The impact of operating system adoption in an embedded project: A case study

The use of an operating system (OS) is advocated as a means to simplify software development, freeing programmers from managing low-level hardware and providing a simpler programming interface for common tasks. The high complexity of modern desktop computers makes an OS indispensable; embedded syste...

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Hauptverfasser: Jasinski, R. P., Moroz, M. R., Pedroni, V. A.
Format: Tagungsbericht
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The use of an operating system (OS) is advocated as a means to simplify software development, freeing programmers from managing low-level hardware and providing a simpler programming interface for common tasks. The high complexity of modern desktop computers makes an OS indispensable; embedded systems, on the other hand, are limited architectures, usually severely cost- and power-constrained. Because of the additional demands imposed by an OS, embedded developers are faced with the crucial decision of whether to adopt an OS or not. In this paper, we present a case study in which a sample application (an embedded weather station) was developed under three different scenarios: without any OS, using the μC/OS-II real-time OS, and using the uClinux general-purpose OS. An FPGA and an SoPC were used to provide a flexible hardware platform able to accommodate all three configurations. The adoption of an OS provided a reduction of up to 48% in development time; on the other hand, it increased program memory requirements in at least 71%.
DOI:10.1109/SPL.2012.6211777