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THPHA152 |
Renovation and Extension of Supervision Software Leveraging Reactive Streams |
1753 |
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- M.A. Galilée, A. Calia, J.Q.C. Do, K. Fuchsberger, J.C. Garnier, K.H. Krol, M. Osinski, M.P. Pocwierz, T.M. Ribeiro, A. Stanisz, M. Zerlauth
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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Inspired by the recent developments of reactive programming and the ubiquity of the concept of streams in modern software industry, we assess the relevance of a reactive streams solution in the context of accelerator controls. The promise of reactive streams, to govern the exchange of data across asynchronous boundaries at a rate sustainable for both the sender and the receiver, is alluring to most data-centric processes of CERN's accelerators. Taking advantage of the renovation of one key software piece of our supervision layer, the Beam Interlock System GUI, we look at the architecture, design and implementation of a reactive streams based solution. Additionally, we see how this model allows us to re-use components and contributes naturally to the extension of our tool set. Lastly, we detail what hindered our progression and how our solution can be taken further.
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Poster THPHA152 [0.879 MB]
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2017-THPHA152
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THPHA153 |
Real-Time Java to Support the Device Property Model |
1757 |
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- C. Cardin, M.A. Galilée, J.C. Garnier, K.H. Krol, M. Osinski, A. Stanisz, M. Zerlauth
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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Today's front-end controllers, which are widely used in CERNs controls environment, feature CPUs with high clock frequencies and extensive memory storage. Their specifications are comparable to low-end servers, or even smartphones. The Java Virtual Machine (JVM) has been running on similar configurations for years now and it seems natural to evaluate the behaviour of JVMs on this environment to characterize if Firm or Soft real-time constraints can be addressed efficiently. Using Java at this low-level offers the opportunity to refactor CERNs current implementation of the device/property model and to move away from a monolithic architecture to a promising and scalable separation of the area of concerns, where the front-end may publish raw data that other layers would decode and re-publish. This paper presents first the evaluation of Machine Protection control system requirements in terms of real-time constraints and a comparison of the performance of different JVMs regarding these constraints. In a second part, it will detail the efforts towards a first prototype of a minimal RT Java supervision layer to provide access to the hardware layer.
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2017-THPHA153
|
|
Export • |
reference for this paper using
※ BibTeX,
※ LaTeX,
※ Text/Word,
※ RIS,
※ EndNote (xml)
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