RTNS 2017

RTNS2017 > Home
25th anniversary

International Conference on Real-Time Networks and Systems

 

Grenoble, France, October 4-6, 2017

RTNS is a friendly conference with a great sense of community that presents excellent opportunities for collaboration.

The purpose of the conference is to share ideas, experiences and information among academic researchers, developers and service providers in the field of real-time systems and networks.

RTNS 2017 will be in Grenoble, France.

RTNS 2017 is the 25th edition of the conference formerly known as RTS (Real-Time Systems, Paris). The first 12 editions of RTS were french-speaking events held in Paris in conjunction with the RTS Embedded System exhibition. Since its 13th edition, the conference language of RTNS has been english.

The proceedings are published by the ACM ICPS and indexed by Scopus. ACM ICPS

Highlights

News

Contact

rtns17@univ-grenoble-alpes.fr
RTNS2017 > Awards

Awards

RTNS17 and JRWRTC17 Awards

Best Paper Award: José Fonseca, Geoffrey Nelissen and Vincent Nélis. Improved Response Time Analysis of Sporadic DAG Tasks for Global FP Scheduling

Best Student Paper Award: Catherine Nemitz, Tanya Amert and Jim Anderson. Real-Time Multiprocessor Locks with Nesting: Optimizing the Common Case

Best Presentation Award: Behnaz Pourmohseni. Predictable Run-Time Mapping Reconfiguration for Real-Time Applications on Many-Core Systems

Best Paper Award in the Junior Workshop: Khaoula Boukir, Jean-Luc Béchennec, and Anne-Marie Déplanche. Reducing the Gap between Theory and Practice: Towards a Proven Implementation of Global EDF in Trampoline

RTNS2017 > 25th Anniversary Awards

25th Anniversary Awards

25th Anniversary Awards

Most Influential Paper Award: Nathan Fisher and Sanjoy Baruah. A Polynomial-Time Approximation Scheme for Feasibility Analysis in Static-Priority Systems with Bounded Relative Deadlines. In RTNS 2005, Paris

Influential Paper Award: Robert I. Davis, Sanjoy Baruah, Thomas Rothvoss, and Alan Burns. Quantifying the Sub-optimality of Uniprocessor Fixed Priority Preemptive Scheduling for Sporadic Tasksets with Arbitrary Deadlines. In RTNS 2009, Paris

Influential Paper Award: Joël Goossens and Christophe Macq. Limitations of the Hyper-Period in Real-Time Periodic Task Set Generation. In RTS 2001

Influential Paper Award: Frédéric Ridouard and Pascal Richard. Worst-Case Analysis of Feasibility Tests for Self-Suspending Tasks. In RTNS 2006

RTNS2017 > Conference Program

Conference Program

Wednesday October 4th

8:30

Registration

9:20 - 9:40

Opening Remarks

9:40 - 10:30

Session 1 - Networks I


Session chair: Jean-Luc Scharbarg

Eike Schweissguth, Peter Danielis, Dirk Timmermann, Helge Parzyjegla and Gero Muehl
ILP-based Joint Routing and Scheduling for Time-Triggered Networks

Dorin Maxim and Ye-Qiong Song functional available artifact
Delay Analysis of AVB trafic in Time-Sensitive Networks (TSN)

10:30 - 11:00

Coffee break

11:00 - 12:40

Session 2 - Multicore: constraints and resource sharing


Session chair: Luca Abeni

José Fonseca, Geoffrey Nelissen and Vincent Nélis
Improved Response Time Analysis of Sporadic DAG Tasks for Global FP Scheduling (OUTSTANDING PAPER)

Catherine Nemitz, Tanya Amert and Jim Anderson
Real-Time Multiprocessor Locks with Nesting: Optimizing the Common Case (OUTSTANDING PAPER)

Nicola Capodieci, Roberto Cavicchioli, Paolo Valente and Marko Bertogna
SiGAMMA: Server based integrated GPU Arbitration Mechanism for Memory Accesses

