Show simple item record

contributor authorیاسر صداقتen
contributor authorSeyed Ghassem Miremadien
contributor authorYasser Sedaghatfa
date accessioned2020-06-06T13:07:17Z
date available2020-06-06T13:07:17Z
date issued2011
identifier urihttp://libsearch.um.ac.ir:80/fum/handle/fum/3342391?locale-attribute=fa&show=full
description abstractNowadays, distributed embedded systems are employed in many safety-critical applications such as X-by-Wire. These systems are composed of several nodes interconnected by a network. Studies show that a transient fault in the communication controller of a network node can lead to errors in the fault site node (called original errors) and/or in the neighbor nodes (called follow-up errors). The communication controller of a network node can be halted due to an error, which may be a follow-up error. In this situation, a follow-up error leads to halt the correct operation of a fault-free controller while the fault site node, i.e. the faulty controller, still continues its operation. In this paper, an analysis shows that the occurrence probability of follow-up errors in communication protocols is noticeable. Consequently, it is important to provide a technique to recognize the error’s nature, i.e. original or follow-up, in each node. This paper proposes a novel low-cost monitoring technique to differentiate follow-up errors from original errors. The proposed technique is based on monitoring the operational states of a communication controller. In this paper, this technique has been applied to the FlexRay protocol. However, it is applicable for all communication protocols having an FSM-based description such as FlexRay, TTP/C, and TT-Ethernet. To evaluate the monitoring technique, a FlexRay-based network including 4 nodes was designed and implemented. The low-cost monitoring technique was as well implemented inside each node of the network. A total of 135,600 transient bit-flip faults were injected in the communication controller of one node. The results showed that about 6.0% of injected faults lead to original errors. This figure for follow-up errors was about 6.1%. The results as well showed that the accuracy of the proposed technique to differentiate between the follow-up and original errors is about 97% at merely 1.4% hardware overhead. This level of accuracy and cost makes the proposed technique a feasible solution to enhance the reliability of communication controllers.en
languageEnglish
titleAn FSM-based Monitoring Technique to Differentiate Between Follow-up and Original Errors in Safety-Critical Distributed Embedded Systemsen
typeJournal Paper
contenttypeExternal Fulltext
subject keywordsDistributed embedded systemsen
subject keywordsError propagationen
subject keywordsFollow-up errorsen
subject keywordsFlexRay protocolen
subject keywordsTransient faultsen
subject keywordsFSM-based monitoringen
journal titleMicroelectronics Journalfa
pages863-873
journal volume42
journal issue1
identifier linkhttps://profdoc.um.ac.ir/paper-abstract-1026816.html
identifier articleid1026816


Files in this item

FilesSizeFormatView

There are no files associated with this item.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record