single task. Energy-efficient task mapping is analyzed and a design methodology, based on minimizing the number of active and utilized resources, is proposed. New techniques for energy optimization are proposed, mainly, clock gating and switching-resources blocking. The authors investigate two main factors of the system: setting the processing frequency, and gating techniques; the latter are used under the assumption that the system meets the requirements of time predictability. The energy consumed by the system is reduced. Theoretical considerations are verified by many experiments of the system's implementation in an FPGA structure. The set of tasks tested consists of programs that implement Mälardalen WCET benchmark algorithms. The tested scenarios are divided into periodic and non-periodic execution schemes. The obtained results show that it is possible to reduce the dynamic energy consumed by real-time applications' meeting their other requirements.
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