ECE6881 - Real-time system design - 2019

0 points, SCA Band 2, 0.000 EFTSL

Postgraduate - Unit

Refer to the specific census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered.

Faculty

Engineering

Organisational Unit

Department of Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering

Chief examiner(s)

Professor Tom Drummond

Coordinator(s)

Associate Professor Lindsay Kleeman

Unit guides

Offered

Clayton

  • First semester 2019 (On-campus)

Prohibitions

ECE4075

Notes

This unit is available only to Engineering PhD students.

Synopsis

The unit aims to enable students to understand, analyse, specify, design and test real-time systems using both hardware and software development. Migration between software and hardware will be considered as an approach to meet design criterion such as speed, throughput, energy usage and cost.

The design, analysis and implementation of real-time operating systems will be studied and will include scheduling policies, process creation and management, inter-process communication and synchronisation, efficient handling of I/O and communication.

Students will complete a major team design project that includes hardware and software design of a real-time system.

Outcomes

On successful completion of this unit, students will be able to:

  • explain the development process for real-time systems from specification, simulation, implementation and testing
  • design and implement interface logic to a bus system and its associated arbitration logic using a hardware description language
  • describe the effectiveness and benefits of deploying a real-time operating system in software development of a real-time system
  • compare, measure and analyse the performance and overhead of real-time scheduling policies of a real-time operating system
  • design and analyse hardware accelerators that improve real-time system performance in areas such as energy use, latency and throughput
  • formulate, plan, create, document and test a solution to a real-time system design problem in a team framework using a real-time kernel and a hardware description language.

Assessment

Continuous assessment: 50%

Examination: (2 hours) 50%

Students are required to achieve at least 45% in the total continuous assessment component and at least 45% in the final examination component and an overall mark of 50% to achieve a pass grade in the unit.

Workload requirements

2 hours lectures, 3 hours laboratory and 7 hours private study per week

See also Unit timetable information

This unit applies to the following area(s) of study

Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering