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Design of Embedded Systems: Formal Models, Validation, and Synthesis
- PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE
, 1999
"... This paper addresses the design of reactive real-time embedded systems. Such systems are often heterogeneous in implementation technologies and design styles, for example by combining hardware ASICs with embedded software. The concurrent design process for such embedded systems involves solving the ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 92 (8 self)
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This paper addresses the design of reactive real-time embedded systems. Such systems are often heterogeneous in implementation technologies and design styles, for example by combining hardware ASICs with embedded software. The concurrent design process for such embedded systems involves solving the specification, validation, and synthesis problems. We review the variety of approaches to these problems that have been taken.
Heterogenous Simulation -- mixing discrete-event model with dataflow
, 1996
"... This paper relates to system-level design of signal processing systems, which are often heterogeneous in implementation technologies and design styles. The heterogeneous approach, by combining small, specialized models of computation, achieves generality and also lends itself to automatic synthesis ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 16 (4 self)
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This paper relates to system-level design of signal processing systems, which are often heterogeneous in implementation technologies and design styles. The heterogeneous approach, by combining small, specialized models of computation, achieves generality and also lends itself to automatic synthesis and formal verification. Key to the heterogeneous approach is to define interaction semantics that resolve the ambiguities when different models of computation are brought together. For this purpose, we introduce a tagged signal model as a formal framework within which the models of computation can be precisely described and unambiguously differentiated, and their interactions can be understood. In this paper, we will focus on the interaction between dataflow models, which have partially ordered events, and discrete-event models, with their notion of time that usually defines a total order of events. A variety of interaction semantics, mainly in handling the different notions of time in the two models, are explored to illustrate the subtleties involved. An implementation based on the Ptolemy system from U.C. Berkeley is described and critiqued.
Effective heterogeneous design and cosimulation
- In NATO Advanced Study Institute Workshop on Hardware/Software Codesign
, 1995
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