The event-triggered and time-triggered medium-access methods

The processes of accessing a shared communication media have been extensively researched in the dependability and real-time area. For embedded systems, the primary approaches have revolved around the event-triggered and the time-triggered paradigms. In this paper, our goal is to objectively and quantitatively outline the capabilities and limitations of each of these paradigms. The event-triggered approach is commonly perceived as providing high flexibility, while the time-triggered approach is expected to provide for a higher degree of predictable communication access to the media. We have quantified the spread of their differences, and provide a summary discussion about suggested best usage for each approach. The focus of our work is on the response times of the communication system, and also on the schedulability of the communication system in collaboration with tasks in the nodes.

[1]  Henrik Lönn,et al.  A comparison of fixed-priority and static cyclic scheduling for distributed automotive control applications , 1999, Proceedings of 11th Euromicro Conference on Real-Time Systems. Euromicro RTS'99.

[2]  Jan Jonsson,et al.  Evaluation of Search Heuristics for Embedded System Scheduling Problems , 2001, CP.

[3]  Hermann Kopetz,et al.  A Comparison of CAN and TTP , 2000 .

[4]  Petru Eles,et al.  Holistic scheduling and analysis of mixed time/event-triggered distributed embedded systems , 2002, Proceedings of the Tenth International Symposium on Hardware/Software Codesign. CODES 2002 (IEEE Cat. No.02TH8627).

[5]  John A. Clark,et al.  Holistic schedulability analysis for distributed hard real-time systems , 1994, Microprocess. Microprogramming.