14 results on '"distributed computer control systems"'
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2. A Database-Centric Framework for the Modeling, Simulation, and Control of Cyber-Physical Systems in the Factory of the Future
- Author
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Bonci Andrea, Pirani Massimiliano, and Longhi Sauro
- Subjects
database management systems ,distributed computer control systems ,embedded systems ,industry automation ,intelligent manufacturing systems ,simulators ,68 ,93 ,94 ,Science ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Abstract
The factory of the future scenario asks for new approaches to cope with the incoming challenges and complexity of cyber-physical systems. The role of database management systems is becoming central for control and automation technology in this new industrial scenario. This article proposes database-centric technology and architecture that aims to seamlessly integrate networking, artificial intelligence, and real-time control issues into a unified model of computing. The proposed methodology is also viable for the development of a framework that features simulation and rapid prototyping tools for smart and advanced industrial automation. The full expression of the potentialities in the presented approach is expected in particular for applications where tiny and distributed embedded devices collaborate to a shared computing task of relevant complexity.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A Database-Centric Framework for the Modeling, Simulation, and Control of Cyber-Physical Systems in the Factory of the Future
- Author
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Massimiliano Pirani, Andrea Bonci, and Sauro Longhi
- Subjects
industry automation ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,database management systems ,Computer science ,simulators ,Science ,Control (management) ,02 engineering and technology ,Modeling and simulation ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Artificial Intelligence ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,Cyber-physical system ,distributed computer control systems ,intelligent manufacturing systems ,QA75.5-76.95 ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,Systems engineering ,Factory (object-oriented programming) ,embedded systems ,Software ,Information Systems - Abstract
The factory of the future scenario asks for new approaches to cope with the incoming challenges and complexity of cyber-physical systems. The role of database management systems is becoming central for control and automation technology in this new industrial scenario. This article proposes database-centric technology and architecture that aims to seamlessly integrate networking, artificial intelligence, and real-time control issues into a unified model of computing. The proposed methodology is also viable for the development of a framework that features simulation and rapid prototyping tools for smart and advanced industrial automation. The full expression of the potentialities in the presented approach is expected in particular for applications where tiny and distributed embedded devices collaborate to a shared computing task of relevant complexity.
- Published
- 2018
4. Building complex remote learning laboratories.
- Author
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Calvo, I., Marcos, M., Orive, D., and Sarachaga, I.
- Subjects
ENGINEERING education ,TECHNOLOGY education ,LABORATORIES ,INTERNET in education ,HIGH technology & education ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,COMPUTERS ,DISTANCE education ,AUTOMATION - Abstract
The interaction with real plants is a key issue in control engineering education in order to consolidate the concepts learned in the classroom. Unfortunately, for several reasons, real laboratories are not always available. On the other hand, Internet technologies have proved to be mature and reliable, becoming a common alternative in the creation of remote laboratories. However, the use of these technologies in complex remote laboratories is not a trivial task as several requisites must be satisfied simultaneously. This article proposes a methodology that eases the creation of remote laboratories establishing the steps to build up a remote access system. This methodology proposes a set of key components that can be used to define the access to a remote plant from a functional point of view. Some of these components are generic being reusable in most applications whereas others are application specific. In summary, the methodology allows designers to concentrate more on the functionality of the applications than on the technical aspects of the underlying technology. The use of this methodology is illustrated with a relatively complex example: A laboratory manufacturing cell. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Comput Appl Eng Educ 18: 53–66, 2010; Published online in Wiley InterScience (
www.interscience.wiley.com ); DOI 10.1002/cae.20239 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Agent-based distributed architecture for mobile robot control
- Author
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Posadas, J.L., Poza, J.L., Simó, J.E., Benet, G., and Blanes, F.