Micaiah Chisholm, Namhoon Kim, Stephen Tang, Nathan Otterness, James Anderson, F. Donelson Smith and Donald Porter
Supporting Mode Changes while Providing Hardware Isolation in Mixed-Criticality Multicore Systems

12:40 - 14:00

Lunch

14:00 - 15:15

Session 3 - Single processor scheduling


Session chair: Dorin Maxim

Daniel Casini, Luca Abeni, Alessandro Biondi, Tommaso Cucinotta and Giorgio Buttazzo reusable availablereplicated artifact
Constant Bandwidth Servers with Constrained Deadlines

Sanjoy Baruah, Vincenzo Bonifaci, Alberto Marchetti-Spaccamela and Victor Verdugo
A scheduling model inspired by control theory

Leonie Ahrendts, Sophie Quinton and Rolf Ernst functional availablereplicated artifact
Finite Ready Queues As a Mean for Overload Reduction in Weakly-Hard Real-Time Systems

15:15 - 15:45

Coffee break

15:45 - 17:00

Session 4 - Automotive

Session chair: Ye-Qiong Song

Tobias Sehnke, Dieter Schwarzmann, Matthias Schultalbers and Rolf Ernst
Temporal Properties in Automotive Control Software

Georg von der Brüggen, Niklas Ueter, Jian-Jia Chen and Matthias Freier
Parametric Utilization Bounds for Implicit-Deadline Periodic Tasks in Automotive Systems

Andreas Sailer, Michael Deubzer, Gerald Luettgen and Juergen Prof. Dr. Mottok
Comparing Trace Recordings of Automotive Real-time Software

17:00 - 18:00

Junior Workshop



18:00 - 20:00

Welcome cocktail and posters

Thursday October 5th

8:30 - 09:20

Session 5 - Multicore: global vs. partitioned


Session chair: Joel Goossens

Mauro Leoncini, Manuela Montangero and Paolo Valente
A Branch-and-Bound Algorithm to Compute a Tighter Bound to Tardiness for Preemptive Global EDF Scheduler
(OUTSTANDING PAPER)

Houssam Eddine Zahaf, Giuseppe Lipari and Luca Abeni functional available artifact
Migrate when necessary: toward partitioned reclaiming for soft real-time tasks

09:20 - 10:30

Keynote Talk

10:30 - 11:00

Coffee Break

11:00 - 12:40

Session 6 - Design practices


Session chair: Emmanuel Grolleau

Behnaz Pourmohseni, Stefan Wildermann, Michael Glaß and Jürgen Teich
Predictable Run-Time Mapping Reconfiguration for Real-Time Applications on Many-Core Systems
(OUTSTANDING PAPER)

Alexandre Honorat, Hai Nam Tran, Loïc Besnard, Thierry Gautier, Jean-Pierre Talpin and Adnan Bouakaz reusable availablereplicated artifact
Introducing ADFG: a scheduling synthesis tool for dataflow graphs in real-time systems

Guillaume Brau, Nicolas Navet and Jérôme Hugues
Heterogeneous models and analyses in the design of real-time embedded systems - an avionic case study

Anh Toan Bui Long, Yassine Ouhammou, Emmanuel Grolleau, Loïc Fejoz and Laurent Rioux
Bridging the gap between practical cases and temporal performance analysis: a models repository-based approach

12:40 - 14:00

Lunch

14:00 - 15:15

Session 7 - Timing analysis


Session chair: Claire Maiza

Sébastien Martinez, Damien Hardy and Isabelle Puaut
Quantifying WCET reduction of parallel applications by introducing slack time to limit resource contention

David Griffin, Benjamin Lesage, Iain Bate, Frank Soboczenski and Robert Davis
Forecast-Based Interference: Modelling Multicore Interference from Observable Factors

Zhenkai Zhang, Zhishan Guo and Xenofon Koutsoukos
Handling Write Backs in Multi-Level Cache Analysis for WCET Estimation

