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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Mixed-criticality (MC) multicore system design
must reconcile safety guarantees and high performance. The
interference among cores on shared resources in such systems
leads to unpredictable temporal behaviour. Memory bandwidth
regulation among different cores can be a useful tool to mitigate
the interference when accessing main memory. However, for
mixed-criticality systems conforming to the (well-established)
Vestal model, the existing schedulability analyses are oblivious to
memory stalling effects, including stalls from memory bandwidth
regulation. This makes it unsafe. In this paper, we address this
issue by formulating a schedulability analysis for mixed-criticality
fixed-priority-scheduled multicore systems using per-core memory
access regulation. We also propose multiple heuristics for
memory bandwidth allocation and task-to-core assignment. We
implement our analysis and heuristics in a tool and evaluate
them, performance-wise, through extensive experiments. Our
experiments show that stall-oblivious schedulability analysis may
be optimistic due to contention on shared memory resources.
Description
Keywords
Mixed-criticality systems Interference Schedulability analysis
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers