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Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA) Trends and Challenges

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Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA) Trends and Challenges Eric E. Retko Sr. Staff Engineer, Smiths Aerospace Company/Consultant DER eric_at_der-faa.com – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA) Trends and Challenges


1
Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA) Trends and
Challenges
  • Eric E. Retko
  • Sr. Staff Engineer, Smiths Aerospace
    Company/Consultant DER
  • eric_at_der-faa.com

2
Topical Outline
  • What is IMA per RTCA SC-200 def ?
  • What are some of the Challenges?
  • Where is IMA heading ?
  • What is needed to support the future of IMA?
  • Open Discussion / Q A

3
RTCA SC-200 Document DO-IMA draft in work
  • Integrated Modular Avionics defined
  • IMA is a shared set of flexible, reusable, and
    interoperable hardware and software resources
    that, when integrated, form a platform that
    provides services, designed and verified to a
    defined set of safety and performance
    requirements, to host applications performing
    aircraft functions.
  • Six tasks define the incremental acceptance of
    IMA systems in the certification process
  • Task 1 Module acceptance
  • Task 2 Application software/hardware acceptance
  • Task 3 IMA system acceptance
  • Task 4 Aircraft integration of IMA system -
    including Validation and Verification (VV)
  • Task 5 Change of modules or applications
  • Task 6 Reuse of modules or applications
  • Approval of an IMA system installation may be
    based on the accumulation of incremental
    acceptance, culminating in the complete design
    assurance needed to demonstrate that the
    installed system and functions comply with the
    applicable regulations and guidance

4
RTCA SC-200 Output
  • Significant to the IMA community, Why?
  • Portable and recognized certification credit for
    module and application acceptance letters for
    HW, SW or both.
  • The continued support of Industry and
    Certification authorities is needed to complete
    the final issuance of this document and its
    recognition as an acceptable means via an FAA AC
    and the EASA equivalent.

5
IMA A word about the Challenges
  • Maybe this topic was chosen because its easier
    to talk about what not to do !
  • Disclaimer Any examples, especially bad ones,
    are fictitious, even if it sounds real and you
    think you know who did it !
  • Some examples or themes
  • How to do a preliminary safety analysis PSSA or
    FHA without specific function (unallocated IMA
    platform) FHA without the F
  • Outdated specs, processes and methods
  • Outdated/lagging guidance and regulations
  • Lagging open standards
  • FAA acceptance of new standards, technology and
    methodology
  • FAA coordination too early, too late, not enough

6
Challenge The Resource Allocation Process-
Getting it right
  • Who and What will host on the system and who make
    the trades for hosted vs. non hosted
    applications?
  • What SW and HW criticality levels will be
    supported ?
  • Estimates of computing horsepower, MIPs, and
    memory requirements, SLOC estimates, WCETs.
  • Computing throughput benchmarking This always
    stirs debate
  • Network bandwidth, control loop times, latency
    bounds, jitter
  • I/O types and quantities to support new and
    legacy equipment
  • Redundancy, separation, and availability
    requirements (multiple HW/SW copies and data
    paths)
  • Which federated LRUs will hitchhike on the IMA
    data bus?
  • Who will manage the ICD and how does the
    information flow into the Requirements Capture
    and VV process?
  • Compounding margins issue (padded resource
    estimates)
  • Get realistic estimates and revise them often as
    program design progresses
  • A scalable architecture provides a less painful
    out if initial requirements estimates prove to be
    off

7
Challenges Convincing Suppliers to Host on the
IMA Platformvs. Federated System
  • Early IMA programs suffered from a tendency for
    hosted function vendors to quote similar system
    price (or more) for a system without his
    traditional black box.
  • Trade studies (and encouragement) needs to be
    applied at the Aircraft level.

8
Challenges Overcoming the Black Box Mentality
  • As suppliers move up the value chain and become
    responsible for system level and aircraft level
    integration, a tendency toward their old black
    box mentality may exist. The result can be to
    not optimize the system in a manner that
    considers the big picture, keep doing things the
    way we always have, or worse yet assuming that
    the integrator must be doing that.
  • A strong system engineering group and
    knowledgeable DERs with heavily front loaded
    involvement is the best mitigation. Systems
    engineering should guide the HW,SW, and systems
    processes, allocate requirements, and determine
    optimum aircraft level solutions.

9
Challenge The Requirements Capture Process-
Getting it right
  • Have a system for requirements flow between
    platform partners and hosted functions
  • Establish requirements that are traceable,
    verifiable, testable, unambiguous, and of course
    correct.

10
FAA/DER Challenges
  • How to manage and provide adequate FAA/ DER
    oversight of the complex and many tiered
    Partnering arrangements and the flow down of
    responsibilities and certification support.
  • Coordinating multiple vendor cert engineers
    across varying locations and ACOs.

