Real-Time Systems [electronic resource] : Design Principles for Distributed Embedded Applications / by Hermann Kopetz.
Series: Real-Time Systems SeriesPublisher: Boston, MA : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 2011Edition: 2Description: XVIII, 378 p. online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781441982377
- Computer science
- Microprocessors
- Computer communication systems
- Special purpose computers
- Computer system failures
- Electronic circuits
- Computer Science
- Special Purpose and Application-Based Systems
- Circuits and Systems
- System Performance and Evaluation
- Computer Communication Networks
- Processor Architectures
- 004.6 23
- TK7874.6

The Real-Time Environment -- Simplicity -- Global Time -- Real-Time (RT) Model -- Temporal Relations -- Power and Energy Awareness -- Dependability -- Real-Time Communication -- Real-Time Operating Systems -- Real-Time Scheduling -- System Design -- Validation -- Internet of Things -- The Time-Triggered Architecture.
"This book is a comprehensive text for the design of safety critical, hard real-time embedded systems. It offers a splendid example for the balanced, integrated treatment of systems and software engineering, helping readers tackle the hardest problems of advanced real-time system design, such as determinism, compositionality, timing and fault management. This book is an essential reading for advanced undergraduates and graduate students in a wide range of disciplines impacted by embedded computing and software. Its conceptual clarity, the style of explanations and the examples make the abstract concepts accessible for a wide audience." Janos Sztipanovits, Director E. Bronson Ingram Distinguished Professor of Engineering Institute for Software Integrated Systems Vanderbilt University Real-Time Systems focuses on hard real-time systems, which are computing systems that must meet their temporal specification in all anticipated load and fault scenarios. The book stresses the system aspects of distributed real-time applications, treating the issues of real-time, distribution and fault-tolerance from an integral point of view. A unique cross-fertilization of ideas and concepts between the academic and industrial worlds has led to the inclusion of many insightful examples from industry to explain the fundamental scientific concepts in a real-world setting. Compared to the first edition, new developments in complexity management, energy and power management, dependability, security, and the internet of things, are addressed. The book is written as a standard textbook for a high-level undergraduate or graduate course on real-time embedded systems or cyber-physical systems. Its practical approach to solving real-time problems, along with numerous summary exercises, makes it an excellent choice for researchers and practitioners alike.