DocumentCode
2909190
Title
Bridging the gap between ATLAS and C: an open-systems approach to TPS re-host
Author
Timcho, Thomas J.
Author_Institution
GDE Syst. Inc., Columbus, OH, USA
fYear
1998
fDate
24-27 Aug 1998
Firstpage
120
Lastpage
124
Abstract
In these days of declining Department of Defense (DoD) budgets and the downsizing of the military, much of the focus has shifted away from large development programs for new platforms and equipment. Rather, upgrades to existing equipment, to modernize it and to replace obsolete components has become a major focus. Additionally, recent efforts of the DoD have been initiated to define or adopt standards that provide a common, open systems approach for all branches of the military. As part of this initiative the use of Commercial Off-the-Shelf (COTS) products throughout the DoD has begun to play a major role in defense-related automated test system (ATS) industry. The commercial test community has also responded to the needs of the military by creating instruments and software products which encompass the needs of the military for standardization, interchangeability and reliability, and which also embrace the future needs of the DoD. The impact of this evolution is becoming apparent in the ATS community, including the Test Program Set (TPS) community. The VME Extensions for instrumentation (VXI) Plug and Play standard for instrumentation drivers is one such example of this trend and has become standard on an increasingly larger percentage of DoD test. Along with this change, a trend toward commercial development environments and run-time systems has also emerged. National Instruments TM LabVIEW(R) and LabWindows(R)/CVI are two of these environments which are increasingly utilized In military ATS platforms as well. The adoption of these standards has brought others to the forefront. Legacy, signal-based environments such as the IEEE´s Abbreviated Test Language for All Systems (ATLAS) do not correlate with the instrument based focus the COTS tools provide. As the DOD focuses on commercialization and open architecture standards, the need to migrate existing TPSs from proprietary ATLAS-based platforms to an Open Systems platform becomes more critical. This paper will focus on a solution which leverages COTS software tools and emerging industry standards and technologies to implement object-oriented database tools which enable the conversion of an ATLAS TPS to an ANSI C environment
Keywords
automatic test software; military standards; military systems; open systems; reliability; software tools; ANSI C environment; ATLAS; COTS; LabVIEW; LabWindows; TPS re-host; Test Program Set; VME Extensions for instrumentation; VXI; instrumentation drivers; interchangeability; military systems; object-oriented database tools; open-systems approach; reliability; signal-based environments; software products; software tools; standardization; standards; Automatic testing; Defense industry; Instruments; Military equipment; Military standards; Open systems; Plugs; Software testing; Standardization; System testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
AUTOTESTCON '98. IEEE Systems Readiness Technology Conference., 1998 IEEE
Conference_Location
Salt Lake City, UT
ISSN
1088-7725
Print_ISBN
0-7803-4420-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/AUTEST.1998.713430
Filename
713430
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