11
Challenges COTS Hardware
  • Bottoms up technology flow means Consumer goods
    such as PCs, games and cell phones drive COTs
    component evolution, making vendors less
    responsive to Aerospace Specific safety driven
    demands
  • Limited or no availability of development data to
    support a DO-254 Design Assurance approach
  • DO-178B testing combined with other VV has
    historically been used to exercise and certify
    the COTs system components
  • Change Control and notification difficult to
    negotiate
  • Field service history often limited to internal
    company data
  • Limited sharing of failure data, PRs, errata, etc
  • Need better information database collection and
    sharing via Industry groups RTCA, SAE, or Cert
    authorities. ( AVSI, Stack International have
    made some progress)

12
Challenge HW Component Obsolescence
  • Obsolescence Management Issues
  • Demand for latest and greatest performance
    compete against obsolescence and accumulated
    service experience
  • Solutions
  • Lifetime or lastime buys
  • Planned technology insertion points, CPU and
    memory upgrades w/ backward compatibility to the
    applications
  • Minimize future compatibility risk by avoiding
    use of special instructions etc. to insure
    backward compatibility to the applications
  • Have a strategy in place for the identification
    and mitigation of the effects of obsolescence.

13
Other Misc Challenge Areas
  • Test Platforms and SW Development Environments
  • Reuse and Cost Of Change
  • Distributed V and V
  • PR Consolidation across companies
  • Platform and HW/SW Config mgmt and compatibility
    checking
  • Configuration Tools
  • BITE
  • Intermixing of HW/SW criticalities on data busses
    or in cabinets. Examples
  • Hardware VL protection on AFDX
  • Protecting the shared cabinet resources from Low
    Integrity hosted hardware modules

14
Misc Challenges cont.
  • Independent and concurrent development of
    platforms and hosted applications
  • Legacy SW hosting
  • Platform and OS Support of multiple programming
    languages
  • Coding standards alignment
  • Incremental qualification of the platform and
    applications
  • Artifacts flow to suppliers and Support of hosted
    TSOs
  • Environmental qual of hosted TSOs
  • Protection of proprietary data and IP while
    sharing responsibilities

15
Challenges The Tears of Integration
  • Configuration Tools
  • Dispatch and redundancy issues
  • Support of hosted function issues
  • Health Management and Fault Consolidation

16
Roles and Responsibilities
  • Each program has unique arrangements
  • Extremes of IMA supplier roles
  • One or two suppliers writing the software and
    providing all the hardware
  • Many suppliers writing SW and multiple vendors
    providing hardware
  • Integration responsibilities may be shared
  • Regardless of arrangements, usually the Aircraft
    integrator is ultimately responsible, especially
    in the eyes of the Cert Authorities

17
IMA Roles and Responsibilities
18
Challenges Multiple Tiers of Suppliers
  • Multiple Companies
  • Subs, Subs of subs, and so on
  • Multiple DERs
  • Multiple ACOs
  • Global partners
  • EASA involvement
  • Be prepared for unique partnering arrangements !

19
IMA Programs Can Make for Strange Bedfellows
  • May be Partners on one program while competing on
    another
  • Protecting data rights while sharing openly
  • Be nice to your partners and competition, who
    knows what the next program will bring!

20
Challenge Network Security Considerations
  • Network security considerations played a
    relatively minor role in the certification of
    federated systems because of the isolation,
    protection mechanisms and limited connectivity
    between these networks.
  • IMA systems trending to greater interconnectivity
    between secure and open networks. Examples
  • Maintenance data
  • Data load
  • Solutions
  • Level A firewalls, ground only maintenance
    interlocks, or other methods.

21
The Fears of Integrationreduced independence
reduced diversity. unintended coupling..
  • On August 14, 2003, large portions of the Midwest
    and Northeast United States and Ontario, Canada,
    experienced an electric power blackout. The
    outage affected an area with an estimated 50
    million people and 61,800 megawatts (MW) of
    electric load in the states of Ohio, Michigan,
    Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, Massachusetts,
    Connecticut, New Jersey and the Canadian province
    of Ontario. The blackout began a few minutes
    after 400 pm Eastern Daylight Time (1600 EDT),
    and power was not restored for 4 days in some
    parts of the United States. Parts of Ontario
    suffered rolling blackouts for more than a week
    before full power was restored.
  • A lesson from another industry protect yourself
    from the other guys anomalous behavior and look
    well beyond the obvious for common mode/common
    cause sources.

22
IMA Has Become More Than Modules in a Rack!
  • Cabinets
  • Power supplies
  • General Processing Modules
  • I/O modules
  • NICS
  • Switches
  • Graphics cards
  • Data storage
  • Fiber/copper translators
  • Application Specific Modules

23
IMA Systems May Include Other LRUs in Addition to
Modules in Multiple Cabinets or Racks
  • Remote data concentrators (RDCs)
  • Remote network switches
  • RPDUs, SPDAs
  • Other LRUs that may provide generic or specific
    aircraft functions that share the network
    backplane power, or other resources
  • Federated LRUs may share the same network
  • Thus flexibility is required in bounding the IMA
    system