15:15 - 15:45

Coffee Break

15:45

City Tour and Banquet Departure

Friday October 6th

9:15 - 10:30

Session 8 - Mixed Criticality


Session chair: Zhishan Guo

Sanjoy Baruah
An enhanced scheduler for MC2

Manohar Vanga, Andrea Bastoni, Henrik Theiling and Björn B. Brandenburg
Supporting Low-Latency, Low-Criticality Tasks in a Certified Mixed-Criticality OS

Dorin Maxim, Robert Davis, Liliana Cucu-Grosjean and Arvind Easwaran
Probabilistic Analysis for Mixed Criticality Systems using Fixed Priority Preemptive Scheduling

10:30 - 11:00

Coffee Break

11:00 - 12:40

Session 9 - Networks II


Session chair: Sophie Quinton

Florian Pölzlbauer, Robert Davis and Iain Bate
Analysis and Optimization of Message Acceptance Filter Configurations for Controller Area Network (CAN)

Florian Greff, Ye-Qiong Song, Laurent Ciarletta and Arnaud Samama
On Combining Source and Destination-Tag Routing to Handle Fault Tolerance in Software-Defined Real-Time Mesh Networks

Voica Gavrilut, Bahram Zarrin, Paul Pop and Soheil Samiifunctional replicated
Fault-Tolerant Topology and Routing Synthesis for IEEE Time-Sensitive Networking

Hugo Daigmorte and Marc Boyer
Evaluation of admissible CAN bus load with weak synchronization mechanism

12:40 - 14:00

Lunch

14:00 - 15:15

Session 10 - Scheduling


Session chair: Rob Davis

Georg von der Brüggen, Jian-Jia Chen, Wen-Hung Kevin Huang and Maolin Yang
Release Enforcement in Resource-Oriented Partitioned Scheduling for Multiprocessor Systems

Mahmoud Shirazi, Mehdi Kargahi and Lothar Thiele
Resilient Scheduling of Energy-Variable Weakly-Hard Real-Time Systems

Hector Joao Rivera Verduzco and Reinder J. Bril
Best-case response times of real-time tasks under fixed-priority scheduling with preemption thresholds

15:15 - 15:30

Closing remarks

RTNS2017 > Call-for-Papers

Conference aims and topics

PDF version of the Call for Papers

RTNS is a friendly and inclusive conference with a great sense of community that presents excellent opportunities for collaboration. Original unpublished papers on all aspects of real-time systems and networks are welcome. RTNS covers a wide-spectrum of topics in real-time and embedded systems, including, but not limited to:

The 11th Junior Researcher Workshop on Real-Time Computing is organized jointly with RTNS.

RTNS2017 > Submission

Instructions to authors

Submissions are limited to 10 two-column pages and must adhere to the ACM format. For convenience, we provide below the templates:

The proceedings are published by the ACM ICPS and indexed by Scopus.

A selection of the best papers will be identified as outstanding papers; the authors of these papers will be invited to submit extended versions to a special issue of the Springer Real-Time Systems journal. RTNS will have the artifact evaluation for the accepted papers, to guarantee the availability of source code and data to replicate the experiments.

Authors submitting a paper to RTNS confirm that neither the paper, nor a version of it, is under submission elsewhere nor will be submitted elsewhere before notification by RTNS, and that if the paper is accepted, at least one author will register by the special registration deadline, and present the paper at the conference.

The link to the Easychair submission page is here
RTNS2017 > Artifact evaluation

Artifact Evaluation

We give the opportunity to authors of papers accepted to the conference to submit an artifact establishing the reproducibility of the computational results described in their paper.

The objective of Artifact Evaluation (AE) is to reward efforts made by researchers to allow others to replicate their experiments. The AE enables to reproduce results, which helps researchers to build on top of each other's work and to compare results in a fair manner. The AE reviewers do not evaluate the correctness of the experimental results obtained using the artifact, only that these results can be reproduced.

The reviewing process is single-blind. Reviewers should be able to evaluate submitted artifacts using regular computing resources. Please feel free to contact the AE chair if you would like to submit an artifact for which this is not possible.

