Description

Book Synopsis
It is currently quite easy for students or designers/engineers to find very general books on the various aspects of safety, reliability and dependability of computer system architectures, and partial treatments of the elements that comprise an effective system architecture. It is not so easy to find a single source reference for all these aspects of system design. However, the purpose of this book is to present, in a single volume, a full description of all the constraints (including legal contexts around performance, reliability norms, etc.) and examples of architectures from various fields of application, including: railways, aeronautics, space, automobile and industrial automation.


The content of the book is drawn from the experience of numerous people who are deeply immersed in the design and delivery (from conception to test and validation), safety (analysis of safety: FMEA, HA, etc.) and evaluation of critical systems. The involvement of real world industrial applications is handled in such as a way as to avoid problems of confidentiality, and thus allows for the inclusion of new, useful information (photos, architecture plans/schematics, real examples).



Trade Review
"The text is clearly written, well-illustrated, and includes a helpful glossary." (Booknews, 1 February 2011)

Table of Contents

Introduction xiii

Chapter 1. Principles 1
Jean-Louis BOULANGER

1.1. Introduction 1

1.2. Presentation of the basic concepts: faults, errors and failures 1

1.3. Safe and/or available architecture 7

1.4. Resetting a processing unit 7

1.5. Overview of safety techniques 8

1.6. Conclusion 45

1.7. Bibliography 45

Chapter 2. Railway Safety Architecture 47
Jean-Louis BOULANGER

2.1. Introduction 47

2.2. Coded secure processor 47

2.3. Other applications 53

2.4. Regulatory and normative context 60

2.5. Conclusion 66

2.6. Bibliography 66

Chapter 3. From the Coded Uniprocessor to 2oo3 69
Gilles LEGOFF and Christophe GIRARD

3.1. Introduction 69

3.2. From the uniprocessor to the dual processor with voter 71

3.3. CSD: available safety computer 80

3.4. DIVA evolutions 93

3.5. New needs and possible solutions 99

3.6. Conclusion 101

3.7. Assessment of installations 102

3.8. Bibliography 103

Chapter 4. Designing a Computerized Interlocking Module: a Key Component of Computer-Based Signal Boxes Designed by the SNCF 105
Marc ANTONI

4.1. Introduction 105

4.2. Issues 107

4.3. Railway safety: fundamental notions 116

4.4. Development of the computerized interlocking module 124

4.5. Conclusion 145

4.6. Bibliography 147

Chapter 5. Command Control of Railway Signaling Safety: Safety at Lower Cost 149
Daniel DRAGO

5.1. Introduction 149

5.2. A safety coffee machine 149

5.3. History of the PIPC 150

5.4. The concept basis 155

5.5. Postulates for safety requirements 157

5.6. Description of the PIPC architecture7 159

5.7. Description of availability principles 173

5.8. Software architecture 176

5.9. Protection against causes of common failure 186

5.10. Probabilistic modeling 188

5.11. Summary of safety concepts 194

5.12. Conclusion 197

5.13. Bibliography 198

Chapter 6. Dependable Avionics Architectures: Example of a Fly-by-Wire system 199
Pascal TRAVERSE, Christine BEZARD, Jean-Michel CAMUS, Isabelle LACAZE, Hervé LEBERRE, Patrick RINGEARD and Jean SOUYRIS

6.1. Introduction 199

6.2. System breakdowns due to physical failures 205

6.3. Manufacturing and design errors 215

6.4. Specific risks 223

6.5. Human factors in the development of flight controls 225

6.6. Conclusion 229

6.7. Bibliography 229

Chapter 7. Space Applications 233
Jean-Paul BLANQUART and Philippe MIRAMONT

7.1. Introduction 233

7.2. Space system 233

7.3. Context and statutory obligation 237

7.4. Specific needs 243

7.5. Launchers: the Ariane 5 example 252

7.6. Satellite architecture 281

7.7. Orbital transport: ATV example 292

7.8. Summary and conclusions 302

7.9. Bibliography 304

Chapter 8. Methods and Calculations Relative to “Safety Instrumented Systems” at TOTAL 307
Yassine CHAABI and Jean-Pierre SIGNORET

