A Comparison of Dual-Core Approaches for Safety-Critical Automotive Applications 2009-01-0761
Safety is a requirement concerning an increasing number of automotive applications. Recent safety standards set requirements for designing safety-critical systems. Among others, these specifications include a comprehensive detection and handling of hardware faults. Currently emerging dual-core microcontrollers provide a cost-effective opportunity to fulfill these requirements. In this paper we analyze a safety-critical application example and discuss two different approaches, an application-specific approach and a generic approach for implementing functional safety requirements on a dual-core microcontroller. An investigation of the associated concepts called function monitoring architectures and generic architectures reveals their differences and at the same time advantages and disadvantages. Besides effects on safety, effects on reliability, modifiability and costs are evaluated and presented graphically.
Also in:
Automotive Electronics Reliability, Volume 2-PT-144, Safety-Critical Systems, 2009-SP-2222, SAE International Journal of Passenger Cars - Electronic and Electrical Systems-V118-7, SAE International Journal of Passenger Cars - Electronic and Electrical Systems-V118-7EJ
Related Topics:
Safety critical systems
Architecture
Hardware
Reliability
Design processes
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