Submitted artifacts will be awarded badges as described in the ACM policy. See the program or accepted papers for papers with awarded badges.

Important dates

Submission Process

To submit an artifact, use the easychair submission website

 Specify the following fields:

A nice HOWTO for preparing an artifact evaluation package is available online at http://bit.ly/HOWTO-AEC.

Artifact Evaluation Committee

Additional information

Here is a list of useful links related to artifact evaluation in other computer science research communities:

Contact

Please contact Julien Forget (julien dot forget at univ dash lille1 dot fr) for any questions, concerns or comments.
RTNS2017 > Keynote talk

Keynote Talk

Luca Benini

Luca Benini,
Department of Inform.Technol.Electrical Eng.
ETH Zurich, Switzerland

Title Plenty of Room at the Bottom? Micropower Deep Learning for Cognitive Cyberphysical Systems

See/Download the Slides

Abstract

Deep convolutional neural networks are being regarded today as an extremely effective and flexible approach for extracting actionable, high-level information from the wealth of raw data produced by a wide variety of sensory data sources. CNNs are however computationally demanding: today they typically run on GPU-accelerated compute servers or high-end embedded platforms. Industry and academia are racing to bring CNN inference (first) and training (next) within ever tighter power envelopes, while at the same time meeting real-time requirements. Recent results, including our PULP and ORIGAMI chips, demonstrate there is plenty of room at the bottom: pj/OP (GOPS/mW) computational efficiency, needed for deploying CNNs in the mobile/wearable scenario, is within reach.

However, this is not enough: 1000x energy efficiency improvement, within a mW power envelope and with low-cost CMOS processes, is required for deploying CNNs in the most demanding CPS scenarios. The fj/OP milestone will require heterogeneous (3D) integration with ultra-efficient die-to-die communication, mixed-signal pre-processing, event-based approximate computing, while still meeting real-time requirements.

Biography

Luca Benini holds the chair of digital Circuits and systems at ETHZ and Full Professor at the Universita di Bologna.
Dr. Benini's research interests are in energy-efficient system design for embedded and high-performance computing.
He is also active in the area of energy-efficient smart sensors and ultra-low power VLSI design.
He has published more than 800 papers, five books and several book chapters. He is a Fellow of the IEEE and the ACM and a member of the Academia Europaea. He is the recipient of the 2016 IEEE CAS Mac Van Valkenburg award.

RTNS2017 > Junior Workshop

Junior Workshop

11th Junior Researcher Workshop on Real-Time Computing

(JRWRTC 2017)

in conjunction with the
Grenoble, France, October 4-6, 2017
http://www.rtns17.org

The purpose of the 11th Junior Researcher Workshop on Real-Time Computing is to bring together junior researchers working on real-time systems (PhD students, postdocs, etc). The workshop provides a relaxed forum to present and discuss new ideas, new research directions, and to review current trends in the real-time systems area and is based on both short presentations and a poster session to encourage stimulating discussions.

The scope of the JRWRTC 2017 includes (but is not limited to) the following areas:

  • Real-time system design and analysis: task and message scheduling, modeling, verification, evaluation, model-driven development, worst-case execution time estimation, distributed systems, fault tolerance, quality of service, security, real-time system benchmarking
  • Infrastructure and hardware for real-time systems: wired and wireless communication networks, fieldbuses, networked control systems, sensor networks, power-aware scheduling
  • Software technologies for real-time systems: compilers, programming languages, middleware and component-based technologies, operating systems, tools and benchmarks
  • Real-time applications: automotive, avionics, telecommunications, process control, multimedia
Proceedings of JRWRTC 2017 are here.

Best Paper Award in the Junior Workshop: Khaoula Boukir, Jean-Luc Béchennec, and Anne-Marie Déplanche. Reducing the Gap between Theory and Practice: Towards a Proven Implementation of Global EDF in Trampoline

Please consult the website of the 25th International Conference on Real-Time and Network Systems for further information on registration, venue and hotel reservations.

