Abstract

This paper presents an overview of the networked supervisory control frameworks for discrete event systems with imperfect communication networks, which are divided into the centralized setup, the decentralized setup and the distributed setup. The state-of-the-art works on networked supervisory control of discrete-event systems addressing the channel imperfections that are caused by channel delays, data losses or non-FIFO channels are discussed. By presenting the key concepts and main results of each representative work, we analyze the pros and cons of different approaches. Finally, we also provide a summary of the existing works, which roughly follow two different lines of thinking and result in two different verification or synthesis approaches. The first approach utilizes simple, non-networked plant models but relies on the development of sophisticated concepts of network controllability and observability to capture network imperfections, while the second approach embeds relatively complex yet verifiable channel models into the model of the networked plant and adopts the standard concepts of controllability and observability for the (verification and) synthesis of networked supervisors. Some future research topics are also presented.

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