Abstract

Fault-tolerant systems have found wide applications in military, industrial and commercial areas. Most of these systems are constructed by multiple-modular redundancy or error control coding techniques. They need some fault-tolerant specific components (such as voter, switcher, encoder, or decoder) to implement error-detecting or error-correcting functions. However, the problem of error detection, location or correction for fault-tolerance specific components themselves has not been solved properly so far. Thus, the dependability of a whole fault-tolerant system will be greatly affected. This paper presents a theory of robust fault-masking digital circuits for characterizing fault-tolerant systems with the ability of concurrent error location and a new scheme of dual-modular redundant systems with partially robust fault-masking property. A basic robust fault-masking circuit is composed of a basic functional circuit and an error-locating corrector. Such a circuit not only has the ability of concurrent error correction, but also has the ability of concurrent error location. According to this circuit model, for a partially robust fault-masking dual-modular redundant system, two redundant modules based on alternating-complementary logic consist of the basic functional circuit. An error-correction specific circuit named as alternating-complementary corrector is used as the error-locating corrector. The performance (such as hardware complexity, time delay) of the scheme is analyzed.

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