Prototype of fault adaptive embedded software for large-scale real-time systems |
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Authors: | Derek Messie Mina Jung Jae C. Oh Shweta Shetty Steven Nordstrom Michael Haney |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA;(2) Institute for Software Integrated Systems, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA;(3) High Energy Physics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA |
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Abstract: | This paper describes a comprehensive prototype of large-scale fault adaptive embedded software developed for the proposed Fermilab BTeV high energy physics experiment. Lightweight self-optimizing agents embedded within Level 1 of the prototype are responsible for proactive and reactive monitoring and mitigation based on specified layers of competence. The agents are self-protecting, detecting cascading failures using a distributed approach. Adaptive, reconfigurable, and mobile objects for reliablility are designed to be self-configuring to adapt automatically to dynamically changing environments. These objects provide a self-healing layer with the ability to discover, diagnose, and react to discontinuities in real-time processing. A generic modeling environment was developed to facilitate design and implementation of hardware resource specifications, application data flow, and failure mitigation strategies. Level 1 of the planned BTeV trigger system alone will consist of 2500 DSPs, so the number of components and intractable fault scenarios involved make it impossible to design an ‘expert system’ that applies traditional centralized mitigative strategies based on rules capturing every possible system state. Instead, a distributed reactive approach is implemented using the tools and methodologies developed by the Real-Time Embedded Systems group. |
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Keywords: | Large-scale real-time systems Embedded systems Subsumption architecture Multi-agent systems |
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