Analyzing the Real-Time Characteristics of Class C Communications in CAN Through Discrete Event Simulations

1994 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bhargav P. Upender
Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 636
Author(s):  
Christina Obermaier ◽  
Raphael Riebl ◽  
Ali H. Al-Bayatti ◽  
Sarmadullah Khan ◽  
Christian Facchi

Speeding up Discrete Event Simulations (DESs) is a broad research field. Promising Parallel Discrete Event Simulation (PDES) approaches with optimistic and conservative synchronisation schemes have emerged throughout the years. However, in the area of real-time simulation, PDESs are rarely considered. This is caused by the complex problem of fitting parallel executed DES models to a real-time clock. Hence, this paper gives an extensive review of existing conservative and optimistic synchronisation schemes for PDESs. It introduces a metric to compare their real-time capabilities to determine whether they can be used for soft or firm real-time simulation. Examples are given on how to apply this metric to evaluate PDESs using synthetic and real-world examples. The results of the investigation reveal that no final answer can be given if PDESs can be used for soft or firm real-time simulation as they are. However, boundary conditions were defined, which allow a use-case specific evaluation of the real-time capabilities of a certain parallel executed DES. Using this in-depth knowledge and can lead to predictability of the real-time behaviour of a simulation run.


2008 ◽  
Vol 9 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 277-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Navodit Misra ◽  
Daniel Lees ◽  
Tiequan Zhang ◽  
Russell Schwartz

As computational and mathematical studies become increasingly central to studies of complicated reaction systems, it will become ever more important to identify the assumptions our models must make and determine when those assumptions are valid. Here, we examine that question with respect to viral capsid assembly by studying the ‘pathway complexity’ of model capsid assembly systems, which we informally define as the number of reaction pathways and intermediates one must consider to accurately describe a given system. We use two model types for this study: ordinary differential equation models, which allow us to precisely and deterministically compare the accuracy of capsid models under different degrees of simplification, and stochastic discrete event simulations, which allow us to sample use of reaction intermediates across a wide parameter space allowing for an extremely large number of possible reaction pathways. The models provide complementary information in support of a common conclusion that the ability of simple pathway models to adequately explain capsid assembly kinetics varies considerably across the space of biologically meaningful assembly parameters. These studies provide grounds for caution regarding our ability to reliably represent real systems with simple models and to extrapolate results from one set of assembly conditions to another. In addition, the analysis tools developed for this study are likely to have broader use in the analysis and efficient simulation of large reaction systems.


1999 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 231-239
Author(s):  
Chun‐Lien Su ◽  
Chan‐Nan Lu ◽  
Yuh‐Tzong Lin ◽  
King‐Chun Tu

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