Automotive Software – Connected Services in Mobile Networks: First Automotive Software Workshop, ASWSD 2004, San Diego, CA, USA, January 10-12, 2004, Revised Selected Papers

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Software development for the automotive domain is currently subject to a silent revolution. On the one hand, software has become the enabling technology for almost all safety-critical and comfort functions o?ered to the customer. A total of 90 % of all innovations in automotive systems are directly or indirectly - abled by software. Today’s luxury cars contain up to 80 electronic control units (ECUs) and 5 di?erent, inter-connectednetworkplatforms, overwhich some700 software-enabled functions are distributed. On the other hand, the complexity induced by this largenumber of functions, their interactions, and their supporting infrastructure has started to becomethe limiting factor for automotive software development. Adequate management of this complexity is particularly important; the following list highlights three of the corresponding challenges: First, the dependencies between safety-critical and comfort functions are rapidly increasing;a simple example is the interplay of airbag controland power seat control in the case of an accident. Careful analysis and design of these dependencies are necessary to yield correct software solutions. Second, advances in wired and wireless networking infrastructures enable - terconnection between cars and backend service providers (e.g., to call for help in cases of emergency), between cars and devices brought into the car by drivers and passengers (such as cell phones, PDAs, and laptops), and even among cars. This dramatically shifts the focus from the development of individual software solutionsresidingondedicatedECUstotheirdistributionandinteractionwithin and beyond car boundaries.

Author(s): Christian Ferdinand, Reinhold Heckmann (auth.), Manfred Broy, Ingolf H. Krüger, Michael Meisinger (eds.)
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science 4147 : Information Systems and Applications, incl. Internet/Web, and HCI
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year: 2006

Language: English
Pages: 156
Tags: Special Purpose and Application-Based Systems; Software Engineering; Computation by Abstract Devices; Logics and Meanings of Programs; Simulation and Modeling

Front Matter....Pages -
Analyzing the Worst-Case Execution Time by Abstract Interpretation of Executable Code....Pages 1-14
Quality Assurance and Certification of Software Modules in Safety Critical Automotive Electronic Control Units Using a CASE-Tool Integration Platform....Pages 15-30
On the Fault Hypothesis for a Safety-Critical Real-Time System....Pages 31-42
A Compositional Framework for Real-Time Guarantees....Pages 43-56
Validation of Component and Service Federations in Automotive Software Applications....Pages 57-73
Towards a Component Architecture for Hard Real Time Control Applications....Pages 74-85
Adding Value to Automotive Models....Pages 86-102
Automotive Software: A Challenge and Opportunity for Model-Based Software Development....Pages 103-115
Software for Automotive Systems: Model-Integrated Computing....Pages 116-136
Simulink Integration of Giotto/TDL....Pages 137-154
Back Matter....Pages -