The call for papers is also available as both PDF and plain text. Why JRWRTC ?

Important dates

Submission deadline: Sept. 8th, 2017 (extended)
Notification of acceptance: Sept. 18th, 2017
Final manuscript due: Sept. 22th, 2017
Conference: Oct. 4-6th, 2017

Workshop chair

Program committee

Paper Submission Guidelines

Submission guidelines: authors can submit up to 4 pages in double column format, with 10pt font (the latex template can be downloaded here).
Every submission should be co-authored by at least one junior researcher. One author of every accepted paper should be registered to the conference to present the paper in a talk and during the poster session.
A booklet containing the proceedings will be available on the web.

RTNS2017 > registration

Registration

All participants must be registered. Please register in advance.
Registration at Early Registration rates will be possible until September 20, 2017 (deadline extended).

AT LEAST ONE AUTHOR PER FULL PAPER (student or full rate) has to be registered before September 20, 2017 (deadline extended).

AT LEAST ONE AUTHOR PER JUNIOR WORKSHOP PAPER (student or full rate) has to be registered before September 20, 2017 (deadline extended).

Registration form

Registration is only available online: online registration.

Registration fees to the main conference:

Early Late
Student 200€ 290€
Full Rate 340€ 490€
Contributor* 500€ 500€
*Contributor: this fee is dedicated to participants who are willing to contribute to an extra regular registration fee.

The registration fees includes for all packages:

In all packages, travel and hotel costs are not included and are the responsibility of each conference participant.

See the form for cancellation policy.

RTNS2017 > Dates

Important dates

Submission (firm) deadline: Mon July 17, 2017, 23:59:59 anywhere on Earth
Notification to authors: Fri September 1, 2017
Early registration deadline: Sun September 10, 2017
Camera ready paper due: Mon September 25, 2017
Conference: October 4-6, 2017
RTNS2017 > Committees

Conference Committees

General chair
Program chairs
Local organization committee
Program committee
Steering committee Artifact Evaluation Chair Junior Workshop Chairs
RTNS2017 > Local Information

Local information

For any information, you can send an e-mail to the local organization committee

Venue and useful informations

The meeting will take place at Université Grenoble Alpes - Batiment IMAG on October 4-6, 2017.
Access: Tram line B or C, stop Gabriel Fauré.

Wi-Fi network with access control on site (including eduroam).
Lunches and coffee breaks will be served on site. They are included in the registration fees.

Address
Batiment IMAG - Université Grenoble Alpes
700 avenue Centrale - 38400 SAINT MARTIN D'HERES
Click here for the Openstreetmap or here for the Google map
Batiment IMAG
Visa information

Traveling to France may require a visa. See this page for complete official details.
Contact us for requesting visa support letters, only for authors with accepted papers (conference or junior workshop), or members of the conference committee.
Those requesting a letter should allow at least 15 business days to receive it.

How to reach the location of the conference

By tram

You can take the tram to get the campus. Two tram lines for the campus: line B and line C (more information on http://www.tag.fr).

From the train station, line B, Grenoble Presqu’île / Gières Plaine des Sports, direction Gières Plaine des Sports. Stop « Gabriel Fauré ».

Line C, Seyssins le Prisme / Saint Martin d’Hères Condillac Universités, direction Saint Martin d’Hères Condillac Universités. Stop « Gabriel Fauré ».

Verimag is 4mn walk away from the « Gabriel Fauré station (See the route on Google Maps)

By plane

Three airports, two of which are less than one hour from Grenoble Grenoble access

By train

The train station is ideally located in the city center

By car

From Paris / Lyon / north of France: motorway A48

From Valence / Marseille / south of France: motorway A49

From Chambéry / Switzerland (Geneva) and Italy (Turin/Torino): motorway A41

Distances

Lyon: 100 km / Geneva: 150 km / Turin/Torino: 250 km / Marseille: 275 km / Paris: 575 km

