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Distinguished Lecture: MARTE: Implemention of the POSIX minimum real-time system OS profile for embedded applications

Speaker:

Michael Gonzalez-Harbour

Type:

Seminar

Start time:

2000-11-23 11:00

End time:

2000-11-23 12:00

Location:

Brinken

Contact person:



Description

The real-time POSIX standards represent an effort by both vendors and users of real-time operating systems to support, for the first time, real-time applications that exhibit a high degree of portability across diverse hardware and software environments.  This talk will give an overview of these standards. We will review the main operating systems services used in real-time applications. We will also give a brief overview of the standard POSIX subsets (i.e., profiles), which allow a wide range of real-time operating system implementations: from
the small and highly efficient embedded real-time system to the large system with real-time requirements. The architecture and performance of an open source implementation of the minimum real-time POSIX profile, called MaRTE OS, will be described.

Speaker

Michael Gonzalez Harbour is an Associate Professor in the Department of Electronics and Computers at the University of Cantabria. He works in schedulability analysis for distributed real-time systems. He is a co-author of "A Practitioner's Handbook on Real-Time Analysis". He has been involved in several projects using Ada to build real-time controllers for robots. Michael is an active member of the POSIX real-time working group. He is the Technical Editor of the IEEE POSIX.1d and IEEE POSIX.1j standards. He is currently leading two projects
related to real-time systems: MaRTE OS is an open source implementation of the minimum real-time POSIX operating system standard, intended for embedded applications; MAST is a modeling and analysis suite for real-time applications.