An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure: Towards Physically-Correct Specifications of Embedded Real-Time Systems
Data(s) |
14/09/2011
14/09/2011
1994
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Resumo |
Predictability — the ability to foretell that an implementation will not violate a set of specified reliability and timeliness requirements - is a crucial, highly desirable property of responsive embedded systems. This paper overviews a development methodology for responsive systems, which enhances predictability by eliminating potential hazards resulting from physically-unsound specifications. The backbone of our methodology is a formalism that restricts expressiveness in a way that allows the specification of only reactive, spontaneous, and causal computation. Unrealistic systems — possessing properties such as clairvoyance, caprice, infinite capacity, or perfect timing — cannot even be specified. We argue that this "ounce of prevention" at the specification level is likely to spare a lot of time and energy in the development cycle of responsive systems - not to mention the elimination of potential hazards that would have gone, otherwise, unnoticed. NSF (CCR-9308344) |
Identificador |
Bestavros, Azer. "Towards Physically-Correct Specifications of Embedded Real-Time Systems”, Technical Report BUCS-1994-008, Computer Science Department, Boston University, May 1994. [Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1488] |
Idioma(s) |
en_US |
Publicador |
Boston University Computer Science Department |
Relação |
BUCS Technical Reports;BUCS-TR-1994-008 |
Tipo |
Technical Report |