RTNS2017 > Accomodation

Accomodation

Hotels with preferential rates within the limit of available rooms

> 80€

Hotel Price for one night Contact Booking Code Public transportation
Hotel d'Angleterre 93€ single room
99€ double room
+33 (0)4 76 90 63 09, Email RTNS Tram line B, stop Victor Hugo
Hotel de l'Europe 90€ single room +33 (0)4 76 46 16 94, Email RTNS Tram line B, stop Maison du Tourisme

< 80€

Hotel Price for one night Contact Booking Code Public transportation
Hotel Ibis Grenoble Université 69€ single room +33 (0)4 76 44 00 44, Email Tram line B, stop Mayencin Champ Roman
Hotel des Alpes 64€ single room
68€ double room
73€ twin room
+33 (0)4 76 87 00 71, Email Tram line B, stop Gares
Hotel Suisse et Bordeaux 65€ single room
80€ double/twin room
+33 (0)4 76 47 55 87, Email Conférence RTNS Tram line B, stop Gares
ResidHotel Grenette 75€ studio single +33 (0)4 76 94 45 45, Email UGA/RTNS Tram line B, stop Victor Hugo
ResidHotel Central Gare 79€ studio single +33 (0)4 76 50 77 88, Email UGA/RTNS Tram line B, stop Gares

For other accomodation

Visit www.grenoble-tourisme.com
RTNS2017 > Tourism

Tourism

Visit Grenoble

The city, its layout, and its history then become much clearer:

At the center, the historic heart is dense, rich with a prestigious past going back more than 2000 years in history. To the west, a world renowned scientific complex. To the south, the urban sprawl accelerated by the 1968 winter Olympic Games and to the east, the university campus which welcomes 61,000 students.

Naturally Y-shaped thanks to the presence of the three alpine chains, Grenoble can be accessed from three points: one from the direction of Valence and Lyon, the other from the south and the Route Napoléon, and the last from Chambery and Italy.

A remarkable university and scientific population give Grenoble the image of a young, cosmopolitan city, one that is constantly on the move. The arrival and departure of the students and scientists mean that Grenoble never gets caught up with stereotypes. This is a free city!

Just as comfortable with culture as with sports, Grenoble offers a wide variety of activities. On the cultural side, how could we mention Grenoble without talking about the Museum of Grenoble and le Magasin (National Contemporary Art Center), leaders when it comes to art. Not to mention France's first house of culture, inaugurated in 1968 by André Malraux. Today known as the MC2, this cultural center hosts a multitude of music, film, and theatre festivals, as well as areas dedicated to electronic music.

As for sports, Grenoble is just a few minutes from several ski resorts and you can set out on a mountain hike from the city center, via La Bastille. The city also boasts the first urban via ferrata in France.

With its 300 km of flat bike paths, Grenoble is also a cyclist's paradise.

Bastille's Bubbles Town from Bastille's Stairs
RTNS2017 > Social events

Social events


Wednesday Cocktail

The 4th of October, a cocktail will be organized at the conference location.

Chez le Per'Gras Dinner

The 5th of October, the traditional RTNS dinner will be organized at «Chez le Per'Gras», after an historial visit of Grenoble ancient city and a climb with a cable car.

17:00

Guided visit (in english).

A walk through the city centre feels more like a trip through time than a simple touristic stroll. From the birth of the city and the Dauphiné region to the dawn of the French Revolution, from the time of Stendhal’s childhood to the time when the Bastille cable car was built, Grenoble will share (almost) all of its secrets with curious visitors!

The meeting point is set to the Office du tourisme (Grenoble tourist office, red cross on the map) at 17:00.

available
Click to enlarge map.

See on Google Maps

The nearest tram station is Hubert Dubedout Maison du Tourism (green cross on the map).

18:30

After the visit at 18:30, the meeting point for the cable car is at Téléphérique Grenoble-Bastille (Blue cross on the map).

19:30 - 22:30

A drink and the diner will take place in the "Chez le Per'Gras" restaurant.

Click to enlarge map.

