DocumentCode
2958396
Title
Timing analysis of the X-38 space station crew return vehicle avionics
Author
Rice, Lorraine E p ; Cheng, Albert M K
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Houston Univ., TX, USA
fYear
1999
fDate
1999
Firstpage
255
Lastpage
264
Abstract
We analyze the timing properties of the X38, an autonomous spacecraft currently being designed and built by NASA as a prototype of the International Space Station (ISS) Crew Return Vehicle (CRV). The CRV will be permanently attached to the ISS, and has the capability to automatically and safely bring to Earth a crew of seven (7) passengers in the event of an emergency ISS evacuation. The avionics hareware and software design phase for this spacecraft is currently underway and tools for representing, analyzing and verifying the hard real time timing aspects of the system are required. As a tool to verify planned performance of the safety critical system functions, an initially high level specification of the X-38 multiprocessor system task structure is modeled in Real-Time Logic (RTL) and Presburger Arithmetic representations, and the associated constraint graph and safety analysis is provided. In addition to the graph-theoretic approach to timing analysis, we also need a tool for representing the scheduling aspects of the system. Several commercially available real time scheduling analysis tools were subjectively evaluated against the requirements of this project, and a brief evaluation summary is presented
Keywords
aerospace computing; automatic guided vehicles; graph theory; multiprocessing systems; program verification; real-time systems; scheduling; space vehicles; timing; CRV; International Space Station Crew Return Vehicle; NASA; Presburger Arithmetic representations; Real-Time Logic; X-38 multiprocessor system task structure; X-38 space station crew return vehicle avionics; autonomous spacecraft; avionics hardware; constraint graph; emergency ISS evacuation; graph-theoretic approach; hard real time timing aspects; high level specification; planned performance; real time scheduling analysis tools; safety analysis; safety critical system functions; scheduling aspects; software design phase; timing analysis; timing properties; International Space Station; NASA; Prototypes; Real time systems; Remotely operated vehicles; Safety; Software prototyping; Space stations; Space vehicles; Timing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Real-Time Technology and Applications Symposium, 1999. Proceedings of the Fifth IEEE
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
ISSN
1080-1812
Print_ISBN
0-7695-0194-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RTTAS.1999.777678
Filename
777678
Link To Document