24
Major Contributions in IMA Evolution to Date
  • EMB-170/Cessna/Falcon Primus EPIC, Honeywell
  • B777 AIMS, Honeywell
  • C-130 AMP, Smiths
  • B767 Tanker, Smiths
  • A380, Airbus/Thales
  • B787, CCS Smiths
  • Others

25
Enablers Why we are here? Moores Law (MIPS
Doubles 18-24 months)
26
The IMA ENABLERS
  • Microprocessor evolution -CPUs
  • Open Architectures
  • Commercial partitioned RTOs
  • APIs such as AE653
  • Data Bus Bandwidths

27
IMA Enablers Open Architecture
  • Real Time Operating Systems (RTOS)
  • The availability of AE653 API based COTs RTOs is
    a large contributor.
  • The partitioned OS allows for hosting of
    unrelated functions without unintended coupling.

28
Enablers TSO-C153
  • Allows for individual module credit only, but not
    for module to module or platform integration or
    for the integrated HW/OS.
  • Perhaps a future TSO-C153 revision or a new TSO
    could allow for approval of a Hosted application
    ready IMA system that includes the OS.

29
Enablers Data Bus Advances are Key to IMA
Present and Future
  • MIL STD 1553
  • ARINC 429
  • ARINC 629
  • Firewire 1394b
  • CAN
  • TTP
  • Ethernet
  • ASCB ERJ-170
  • AFDX---A380 , B787
  • Fibre Channel 2Gbit -- F18, F35, C-130 AMP
  • Safebus -----777
  • Fiber optic continues to replace copper due to
    its bandwidth and EME tolerance in many cases

30
IMA Seems to Attract Significant Attention From
the Cert Authorities
  • Good News The cert authorities tend to task
    their A team with IMA programs
  • Bad News The cert authorities tend to task their
    A team with IMA programs
  • So.Be prepared to use their help and keep them
    well informed !

31
HW and Systems Design Assurance.
  • DO254 finally officially recognized in AC20-152
    !!!
  • ARP4761/4754 update in progress S-18Airplane
    Safety Assessment Committee
  • The term Level A HW is based on context of the
    above
  • For level A systems
  • The entire HW and System development process
    should be be structured, not just the
    CEH/ASIC/PLD. If not following DO-254, then there
    should be acceptable company processes in place.

32
FAA Interface Challenges, from the DER perspective
  • Accepting new standards
  • Accepting new methodologies
  • Dealing with the many players and coordinating
    across multiple ACOs
  • Concurrent and incremental acceptance. FAA is
    taking a conservative approach for now that tends
    to defer any award of TSOs or other equipment
    approvals until near TC or STC award
  • Difficulties delegating more as complexities and
    new technologies are introduced while facing
    internal resource constraints

33
Useful IMA Guidance
  • ARP 4761, Guidelines and Methods for Conducting
    the Safety Assessment Process on Civil Airborne
    Systems and Equipment
  • ARP 4754, Certification Considerations for Highly
    Integrated or Complex Aircraft Systems
  • TSO-C153, Integrated Modular Avionics Hardware
    Elements
  • AC20-145, Guidance For Integrated Modular
    Avionics (IMA) That Implement TSO-C153,
    Authorized Hardware Elements
  • SC-200 RTCA WP400, DO-IMA coming soon
  • AC20-148, Reusable Software Components
  • ARINC 653 Avionics Application Software Standard
    Interface
  • RTCA DO-254, Design Assurance Guidance for
    Airborne Electronic Hardware
  • RTCA DO-178B, Software Considerations in Airborne
    Systems and Equipment Certification

34
Where May IMA Technology Be Heading?
  • More COTs HW modules
  • Closed loop control, FADECS
  • Flight controls
  • Lower cost and more GA and 14 CFR 23 aircraft,
    RPVs
  • HUMS/fatigue monitoring
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Airborne Interconnectivity internet and data
  • More Video processing
  • More non critical functions hosted as cost come
    down
  • More of the connectivity theme
  • Neural networks
  • Adaptive structures
  • Technology may flow both up and down from GA to
    transport

35
Trend may be Towards Distributed IMA
36
Superceding Technologies ??
  • What trends may cause an Integration Reversal?
  • Reduced dependencies on shared cabinet resources,
    ex advances in power conditioning and lower
    wattages reduce the need for cooling provided by
    Cabinet or ECS.
  • Smaller cheaper computing resources and I/O
    devices can be placed closer to the sensors and
    effectors with less urgent need to combine
    functions, lessening zonal hazard exposure
  • Miniature connectors allow for more I/O to
    smaller LRMs
  • Wireless networking
  • CPU cooling and power conditioning improvements
  • Note that the importance of the Network still
    likely prevails
  • Eventually will we see throw away LRMs?
  • Other comments?

37
Open Discussion
  • Open Discussion seeds
  • General QA
  • Where do we go from here?
  • More COTs modules? Standard HW interface?
  • What does industry need from FAA ?
  • What does FAA need from industry ?
  • What will IMA systems look like in 10-15 years?

38
Thanks !
  • Open discussion topics
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