RTNS2017 > Past Issues

Past Issues

RTNS 2016: Brest (France), PC chairs: Sébastien Faucou (Université de Nantes, FRANCE) and Luis Miguel Pinho (CISTER Research Center, Porto, Portugal)

RTNS 2015: Lille (France), PC chairs: Liliana Cucu-Grosjean (INRIA, Paris-Rocquencourt, FRANCE) and Nathan Fisher (Wayne State University, USA)

RTNS 2014: Versailles (France), PC chairs: Joël Goossens (ULB, Brussels, Belgium) and Claire Maiza (INP/Verimag, Grenoble, France)

RTNS 2013: Sophia Antipolis (France), PC chairs: Rob Davis (University of York, UK) and Emmanuel Grolleau (LIAS, Poitiers, France)

RTNS 2012: Pont à Mousson (France), PC chairs: Christine Rochange (University of Toulouse/IRIT, France) and Jim Andersson (University of North Carolina, USA)

RTNS 2011: Nantes (France), PC chairs: Alan Burns (University of York, UK) and Laurent George (Inria/AOSTE - UPEC/LISSI, France)

RTNS 2010: Toulouse (France), PC chairs: Sanjoy Baruah (University of North Carolina, USA) and Yves Sorel (Inria, Rocquencourt, France)

RTNS 2009: Paris (France), PC chairs: Maryline Chetto (IRCCyN, Nantes, France) and Mikael Sjödin (Mälardalen University, Sweden)

RTNS 2008: Rennes (France), PC chairs: Pascale Minet (Inria-Rocquencourt/Hipercom, France) and Giorgio Buttazzo (Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy)

RTNS 2007: Nancy (France), PC chair: Isabelle Puaut (University of Rennes/IRISA, France)

RTNS 2006: Poitiers (France), PC chair: Guy Juanole(LAAS, Toulouse, France) and Pascal Richard (LISI, Poitiers, France)

RTS 2005: Paris (France), PC chair: Nicolas Navet (LORIA, Nancy, France)

RTS 2004 : Paris (France),PC chair : Joël Goossens (University of Bruxelles, Belgium)

RTS 2001: Paris (France), PC chair: Zoubir Mammeri (IRIT, UPS Toulouse, France)

RTS 2000: Paris (France), Francis Cottet (LISI, ENSMA, Poitiers)

RTS03, RTS02, RTS99, RTS98, RTS97, RTS96, RTS95, RTS94, RTS93: no official website

RTNS2017 > Accepted papers

Accepted papers

Leonie Ahrendts, Sophie Quinton and Rolf Ernst. Finite Ready Queues As a Mean for Overload Reduction in Weakly-Hard Real-Time Systemsfunctional availablereplicated artifact

Hector Joao Rivera Verduzco and Reinder J. Bril. Best-case response times of real-time tasks under fixed-priority scheduling with preemption thresholds

Catherine Nemitz, Tanya Amert and Jim Anderson. Real-Time Multiprocessor Locks with Nesting: Optimizing the Common Case

Sébastien Martinez, Damien Hardy and Isabelle Puaut. Quantifying WCET reduction of parallel applications by introducing slack time to limit resource contention

Florian Greff, Ye-Qiong Song, Laurent Ciarletta and Arnaud Samama. On Combining Source and Destination-Tag Routing to Handle Fault Tolerance in Software-Defined Real-Time Mesh Networks

Andreas Sailer, Michael Deubzer, Gerald Luettgen and Juergen Prof. Dr. Mottok. Comparing Trace Recordings of Automotive Real-time Software

Florian Pölzlbauer, Robert Davis and Iain Bate. Analysis and Optimization of Message Acceptance Filter Configurations for Controller Area Network (CAN)

Alexandre Honorat, Hai Nam Tran, Loïc Besnard, Thierry Gautier, Jean-Pierre Talpin and Adnan Bouakaz. Introducing ADFG: a scheduling synthesis tool for dataflow graphs in real-time systemsreusable availablereplicated artifact

