Non-Intrusive Tracing at First Instruction

2015-01-0176

04/14/2015

Event
SAE 2015 World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
In recent years, we see more and more ECUs integrating a huge number of application software components. This process mostly results from the increasing amount of so called in-house software in various fields like electric-drive, chassis and driver assistance systems. The software development for these systems is partially moved from the supplier to the car manufacturers. Another important trend is the introduction of new network architectures intending to meet the growing communication requirements.
For such ECUs the software integration scenarios become more complicated, as more quality of service requirements with regards to timing, safety and security need to be considered [2]. Multi-core microcontrollers offer even more potential variants for integration scenarios. Understanding the interaction between the different software components, not only from a functional, but also from a timing view, is a key success factor for modern electronic systems [6,7,8,9]. This paper presents suggestions on how hardware-based tracing can be used to identify functional and timing issues in complex scenarios.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2015-01-0176
Pages
6
Citation
Schmidt, K., Marx, D., Harnisch, J., Mayer, A. et al., "Non-Intrusive Tracing at First Instruction," SAE Technical Paper 2015-01-0176, 2015, https://doi.org/10.4271/2015-01-0176.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 14, 2015
Product Code
2015-01-0176
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English