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High-Performance Embedded Computing

Applications in Cyber-Physical Systems and Mobile Computing

  • 2 Edición - 17 de marzo de 2014
  • Última edición
  • Autor: Marilyn Wolf
  • Idioma: Inglés

High-Performance Embedded Computing, Second Edition, combines leading-edge research with practical guidance in a variety of embedded computing topics, including real-time systems,… Leer más

Descripción

High-Performance Embedded Computing, Second Edition, combines leading-edge research with practical guidance in a variety of embedded computing topics, including real-time systems, computer architecture, and low-power design. Author Marilyn Wolf presents a comprehensive survey of the state of the art, and guides you to achieve high levels of performance from the embedded systems that bring these technologies together.

The book covers CPU design, operating systems, multiprocessor programs and architectures, and much more. Embedded computing is a key component of cyber-physical systems, which combine physical devices with computational resources for control and communication. This revised edition adds new content and examples of cyber-physical systems throughout the book, including design methodologies, scheduling, and wide-area CPS to illustrate the possibilities of these new systems.

Puntos claves

  • Revised and updated with coverage of recently developed consumer electronics architectures and models of computing
  • Includes new VLIW processors such as the TI Da Vinci, and CPU simulation
  • Learn model-based verification and middleware for embedded systems
  • Supplemental material includes lecture slides, labs, and additional resources

De interès para

Professionals in high-performance and /or embedded computing; practitioners in cyber-physical systems, and students in graduate courses on these topics

Índice

  • Dedication
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Author
  • Preface to the Second Edition
  • Preface to the First Edition
  • Chapter 1. Embedded Computing
    • 1.1. The landscape of high-performance embedded computing
    • 1.2. Cyber-physical systems and embedded computing
    • 1.3. Design methodologies
    • 1.4. Models of computation
    • 1.5. Reliability, safety, and security
    • 1.6. Consumer electronics architectures
    • 1.7. Summary and a look ahead
    • What we learned
    • Further reading
    • Questions
    • Lab exercises
  • Chapter 2. CPUs
    • 2.1. Introduction
    • 2.2. Comparing processors
    • 2.3. RISC processors and digital signal processors
    • 2.4. Parallel execution mechanisms
    • 2.5. Variable-performance CPU architectures
    • 2.6. Processor memory hierarchy
    • 2.7. Encoding and security
    • 2.8. CPU simulation
    • 2.9. Automated CPU design
    • 2.10. Summary
    • What we learned
    • Further reading
    • Questions
    • Lab exercises
  • Chapter 3. Programs
    • 3.1. Introduction
    • 3.2. Code generation and back-end compilation
    • 3.3. Memory-oriented optimizations
    • 3.4. Program performance analysis
    • 3.5. Models of computation and programming
    • 3.6. Summary
    • What we have learned
    • Further reading
    • Questions
    • Lab exercises
  • Chapter 4. Processes and Operating Systems
    • 4.1. Introduction
    • 4.2. Real-time process scheduling
    • 4.3. Languages and scheduling
    • 4.4. Operating system design
    • 4.5. Verification
    • 4.6. Summary
    • What we have learned
    • Further reading
    • Questions
    • Lab exercises
  • Chapter 5. Multiprocessor Architectures
    • 5.1. Introduction
    • 5.2. Why embedded multiprocessors?
    • 5.3. Multiprocessor design techniques
    • 5.4. Multiprocessor architectures
    • 5.5. Processing elements
    • 5.6. Interconnection networks
    • 5.7. Memory systems
    • 5.8. Physically distributed systems and networks
    • 5.9. Multiprocessor design methodologies and algorithms
    • 5.10. Summary
    • What we have learned
    • Further reading
    • Questions
    • Lab exercises
  • Chapter 6. Multiprocessor Software
    • 6.1. Introduction
    • 6.2. What is different about embedded multiprocessor software?
    • 6.3. Real-time multiprocessor operating systems
    • 6.4. Services and middleware for embedded multiprocessors
    • 6.5. Design verification
    • 6.6. Summary
    • What we have learned
    • Further reading
    • Questions
    • Lab exercises
  • Chapter 7. System-Level Design and Hardware/Software Co-design
    • 7.1. Introduction
    • 7.2. Performance estimation
    • 7.3. Hardware/software co-synthesis algorithms
    • 7.4. Electronic system-level design
    • 7.5. Thermal-aware design
    • 7.6. Reliability
    • 7.7. System-level simulation
    • 7.8. Summary
    • What we have learned
    • Further reading
    • Questions
    • Lab exercises
  • Chapter 8. Cyber-Physical Systems
    • 8.1. Introduction
    • 8.2. Control theory and systems
    • 8.3. Control/computing co-design
    • 8.4. Networked control systems
    • 8.5. Design methodologies
    • 8.6. Security
    • 8.7. Summary
    • What we have learned
    • Further reading
    • Questions
    • Lab exercises
  • Glossary
  • References
  • Index

Reseñas

"This book’s goal is to provide a frame of reference for the burgeoning field of high performance embedded computing."- HPCMagazine.com, August 2014

Detalles del producto

  • Edición: 2
  • Última edición
  • Publicado: 17 de marzo de 2014
  • Idioma: Inglés

Sobre el autor

MW

Marilyn Wolf

Marilyn Wolf is Elmer E. Koch Professor of Engineering and Chair of the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Nebraska Lincoln. She received her BS, MS, and PhD in electrical engineering from Stanford University. She was with AT&T Bell Laboratories from 1984 to 1989, was on the faculty of Princeton University from 1989 to 2007 and was Farmer Distinguished Chair in Embedded Computing Systems and GRA Eminent Scholar at the Georgia Institute of Technology from 2007 to 2019. Her research interests include cyber-physical systems, Internet-of-Things, embedded computing, embedded computer vision, and VLSI systems. She has received the IEEE Computer Society Goode Memorial Award, the ASEE Terman Award, and IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Education Award. She is a Fellow of the IEEE and ACM and a Golden Core member of IEEE Computer Society. Professor Wolf is the author of several successful Morgan Kaufmann textbooks: Computers as Components, Fifth Edition (2022); High-Performance Embedded Computing, Second Edition (2014); The Physics of Computing, First Edition (2016); and Embedded System Interfacing, First Edition (2019).
Afiliaciones y experiencia
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE, USA

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