Micaiah Chisholm, Namhoon Kim, Stephen Tang, Nathan Otterness, James Anderson, F. Donelson Smith and Donald Porter. Supporting Mode Changes while Providing Hardware Isolation in Mixed-Criticality Multicore Systems

Zhenkai Zhang, Zhishan Guo and Xenofon Koutsoukos. Handling Write Backs in Multi-Level Cache Analysis for WCET Estimation

Nicola Capodieci, Roberto Cavicchioli, Paolo Valente and Marko Bertogna. SiGAMMA: Server based integrated GPU Arbitration Mechanism for Memory Accesses

Sanjoy Baruah. An enhanced scheduler for MC2

Sanjoy Baruah, Vincenzo Bonifaci, Alberto Marchetti-Spaccamela and Victor Verdugo. A scheduling model inspired by control theory

Georg von der Brüggen, Niklas Ueter, Jian-Jia Chen and Matthias Freier. Parametric Utilization Bounds for Implicit-Deadline Periodic Tasks in Automotive Systems

Manohar Vanga, Andrea Bastoni, Henrik Theiling and Björn B. Brandenburg. Supporting Low-Latency, Low-Criticality Tasks in a Certified Mixed-Criticality OS

David Griffin, Benjamin Lesage, Iain Bate, Frank Soboczenski and Robert Davis. Forecast-Based Interference: Modelling Multicore Interference from Observable Factors

Dorin Maxim, Robert Davis, Liliana Cucu-Grosjean and Arvind Easwaran. Probabilistic Analysis for Mixed Criticality Systems using Fixed Priority Preemptive Scheduling

Mauro Leoncini, Manuela Montangero and Paolo Valente. A Branch-and-Bound Algorithm to Compute a Tighter Bound to Tardiness for Preemptive Global EDF Scheduler

Behnaz Pourmohseni, Stefan Wildermann, Michael Glaß and Jürgen Teich. Predictable Run-Time Mapping Reconfiguration for Real-Time Applications on Many-Core Systems

Tobias Sehnke, Dieter Schwarzmann, Matthias Schultalbers and Rolf Ernst. Temporal Properties in Automotive Control Software

Houssam Eddine Zahaf, Giuseppe Lipari and Luca Abeni. Migrate when necessary: toward partitioned reclaiming for soft real-time tasksfunctional available artifact

Guillaume Brau, Nicolas Navet and Jérôme Hugues. Heterogeneous models and analyses in the design of real-time embedded systems - an avionic case study

Mahmoud Shirazi, Mehdi Kargahi and Lothar Thiele. Resilient Scheduling of Energy-Variable Weakly-Hard Real-Time Systems

Dorin Maxim and Ye-Qiong Song. Delay Analysis of AVB trafic in Time-Sensitive Networks (TSN)functional available artifact

Voica Gavrilut, Bahram Zarrin, Paul Pop and Soheil Samii. Fault-Tolerant Topology and Routing Synthesis for IEEE Time-Sensitive Networking functional replicated

Daniel Casini, Luca Abeni, Alessandro Biondi, Tommaso Cucinotta and Giorgio Buttazzo. Constant Bandwidth Servers with Constrained Deadlinesreusable availablereplicated artifact

Anh Toan Bui Long, Yassine Ouhammou, Emmanuel Grolleau, Loïc Fejoz and Laurent Rioux. Bridging the gap between practical cases and temporal performance analysis: a models repository-based approach

Georg von der Brüggen, Jian-Jia Chen, Wen-Hung Kevin Huang and Maolin Yang. Release Enforcement in Resource-Oriented Partitioned Scheduling for Multiprocessor Systems

José Fonseca, Geoffrey Nelissen and Vincent Nélis. Improved Response Time Analysis of Sporadic DAG Tasks for Global FP Scheduling

Eike Schweissguth, Peter Danielis, Dirk Timmermann, Helge Parzyjegla and Gero Muehl. ILP-based Joint Routing and Scheduling for Time-Triggered Networks

Verimag Université Grenoble Alpes INP Grenoble  INRIA Grenoble Persyval CNRS Metro
Legal information