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Defending Event-Triggered Systems against Out-of-Envelope Environments

Marcus Völp, Mohammad Ibrahim Alkoudsi, Azin Bayrami Asl, Kristin Krüger, Julio Rodrigues Mendonca da Neto, Gerhard Fohler

Year
2025
Access
Open access

Abstract

The design of real-time systems is based on assumptions about environmental conditions in which they will operate. We call this their safe operational envelope. Violation of these assumptions, i.e., out-of-envelope environments, can jeopardize timeliness and safety of real-time systems, e.g., by overwhelming them with interrupt storms. A long-lasting debate has been going on over which design paradigm, the time- or event-triggered, is more robust against such behavior. In this work, we investigate the claim that time-triggered systems are immune against out-of-envelope behavior and how event-triggered systems can be constructed to defend against being overwhelmed by interrupt showers. We introduce importance (independently of priority and criticality) as a means to express which tasks should still be scheduled in case environmental design assumptions cease to hold, draw parallels to mixed-criticality scheduling, and demonstrate how event-triggered systems can defend against out-of-envelope behavior.

Keywords

cs.OSeess.SY

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