- Subjects
- *
MOBILE robots , *ARCHITECTURE , *COMMUNICATION , *AUTOMATIC control systems - Abstract
Abstract: Mobile robots are physical agents that move and interact continuously while embedded in a dynamic environment. Communications can be one of the most difficult parts of building robot architecture because of the increasing complexity of sensor and actuator hardware, and the interaction between intelligent features and real-time constraints. Currently, hybrid architectures offer the most widespread solutions for controlling intelligent mobile robots. This paper deals with the communications framework necessary to design and implement these architectures. The main goal of this work 1 [1] This work has been partially funded with Spanish government project DPI2005-09327-C02-01/02. is to design a modular and portable architecture that allows the development of robot control systems. A multi-level and distributed architecture based on the reactive/deliberative paradigm is presented. Its main components are mobile software agents that interact through a distributed blackboard communications framework. These agents can be run on onboard processors, as well as on fixed workstations depending on their real-time restrictions. The presented control architecture has been tested in a real mobile robot and results demonstrate the effectiveness of distributing software agents to guarantee hard real-time execution. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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6. Industrial applications of agent technologies
- Author
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Mařík, Vladimír and Lažanský, Jiří
- Subjects
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PRODUCTION planning , *PRODUCTION scheduling , *INDUSTRIAL supervisors , *INDUSTRIAL management - Abstract
Abstract: This paper is aimed at summarizing the current state-of-the-art in the development of agent-based solutions in three areas connected with industrial production, namely in holonic control, production management and virtual enterprises. This paper shows how the results in these three sub-areas are converging and discusses how the agent-oriented technologies could provide a good background for developing a unifying approach. Two industrial applications of agent-based systems are described in some detail. The paper also presents both the positive and negative aspects of applying agent-based technologies in industry. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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7. A methodology based on distributed object-oriented technologies for providing remote access to industrial plants
- Author
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Calvo, Isidro, Marcos, Marga, Orive, Darío, and Sarachaga, Isabel
- Subjects
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REMOTE access networks , *FACTORIES , *INDUSTRIAL applications , *COMPUTER access control - Abstract
Abstract: Remote access to industrial plants has proven a serious competitive advantage. However, building efficient and safe systems is not a trivial task. It requires the integration of diverse complex technologies at different levels. Even though these technologies are not extended in industrial environments, in the authors’ opinion, they are mature enough to be used in industrial applications. This paper proposes a systematic object-oriented methodology to build applications with remote access to industrial plants through Internet-like networks. The methodology guides the designer regarding key issues, such as security, concurrency, distribution of alarms and monitoring information to different kinds of users. A generic architecture for building remote access applications is proposed. The central components of the architecture are the so-called Application Servers (ASs). Each of them offers services to remote users and directly accesses to specific parts of the physical plants. The proposed methodology suggests the basic structure for these ASs, based on several reusable components, as well as mechanisms to determine the number of ASs required. The instantiation of the generic architecture as well as the stages of the methodology are validated through an industrial case study: a laboratory manufacturing cell. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
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8. Design of robust shipboard power automation systems
- Author
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Zivi, Edwin
- Subjects
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AUTOMATION , *SHIPS , *COMPUTER integrated manufacturing systems , *TECHNICAL specifications - Abstract
Abstract: Emergent power and automation technologies provide new opportunities and challenges for multi-disciplinary ship design. In particular, these dynamically interdependent systems require dependable, fault-tolerant control to efficiently manage limited resources and to respond to casualty conditions. Design of an electric warship engineering and damage control system of systems is considered as an illustrative example. In this context, cost and survivability can be considered as either deterministic or probabilistic independent variables. In the stochastic formulation, design robustness is defined with respect to uncertainties including technology readiness, mission creep, and operational environment. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
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9. Reconfigurable distributed control using smart peripheral elements
- Author
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Benítez-Pérez, H. and García-Nocetti, F.
- Subjects
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CHEMICAL decomposition , *DETECTORS - Abstract
Increasingly, there is a move towards in-built intelligence for sensors and actuators in order to integrate these “smart” peripheral elements as part of a distributed control system. The utilisation of local intelligence to provide local fault detection and fault tolerance allows the incorporation of new variables into the structure of the system. The proposed approach is to integrate this information into the structure of the control law. Thus, the main goal is to integrate a decision-making procedure between peripheral elements and different control strategies. The reconfiguration of the control law, based upon local health measures, is decided by this procedure. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
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10. Communications structure for sensory data in mobile robots
- Author
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Posadas, J.L., Pérez, P., Simó, J.E., Benet, G., and Blanes, F.
