Real Time Systems Design And Analysis

Chapter 1 - Basic Real-Time Concepts


Consider a system in which data need to be processed at a regular and timely rate.
For example, an aircraft uses a sequence of accelerometer pulses to determine its
position. In addition, systems other than aeronautic ones require a rapid response
to events that occur at nonregular rates, such as an overtemperature failure in
a nuclear plant. In some sense it is understood that these events require real-time
processing.

Now consider a situation in which a passenger approaches an airline reservation
counter to pick up his ticket for a certain flight from New York to Boston, which
is leaving in 5 minutes. The reservation clerk enters the appropriate information
into the computer and a few seconds later a boarding pass is generated. Is this a
real-time system?

Indeed, all three systems – aircraft, nuclear plant, and airline reservations – are
real-time because they must process information within a specified interval or risk
system failure. Although these examples provide an intuitive definition of a realtime
system, it is necessary to clearly define when a system is real-time and
when it is not. This chapter answers the preceding questions, defines a number
of terms, and introduces issues that are examined further later.

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