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This book offers readers broad coverage of techniques to model,
verify and validate the behavior and performance of complex
distributed embedded systems. The authors attempt to bridge the gap
between the three disciplines of model-based design, real-time
analysis and model-driven development, for a better understanding
of the ways in which new development flows can be constructed,
going from system-level modeling to the correct and predictable
generation of a distributed implementation, leveraging current and
future research results.
Analog circuit design is often the bottleneck when designing mixed
analog-digital systems. A Top-Down, Constraint-Driven Design
Methodology for Analog Integrated Circuits presents a new
methodology based on a top-down, constraint-driven design paradigm
that provides a solution to this problem. This methodology has two
principal advantages: (1) it provides a high probability for the
first silicon which meets all specifications, and (2) it shortens
the design cycle. A Top-Down, Constraint-Driven Design Methodology
for Analog Integrated Circuits is part of an ongoing research
effort at the University of California at Berkeley in the
Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department. Many
faculty and students, past and present, are working on this design
methodology and its supporting tools. The principal goals are: (1)
developing the design methodology, (2) developing and applying new
tools, and (3) proving' the methodology by undertaking industrial
strength' design examples. The work presented here is neither a
beginning nor an end in the development of a complete top-down,
constraint-driven design methodology, but rather a step in its
development. This work is divided into three parts. Chapter 2
presents the design methodology along with foundation material.
Chapters 3-8 describe supporting concepts for the methodology, from
behavioral simulation and modeling to circuit module generators.
Finally, Chapters 9-11 illustrate the methodology in detail by
presenting the entire design cycle through three large-scale
examples. These include the design of a current source D/A
converter, a Sigma-Delta A/D converter, and a video driver system.
Chapter 12 presents conclusions and current research topics. A
Top-Down, Constraint-Driven Design Methodology for Analog
Integrated Circuits will be of interest to analog and mixed-signal
designers as well as CAD tool developers.
Addressing the rising security issues during the design stages of
cyber-physical systems, this book develops a systematic approach to
address security at early design stages together with all other
design constraints. Cyber-attacks become more threatening as
systems are becoming more connected with the surrounding
environment, infrastructures, and other systems. Security
mechanisms can be designed to protect against attacks and meet
security requirements, but there are many challenges of applying
security mechanisms to cyber-physical systems including open
environments, limited resources, strict timing requirements, and
large number of devices. Designed for researchers and
professionals, this book is valuable for individuals working in
network systems, security mechanisms, and system design. It is also
suitable for advanced-level students of computer science.
The Problem of the Unknown Component: Theory and Applications
addresses the issue of designing a component that, combined with a
known part of a system, conforms to an overall specification. The
authors tackle this problem by solving abstract equations over a
language. The most general solutions are studied when both
synchronous and parallel composition operators are used. The
abstract equations are specialized to languages associated with
important classes of automata used for modeling systems. The book
is a blend of theory and practice, which includes a description of
a software package with applications to sequential synthesis of
finite state machines. Specific topologies interconnecting the
components, exact and heuristic techniques, and optimization
scenarios are studied. Finally the scope is enlarged to domains
like testing, supervisory control, game theory and synthesis for
special omega languages. The authors present original results of
the authors along with an overview of existing ones.
The existence of electrical noise is basically due to the fact that
electrical charge is not continuous but is carried in discrete
amounts equal to the electron charge. Electrical noise represents a
fundamental limit on the performance of electronic circuits and
systems. With the explosive growth in the personal mobile
communications market, the need for noise analysis/simulation
techniques for nonlinear electronic circuits and systems has been
re-emphasized. Even though most of the signal processing is done in
the digital domain, every wireless communication device has an
analog front-end which is usually the bottleneck in the design of
the whole system. The requirements for low-power operation and
higher levels of integration create new challenges in the design of
the analog signal processing subsystems of these mobile
communication devices. The effect of noise on the performance of
these inherently nonlinear analog circuits is becoming more and
more significant. Analysis and Simulation of Noise in Nonlinear
Electronic Circuits and Systems presents analysis, simulation and
characterization techniques and behavioral models for noise in
nonlinear electronic circuits and systems, along with practical
examples. This book treats the problem within the framework of, and
using techniques from, the probabilistic theory of stochastic
processes and stochastic differential systems. Analysis and
Simulation of Noise in Nonlinear Electronic Circuits and Systems
will be of interest to RF/analog designers as well as engineers
interested in stochastic modeling and simulation.