- Subjects
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MOBILE robots , *REAL-time control - Abstract
Mobile robotics development provides an excellent opportunity to experiment with various architectural solutions for distributed real-time systems. This is because of the increasing complexity of sensor and actuator hardware, and the interaction between intelligent features and real-time constraints. Currently, hybrid control structures seem to be the most widespread method of control. This paper describes a communications scenario resulting from hybrid structures. The YAIR robot and its communication infrastructure is described by addressing the control problems found and the solutions adopted. This paper presents a case study of implementing a hybrid communications system using the CAN bus. The worst-case message delay analysis for this bus is also presented, as well as the structure of identifiers defining its semantic possibilities. The deliberative part of the communication system is a developed object bus on TCP/IP protocol networks. The programming interface at this level takes the form of a distributed blackboard with extended properties such as a bind-notification mechanism and a temporal register recording the temporal firewall of information supplied. The overlap between both communication systems is a gateway service performing bi-directional mirroring over a set of CAN identifiers. Finally, a system test is presented. The test emphasises the intra-level gateway for validating performance and time expressiveness. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
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11. Verification of distributed control systems in intelligent manufacturing
- Author
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Vyatkin, Valeriy and Hanisch, Hans-Michael
- Published
- 2003
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12. SaBot: a Scalable Architecture for Web-enabled Mobile Robots
- Author
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Marcello Bonfe, Cristian Secchi, and Enrico Piccinini
- Subjects
Interconnection Networks ,Engineering ,Task management ,business.industry ,Distributed computing ,Interoperability ,Mobile computing ,Mobile robot ,General Medicine ,computer.software_genre ,Autonomous Mobile Robots ,Distributed Computer Control Systems ,Software ,Robot ,Architecture ,Web service ,business ,computer - Abstract
The paper presents the architecture of an experimental mobile robotic platform, which has been designed specifying interoperability between multiple robots as a main objective. In particular, novel software technologies based on Web services have been exploited in order to support mobile robots with efficient and extensible messaging, data-sharing and distributed task management capabilities. The basic components of the proposed architecture have been implemented and tested on a demonstrative robotic setup, that will be fully described in the paper. However, the aim of the proposal is to contribute to future Web-based interoperability between mobile robots employed in either industrial or human service applications.
- Published
- 2010
13. Real-Time Control Systems with Delays
- Author
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Nilsson, Johan
- Subjects
robotics ,reglerteknik ,Delay compensation ,control engineering ,Stochastic parameters ,Clock synchronization ,Automation ,Jump linear systems ,Linear quadratic control ,Stochastic control ,Automatiska system ,robotteknik ,Timing jitter ,Distributed computer control systems ,Real-time systems - Abstract
Control loops that are closed over a communication network get more and more common. A problem with such systems is that the transfer delays will be varying with different characteristics depending on the network hardware and software. The network delays are typically varying due to varying network load, scheduling policies in the network and the nodes, and due to network failures. Two network models of different complexity are studied: Random delays that are independent from transfer to transfer, Random delays with probability distribution functions governed by an underlying Markov chain. The delay models are verified by experimental measurements of network delays. In the thesis it is shown how to analyze stability and expected performance of linear controllers where the network delays are described by one of the two network models above. Methods to evaluate quadratic cost functions are developed. Through the same analysis we find criteria for mean square stability of the closed loop for the different network models. The Linear Quadratic Gaussian (LQG) optimal controller is developed for the two delay models. The derived controller uses knowledge of old time delays. These can be calculated using ``timestamping'' of messages in the network. ``Timestamping'' means that every transfered signal is marked with the time of generation. The receiving node can then calculate how long the transfer delay was by comparing the timestamp with the node's internal clock.
- Published
- 1998
14. Approaches to designing complex dependable systems
- Author
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Vittoria Gianuzzi, Andy M. Tyrrell, Walter Cazzola, Andrea Clematis, and Alexander Romanovsky
- Subjects
Programming approaches ,Computer science ,Fault-tolerant software ,Distributed computer control systems ,Distributed computing ,Software fault tolerance ,Concurrency ,Reactive system - Abstract
The problem of designing complex dependable systems is addressed in this paper. Due to some peculiarities of their application and behavior these are often referred to as reactive systems. Two main paradigms for their design have recently been proposed; we name these paradigms living processes and hidden concurrency, depending on their approach to concurrency handling. The analysis of application requirements and constraints is proposed as a methodology for selecting the most suitable implementation paradigm for a given application. Finally, it is shown that in some cases an intermediate paradigm may provide a suitable solution.
- Published
- 1998
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