Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Software Engineering and Formal Methods (SEFM),
2014 · DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-10431-7_15
In many embedded systems like in the automotive domain, safety-critical features are increasingly realized by software. Some of these features are often required to behave fail-operational, meaning that they must stay alive even in the presence of random hardware failures. We propose a new fault-tolerant SW/HW architecture for electric vehicles with inherent safety capabilities that enable fail-operational features. In this paper, we introduce a constraint-based approach to calculate valid deployments of mixed-critical software components to the execution nodes. To avoid harm, faulty execution nodes have to be isolated from the remaining system. We treat the isolations of execution nodes and the required changes to the deployment to keep those software components alive that realize fail-operational features. The affected software components have to be resumed on intact execution nodes. However, the remaining system resources may become insufficient to execute the full set of software components after an isolation of an execution node. Hence, some components might have to be deactivated, meaning that features might get lost. Our approach allows to formally analyze which subset of features can still be provided after one or more isolations. We present an arithmetic system model with formal constraints of the deployment-problem that can be solved by a SMT-Solver. We evaluate our approach by showing an example problem and its solution.
Stichworte: Fault-Tolerance, Fail-Operational, Mixed-Critical, Deployment, Dependability, SMT, Model-based Systems Engineering, MbSE