The invention relates to an arrangement for connecting various integrated circuits (IC) in an automotive control system wherein at least two integrated circuits are connected by a bus.
The invention relates also to a method of performing data exchange between various integrated circuits (IC) in an automotive control system wherein the data are exchanged by a bus.
The term automotive in this application shall mean all applications for commercial and non-commercial automotive, drones, robotics or industrial automation.
Increasing number of automakers are moving towards more powerful System on Chips (SoCs) to accommodate a large amount of raw data that sensors produce to achieve safe driving condition when vehicle is autonomously driving. In such mode of operation, safety is of paramount importance. Therefore, electronic components requirements are moving from AECQ100 only to more and more Automotive Signal Integrity Level (ASIL). ASIL is a risk classification scheme defined by the Functional Safety for Road Vehicles standard. This classification helps defining the safety requirements necessary to be in line with the standard. The ASIL is established by performing a risk analysis of a potential hazard by looking at the Severity, Exposure and Controllability of the vehicle operating scenario. The safety goal for that hazard in turn carries the ASIL requirements.
There are four ASILs identified by the standard: ASIL A, ASIL B, ASIL C, ASIL D. ASIL D dictates the highest integrity requirements on the product and ASIL A the lowest.
For example, even for infotainment systems electronics, the trend is to achieve minimum of ASIL-B compliance whereas in the past only AECQ100 would suffice. For ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance System) systems, the trend is towards ASIL C/D at a system/module level. Therefore, increasing number of integrated circuits (ICs) are required to be ASIL C/D compliant.
The object of the invention is to enable ASIL C/D system coverage and to tie various ICs (clocks, regulators, memory interfaces, sensor signal conditioners, power management ICs etc.)
The object is achieved by an arrangement for connecting various integrated circuits in an automotive control system wherein at least two integrated circuits are connected by a bus being ASIL C/D compliant and forming a common bus protocol to exchange information among the integrated circuits. The bus is at least provided with the following features:
Claims 2 to 7 relate to further embodiments of the invention.
The object of the invention is also solved by a method of performing data exchange between various integrated circuits in an automotive control system wherein the data are exchanged by a bus being ASIL C/D compliant and forming a common protocol to exchange information among the integrated circuits. The method is comprising the following steps:
The technical functions of these steps have already been described in connection with the corresponding features of the arrangement.
Claims 7 to 9 show various configurations of the method.
The invention will now be explained in more detail with an example. In the corresponding drawings
In the following the bus 1 is named ASILBUS 1 to demonstrate, that with die inventive configuration of the ASILBUS an ASIL-C compliance is achieved. The ASILBUS 1 is a single wire interface bus.
The arrangement of
Further are shown in
The PMIC 3 is depending on external components such as, but not limited to, clocks, LDOs, memory devices 11, power stages such as DPUs 4 to ensure power delivery to SoC 2 is safe, as shown in
By the use of the ASILBUS 1 after setting the frequency of operation it is arbitrated that the DPUs 4 play the slave role and the PMIC 3 plays the master role.
According to the present invention, the data integrity check between PMIC 3 (P860x) and DPU 4 (P861x) is based on implementing both spatial (CRC) and temporal (Frame repetition) redundant check. 3-bit CRC is generated by each data sender during their allocated time slot. Failures data information are validated in case of two consecutives data
According to a broadcast inquire the PMIC 3 (master) periodically gathers failures data information (e.g. 5-bit data) by each DPU 4 (slave). Each DPU 4 generates this failure field information including failure flags related to (1) junction temperature, (2) over current, (3) over voltage, (4) silicon failure, (5) warning alarm. Each DPU 4 appends 3-bit CRC field for protecting the data field against systematic or random failures. The allocation of the answering time slots is based on the address of the DPU 4 as determined during the power on phase by the value of a pull-down resistor connected to each DPU 4.
Data encoding mechanism is a single wire Pulse Width Modulation (PWM). Therefore the stuck at mechanism is based on counting the rising or falling edges. These are independent by the data fields contents and must be equal to the length of the overall data transaction. Any discrepancy to the rule is determined by a physical stuck-at at system level or by a logical one at the level of the DPUs 4 (slave).
DPUs 4 use local clock timing. This cannot be thoroughly monitored by any timing measurement of the ASILBUS 1 transaction because of the too short time. However, by implementing a TBD bit counter into DPU 4 it is possible to install a remote clock timing check by few ASILBUS 1 commands (i.e. (1) counter stop, (2) counter run, (3) counter reset). This allows very precise long term timing measurements driven by PMIC 3.
The regular and periodic gathering of DPU 4 temperatures allows collecting the precise temperature information about the neighbor surrounding discrete components which directly exposed to the junction temperature effect. This allows to maintain updated the actual temperature profile of the application and comparing it against the assumed one. In case of negative discrepancies, this information allows to plan and execute those required maintenance strategies (e.g. replacement of the sub-system with a new one).
As further shown in
1 bus, ASILBUS
2 automotive SoC
3 PMIC
4 DPU
5 Re-Regulator
6 LDO
7 Non-Power Products
8 Microcontroller
9 Power Rail
10 Device
11 Memory
The present application claims priority to International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2018/065905 entitled “ARRANGEMENT AND METHOD FOR CONNECTING VARIOUS INTEGRATED CIRCUITS IN AN AUTOMOTIVE CONTROL SYSTEM,” filed 14 Jun. 2018, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/519,744 entitled “ASILBUS Implementation,” filed 14 Jun. 2017, all of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/065905 | 6/14/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2018/229238 | 12/20/2018 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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10800449 | Bernon-Enjalbert | Oct 2020 | B2 |
20030050735 | Griffis | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20140281753 | Wagh | Sep 2014 | A1 |
20150280904 | Tang | Oct 2015 | A1 |
20180137596 | Chenu | May 2018 | A1 |
20190039644 | Bernon-Enjalbert | Feb 2019 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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102016102259 | Aug 2017 | DE |
WO-2017137222 | Aug 2017 | WO |
Entry |
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Hamperl, “Technical Specification: SafeSPI—Serial Peripheral Interface for Automotive Safety, Rev. 1.0,” Jun. 3, 2016, pp. 1-21. |
Industrial Communication Networks—Profiles—Part 3: Functional Safety Fieldbuses—General Rules and Profile Definitions, IEC 61784-3:2016, IEC, 3, Rue De Varembé, PO Box 131, CH-1211 Geneva 20, Switzerland, May 13, 2016 pp. 1-84. |
Notification Concerning Transmittal of International Preliminary Report on Patentability from PCT/EP2018/065905, dated Dec. 26, 2019, pp. 1-10. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20200127872 A1 | Apr 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62519744 | Jun 2017 | US |