Mixed criticality explained

A mixed criticality system is a system containing computer hardware and software that can execute several applications of different criticality, such as safety-critical and non-safety critical, or of different safety integrity level (SIL). Different criticality applications are engineered to different levels of assurance, with high criticality applications being the most costly to design and verify. These kinds of systems are typically embedded in a machine such as an aircraft whose safety must be ensured.

Principle

Traditional safety-critical systems had to be tested and certified in their entirety to show that they were safe to use. However, many such systems are composed of a mixture of safety-critical and non-critical parts, as for example when an aircraft contains a passenger entertainment system that is isolated from the safety-critical flight systems. Some issues to address in mixed criticality systems include real-time behaviour, memory isolation, data and control coupling.

Computer scientists have developed techniques for handling systems which thus have mixed criticality, but there are many challenges remaining especially for multi-core hardware.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Priority and criticality

Basically, most errors are currently committed when making confusion between priority attribution and criticality management. As priority defines an order between different tasks or messages to be transmitted inside a system, criticality defines classes of messages which can have different parameters depending on the current use case. For example, in case of car crash avoidance or obstacle anticipation, camera sensors can suddenly emit messages more often, and so create an overload in the system. That is when we need to make Mixed-Criticality operate : to select messages to absolutely guarantee on the system in these overload cases.

Research projects

EU funded research projects on mixed criticality include:

UK EPSRC funded research projects on mixed criticality include:

Several research projects have decided to present their research results at the EU-funded Mixed-Criticality Forum

Workshops and seminars

Workshops and seminars on Mixed Criticality Systems include:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Response-Time Analysis for Mixed Criticality Systems . University of York . 19 February 2013 . Baruah, SK . Burns, A . Davis, RI .
  2. Web site: Scheduling real-time mixed-criticality jobs . 19 February 2013 . Baruah, S . Bonifaci, V . D'Angelo, G . Li, H . Marchetti-Spaccamela, A . Megow, N . Nicole Megow . Stougie, L . 8 January 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130108023906/http://www.mpi-inf.mpg.de/~nmegow/papers/mfcs10-mcscheduling.pdf . dead .
  3. Web site: The ACROSS MPSoC – A New Generation of Multi-Core Processors designed for Safety-Critical Embedded Systems . 17 May 2013 . El-Salloum, C. . Elshuber, M. . Höftberger, O. . Isakovic, H. . Wasicek, A. .
  4. Web site: Mixed Criticality Systems - A Review . University of York . 4 March 2016 . Burns, A . Davis, R.I. .