8.1. Introduction 307

8.2. Specific problems to be taken into account 308

8.3. Example 1: system in 2/3 modeled by fault trees 322

8.4. Example 2: 2/3 system modeled by the stochastic Petri net 328

8.5. Other considerations regarding HIPS 333

8.6. Conclusion 342

8.7. Bibliography 343

Chapter 9. Securing Automobile Architectures 345
David LIAIGRE

9.1. Context 345

9.2. More environmentally-friendly vehicles involving more embedded electronics 347

9.3. Mastering the complexity of electronic systems 348

9.4. Security concepts in the automotive field 350

9.5. Which security concepts for which security levels of the ISO 26262 standard? 364

9.6. Conclusion 376

9.7. Bibliography 377

Chapter 10. SIS in Industry 379
Grégory BUCHHEIT and Olaf MALASSE

10.1. Introduction 379

10.2. Safety loop structure 384

10.3. Constraints and requirements of the application 407

10.4. Analysis of a safety loop 413

10.5. Conclusion 423

10.6. Bibliography 424

Chapter 11. A High-Availability Safety Computer 425
Sylvain BARO

11.1. Introduction 425

11.2. Safety computer 426

11.3. Applicative redundancy 433

11.4. Integrated redundancy 433

11.5. Conclusion 443

11.6. Bibliography 446

Chapter 12. Safety System for the Protection of Personnel in the CERN Large Hadron Collider 447
Pierre NININ, Silvia GRAU, Tomasz LADZINSKI and Francesco VALENTINI

12.1. Introduction 447

12.2. LACS 450

12.3. LASS 452

12.4. Functional safety methodology 459

12.5. Test strategy 466

12.6. Feedback 472

12.7. Conclusions 473

12.8. Bibliography 474

Glossary 477

List of Authors 485

Index 487

Safety of Computer Architectures

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    A Hardback by Jean-Louis Boulanger

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      View other formats and editions of Safety of Computer Architectures by Jean-Louis Boulanger

      Publisher: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 16/07/2010
      ISBN13: 9781848211971, 978-1848211971
      ISBN10: 184821197X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      It is currently quite easy for students or designers/engineers to find very general books on the various aspects of safety, reliability and dependability of computer system architectures, and partial treatments of the elements that comprise an effective system architecture. It is not so easy to find a single source reference for all these aspects of system design. However, the purpose of this book is to present, in a single volume, a full description of all the constraints (including legal contexts around performance, reliability norms, etc.) and examples of architectures from various fields of application, including: railways, aeronautics, space, automobile and industrial automation.


      The content of the book is drawn from the experience of numerous people who are deeply immersed in the design and delivery (from conception to test and validation), safety (analysis of safety: FMEA, HA, etc.) and evaluation of critical systems. The involvement of real world industrial applications is handled in such as a way as to avoid problems of confidentiality, and thus allows for the inclusion of new, useful information (photos, architecture plans/schematics, real examples).



      Trade Review
      "The text is clearly written, well-illustrated, and includes a helpful glossary." (Booknews, 1 February 2011)

      Table of Contents

      Introduction xiii

      Chapter 1. Principles 1
      Jean-Louis BOULANGER

      1.1. Introduction 1

      1.2. Presentation of the basic concepts: faults, errors and failures 1

      1.3. Safe and/or available architecture 7

      1.4. Resetting a processing unit 7

      1.5. Overview of safety techniques 8

      1.6. Conclusion 45

      1.7. Bibliography 45

      Chapter 2. Railway Safety Architecture 47
      Jean-Louis BOULANGER

      2.1. Introduction 47

      2.2. Coded secure processor 47

      2.3. Other applications 53

      2.4. Regulatory and normative context 60

      2.5. Conclusion 66

      2.6. Bibliography 66

      Chapter 3. From the Coded Uniprocessor to 2oo3 69
      Gilles LEGOFF and Christophe GIRARD

      3.1. Introduction 69

      3.2. From the uniprocessor to the dual processor with voter 71

      3.3. CSD: available safety computer 80

      3.4. DIVA evolutions 93

      3.5. New needs and possible solutions 99

      3.6. Conclusion 101

      3.7. Assessment of installations 102

      3.8. Bibliography 103

      Chapter 4. Designing a Computerized Interlocking Module: a Key Component of Computer-Based Signal Boxes Designed by the SNCF 105
      Marc ANTONI

