학술논문

A new generation of real-time systems in the JET tokamak
Document Type
Conference
Source
2012 18th IEEE-NPSS Real Time Conference Real Time Conference (RT), 2012 18th IEEE-NPSS. :1-9 Jun, 2012
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
General Topics for Engineers
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Real-time systems
Linux
Kernel
Jitter
Plasmas
Switches
Stress
Real-Time
Nuclear Fusion
Language
Abstract
Recently a new recipe for developing and deploying real-time systems has become increasingly adopted in the JET tokamak. Powered by the advent of x86 multi-core technology and the reliability of the JET's well established Real-Time Data Network (RTDN) to handle all real-time I/O, an official Linux vanilla kernel has been demonstrated to be able to provide real-time performance to user-space applications that are required to meet stringent timing constraints. In particular, a careful rearrangement of the Interrupt ReQuests' (IRQs) affinities together with the kernel's CPU isolation mechanism allows to obtain either soft or hard real-time behavior depending on the synchronization mechanism adopted. Finally, the Multithreaded Application Real-Time executor (MARTe) framework is used for building applications particularly optimised for exploring multi-core architectures. In the past year, four new systems based on this philosophy have been installed and are now part of the JET's routine operation. The focus of the present work is on the configuration and interconnection of the ingredients that enable these new systems' real-time capability and on the impact that JET's distributed real-time architecture has on system engineering requirements, such as algorithm testing and plant commissioning. Details are given about the common real-time configuration and development path of these systems, followed by a brief description of each system together with results regarding their real-time performance. A cycle time jitter analysis of a user-space MARTe based application synchronising over a network is also presented. The goal is to compare its deterministic performance while running on a vanilla and on a Messaging Real time Grid (MRG) Linux kernel