Abstract

A Mixed-Criticality System (MCS) features the integration of multiple subsystems that are subject to different levels of safety certification on a shared hardware platform. In cost-sensitive application domains such as automotive E/E systems, it is important to reduce application memory footprint, since such a reduction may enable the adoption of a cheaper microprocessor in the family. Preemption Threshold Scheduling (PTS) is a well-known technique for reducing system stack usage. We consider partitioned multiprocessor scheduling, with Preemption Threshold Adaptive Mixed-Criticality (PT-AMC) as the task scheduling algorithm on each processor and address the optimization problem of finding a feasible task-to-processor mapping with minimum total system stack usage on a resource-constrained multi-processor. We present the Extended Maximal Preemption Threshold Assignment Algorithm (EMPTAA), with dual purposes of improving the taskset’s schedulability if it is not already schedulable, and minimizing system stack usage of the schedulable taskset. We present efficient heuristic algorithms for finding sub-optimal yet high-quality solutions, including Maximum Utilization Difference based Partitioning (MUDP) and MUDP with Backtrack Mapping (MUDP-BM), as well as a Branch-and-Bound (BnB) algorithm for finding the optimal solution. Performance evaluation with synthetic task sets demonstrates the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed algorithms.

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