DocumentCode
3220766
Title
Lightweight Modeling of Complex State Dependencies in Stream Processing Systems
Author
Bouillard, Anne ; Phan, Linh T X ; Chakraborty, Samarjit
Author_Institution
ENS Cachan (Bretagne), IRISA, Rennes
fYear
2009
fDate
13-16 April 2009
Firstpage
195
Lastpage
204
Abstract
Over the last few years, Real-Time Calculus has been used extensively to model and analyze embedded systems processing continuous data/event streams. Towards this, bounds on the arrival process of streams and bounds on the processing capacity of resources serve as inputs to the model, which are used to calculate end-to-end delays suffered by streams, maximum backlog, utilization of resources, etc. This "functional\´\´ model, although amenable to computationally inexpensive analysis methods, has limited modeling capability. In particular, "state-based\´\´ processing, e.g. blocking write - where the processing depends on the "state\´\´ or fill-level of the buffer - cannot be modeled in a straightforward manner. This has led to a number of recent proposals on using automata-theoretic models for stream processing systems (e.g. Event Count Automata [RTSS 2005]). Although such models offer better modeling flexibility, they suffer from the usual state-space explosion problem. In this paper we show that a number of complex state-dependencies can be modeled in a lightweight manner, using a feedback control technique. This avoids explicit state modeling, and hence the state-space explosion problem. Our proposed modeling and analysis therefore extend the original Real-Time Calculus-based functional modeling in a very useful way, and cover much larger problem domain compared to what was previously possible without explicit state-modeling. We illustrate its utility through two case studies and also compare our analysis results with those obtained from detailed system simulations (which are significantly more time consuming).
Keywords
automata theory; calculus; feedback; temporal logic; automata-theoretic models; complex state-dependencies; computationally inexpensive analysis methods; end-to-end delays; feedback control technique; functional modeling; lightweight modeling; real-time calculus; state-space explosion problem; stream processing systems; Application software; Availability; Calculus; Context modeling; Delay; Embedded system; Explosions; Jitter; Real time systems; Timing; RTC; modelling; performance analysis; stream processing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Real-Time and Embedded Technology and Applications Symposium, 2009. RTAS 2009. 15th IEEE
Conference_Location
San Francisco, CA
ISSN
1545-3421
Print_ISBN
978-0-7695-3636-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RTAS.2009.27
Filename
4840580
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