Embedded systems are informally defined as a collection of
programmable parts surrounded by ASICs and other standard
components, that interact continuously with an environment through
sensors and actuators. The programmable parts include
micro-controllers and Digital Signal Processors (DSPs). Embedded
systems are often used in life-critical situations, where
reliability and safety are more important criteria than
performance. Today, embedded systems are designed with an ad hoc
approach that is heavily based on earlier experience with similar
products and on manual design. Use of higher-level languages such
as C helps structure the design somewhat, but with increasing
complexity it is not sufficient. Formal verification and automatic
synthesis of implementations are the surest ways to guarantee
safety. Thus, the POLIS system which is a co-design environment for
embedded systems is based on a formal model of computation. POLIS
was initiated in 1988 as a research project at the University of
California at Berkeley and, over the years, grew into a full design
methodology with a software system supporting it. Hardware-Software
Co-Design of Embedded Systems: The POLIS Approach is intended to
give a complete overview of the POLIS system including its formal
and algorithmic aspects. Hardware-Software Co-Design of Embedded
Systems: The POLIS Approach will be of interest to embedded system
designers (automotive electronics, consumer electronics and
telecommunications), micro-controller designers, CAD developers and
students.
This book offers readers broad coverage of techniques to model,
verify and validate the behavior and performance of complex
distributed embedded systems. The authors attempt to bridge the gap
between the three disciplines of model-based design, real-time
analysis and model-driven development, for a better understanding
of the ways in which new development flows can be constructed,
going from system-level modeling to the correct and predictable
generation of a distributed implementation, leveraging current and
future research results.
The Problem of the Unknown Component: Theory and Applications
addresses the issue of designing a component that, combined with a
known part of a system, conforms to an overall specification. The
authors tackle this problem by solving abstract equations over a
language. The most general solutions are studied when both
synchronous and parallel composition operators are used. The
abstract equations are specialized to languages associated with
important classes of automata used for modeling systems. The book
is a blend of theory and practice, which includes a description of
a software package with applications to sequential synthesis of
finite state machines. Specific topologies interconnecting the
components, exact and heuristic techniques, and optimization
scenarios are studied. Finally the scope is enlarged to domains
like testing, supervisory control, game theory and synthesis for
special omega languages. The authors present original results of
the authors along with an overview of existing ones.
Embedded systems are informally defined as a collection of
programmable parts surrounded by ASICs and other standard
components, that interact continuously with an environment through
sensors and actuators. The programmable parts include
micro-controllers and Digital Signal Processors (DSPs). Embedded
systems are often used in life-critical situations, where
reliability and safety are more important criteria than
performance. Today, embedded systems are designed with an ad hoc
approach that is heavily based on earlier experience with similar
products and on manual design. Use of higher-level languages such
as C helps structure the design somewhat, but with increasing
complexity it is not sufficient. Formal verification and automatic
synthesis of implementations are the surest ways to guarantee
safety. Thus, the POLIS system which is a co-design environment for
embedded systems is based on a formal model of computation. POLIS
was initiated in 1988 as a research project at the University of
California at Berkeley and, over the years, grew into a full design
methodology with a software system supporting it. Hardware-Software
Co-Design of Embedded Systems: The POLIS Approach is intended to
give a complete overview of the POLIS system including its formal
and algorithmic aspects. Hardware-Software Co-Design of Embedded
Systems: The POLIS Approach will be of interest to embedded system
designers (automotive electronics, consumer electronics and
telecommunications), micro-controller designers, CAD developers and
students.
The existence of electrical noise is basically due to the fact that
electrical charge is not continuous but is carried in discrete
amounts equal to the electron charge. Electrical noise represents a
fundamental limit on the performance of electronic circuits and
systems. With the explosive growth in the personal mobile
communications market, the need for noise analysis/simulation
techniques for nonlinear electronic circuits and systems has been
re-emphasized. Even though most of the signal processing is done in
the digital domain, every wireless communication device has an
analog front-end which is usually the bottleneck in the design of
the whole system. The requirements for low-power operation and
higher levels of integration create new challenges in the design of
the analog signal processing subsystems of these mobile
communication devices. The effect of noise on the performance of
these inherently nonlinear analog circuits is becoming more and
more significant.Analysis and Simulation of Noise in Nonlinear
Electronic Circuits and Systems presents analysis, simulation and
characterization techniques and behavioral models for noise in
nonlinear electronic circuits and systems, along with practical
examples. This book treats the problem within the framework of, and
using techniques from, the probabilistic theory of stochastic
processes and stochastic differential systems. Analysis and
Simulation of Noise in Nonlinear Electronic Circuits and Systems
will be of interest to RF/analog designers as well as engineers
interested in stochastic modeling and simulation.
Analog circuit design is often the bottleneck when designing mixed
analog-digital systems. A Top-Down, Constraint-Driven Design
Methodology for Analog Integrated Circuits presents a new
methodology based on a top-down, constraint-driven design paradigm
that provides a solution to this problem. This methodology has two
principal advantages: (1) it provides a high probability for the
first silicon which meets all specifications, and (2) it shortens
the design cycle. A Top-Down, Constraint-Driven Design Methodology
for Analog Integrated Circuits is part of an ongoing research
effort at the University of California at Berkeley in the
Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department. Many
faculty and students, past and present, are working on this design
methodology and its supporting tools. The principal goals are: (1)
developing the design methodology, (2) developing and applying new
tools, and (3) `proving' the methodology by undertaking `industrial
strength' design examples. The work presented here is neither a
beginning nor an end in the development of a complete top-down,
constraint-driven design methodology, but rather a step in its
development. This work is divided into three parts. Chapter 2
presents the design methodology along with foundation material.
Chapters 3-8 describe supporting concepts for the methodology, from
behavioral simulation and modeling to circuit module generators.
Finally, Chapters 9-11 illustrate the methodology in detail by
presenting the entire design cycle through three large-scale
examples. These include the design of a current source D/A
converter, a Sigma-Delta A/D converter, and a video driver system.
Chapter 12 presents conclusions and current research topics. A
Top-Down, Constraint-Driven Design Methodology for Analog
Integrated Circuits will be of interest to analog and mixed-signal
designers as well as CAD tool developers.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Second International Conference on Embedded Software, EMSOFT 2002, held in Grenoble, France in October 2002.The book presents 13 invited papers by leading researchers and 17 revised full papers selected during a competitive round of reviewing. The book spans the whole range of embedded software, including operating systems and middleware, programming languages and compilers, modeling and validation, software engineering and programming methodologies, scheduling and execution-time analysis, formal methods, and communication protocols and fault-tolerance
Addressing the rising security issues during the design stages of
cyber-physical systems, this book develops a systematic approach to
address security at early design stages together with all other
design constraints. Cyber-attacks become more threatening as
systems are becoming more connected with the surrounding
environment, infrastructures, and other systems. Security
mechanisms can be designed to protect against attacks and meet
security requirements, but there are many challenges of applying
security mechanisms to cyber-physical systems including open
environments, limited resources, strict timing requirements, and
large number of devices. Designed for researchers and
professionals, this book is valuable for individuals working in
network systems, security mechanisms, and system design. It is also
suitable for advanced-level students of computer science.
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