      4.1. Introduction 105

      4.2. Issues 107

      4.3. Railway safety: fundamental notions 116

      4.4. Development of the computerized interlocking module 124

      4.5. Conclusion 145

      4.6. Bibliography 147

      Chapter 5. Command Control of Railway Signaling Safety: Safety at Lower Cost 149
      Daniel DRAGO

      5.1. Introduction 149

      5.2. A safety coffee machine 149

      5.3. History of the PIPC 150

      5.4. The concept basis 155

      5.5. Postulates for safety requirements 157

      5.6. Description of the PIPC architecture7 159

      5.7. Description of availability principles 173

      5.8. Software architecture 176

      5.9. Protection against causes of common failure 186

      5.10. Probabilistic modeling 188

      5.11. Summary of safety concepts 194

      5.12. Conclusion 197

      5.13. Bibliography 198

      Chapter 6. Dependable Avionics Architectures: Example of a Fly-by-Wire system 199
      Pascal TRAVERSE, Christine BEZARD, Jean-Michel CAMUS, Isabelle LACAZE, Hervé LEBERRE, Patrick RINGEARD and Jean SOUYRIS

      6.1. Introduction 199

      6.2. System breakdowns due to physical failures 205

      6.3. Manufacturing and design errors 215

      6.4. Specific risks 223

      6.5. Human factors in the development of flight controls 225

      6.6. Conclusion 229

      6.7. Bibliography 229

      Chapter 7. Space Applications 233
      Jean-Paul BLANQUART and Philippe MIRAMONT

      7.1. Introduction 233

      7.2. Space system 233

      7.3. Context and statutory obligation 237

      7.4. Specific needs 243

      7.5. Launchers: the Ariane 5 example 252

      7.6. Satellite architecture 281

      7.7. Orbital transport: ATV example 292

      7.8. Summary and conclusions 302

      7.9. Bibliography 304

      Chapter 8. Methods and Calculations Relative to “Safety Instrumented Systems” at TOTAL 307
      Yassine CHAABI and Jean-Pierre SIGNORET

      8.1. Introduction 307

      8.2. Specific problems to be taken into account 308

      8.3. Example 1: system in 2/3 modeled by fault trees 322

      8.4. Example 2: 2/3 system modeled by the stochastic Petri net 328

      8.5. Other considerations regarding HIPS 333

      8.6. Conclusion 342

      8.7. Bibliography 343

      Chapter 9. Securing Automobile Architectures 345
      David LIAIGRE

      9.1. Context 345

      9.2. More environmentally-friendly vehicles involving more embedded electronics 347

      9.3. Mastering the complexity of electronic systems 348

      9.4. Security concepts in the automotive field 350

      9.5. Which security concepts for which security levels of the ISO 26262 standard? 364

      9.6. Conclusion 376

      9.7. Bibliography 377

      Chapter 10. SIS in Industry 379
      Grégory BUCHHEIT and Olaf MALASSE

      10.1. Introduction 379

      10.2. Safety loop structure 384

      10.3. Constraints and requirements of the application 407

      10.4. Analysis of a safety loop 413

      10.5. Conclusion 423

      10.6. Bibliography 424

      Chapter 11. A High-Availability Safety Computer 425
      Sylvain BARO

      11.1. Introduction 425

      11.2. Safety computer 426

      11.3. Applicative redundancy 433

      11.4. Integrated redundancy 433

      11.5. Conclusion 443

      11.6. Bibliography 446

      Chapter 12. Safety System for the Protection of Personnel in the CERN Large Hadron Collider 447
      Pierre NININ, Silvia GRAU, Tomasz LADZINSKI and Francesco VALENTINI

      12.1. Introduction 447

      12.2. LACS 450

      12.3. LASS 452

      12.4. Functional safety methodology 459

      12.5. Test strategy 466

      12.6. Feedback 472

      12.7. Conclusions 473

      12.8. Bibliography 474

      Glossary 477

      List of Authors 485

      Index 487

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