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Language Challenges inspired by Networks of Tiny Devices David Culler Computer Science Division U.C. Berkeley Intel Berkeley

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Presentation on theme: "Language Challenges inspired by Networks of Tiny Devices David Culler Computer Science Division U.C. Berkeley Intel Berkeley"— Presentation transcript:

1 Language Challenges inspired by Networks of Tiny Devices David Culler Computer Science Division U.C. Berkeley Intel Research @ Berkeley www.cs.berkeley.edu/~culler

2 10/5/2001MRL Systems2 Challenges 6-pack Optimizing for efficient modularity Analysis for jitter bounds and other system properties Whole Program code generations for network capsules Analysis for verification of system invariants Programming environments for event-driven execution Programming language for unstructured aggregates

3 10/5/2001MRL Systems3 Outline Motivating networked sensor regime TinyOS structure Discussion of 5 challenges

4 10/5/2001MRL Systems4 Emerging Microscopic Devices CMOS trend is not just Moore’s law Micro Electical Mechanical Systems (MEMS) –rich array of sensors are becoming cheap and tiny Imagine, all sorts of chips that are connected to the physical world and to cyberspace! LNA mixer PLL baseband filters I  Q  Low-power Wireless Communication

5 10/5/2001MRL Systems5 Disaster Management Circulatory Net What can you do with them? Embed many distributed devices to monitor and interact with physical world Network these devices so that they can coordinate to perform higher-level tasks. => Requires robust distributed systems of hundreds or thousands of devices. Habitat Monitoring Condition-based maintenance

6 10/5/2001MRL Systems6 Getting started in the small 1” x 1.5” motherboard –ATMEL 4Mhz, 8bit MCU, 512 bytes RAM, 8K pgm flash –900Mhz Radio (RF Monolithics) 10-100 ft. range –ATMEL network pgming assist –Radio Signal strength control and sensing –I2C EPROM (logging) –Base-station ready (UART) –stackable expansion connector »all ports, i2c, pwr, clock… Several sensor boards –basic protoboard –tiny weather station (temp,light,hum,prs) –vibrations (2d acc, temp, light) –accelerometers, magnetometers, –current, acoustics

7 10/5/2001MRL Systems7 A Operating System for Tiny Devices? Traditional approaches –command processing loop (wait request, act, respond) –monolithic event processing –bring full thread/socket posix regime to platform Alternative –provide framework for concurrency and modularity –never poll, never block –interleaving flows, events, energy management –allow appropriate abstractions to emerge

8 10/5/2001MRL Systems8 Tiny OS Concepts Scheduler + Graph of Components –constrained two-level scheduling model: threads + events Component: –Commands, –Event Handlers –Frame (storage) –Tasks (concurrency) Constrained Storage Model –frame per component, shared stack, no heap Very lean multithreading Efficient Layering Messaging Component init Power(mode) TX_packet(buf) TX_pack et_done (success ) RX_pack et_done (buffer) Internal State init power(mode) send_msg (addr, type, data) msg_rec(type, data) msg_sen d_done) internal thread Commands Events

9 10/5/2001MRL Systems9 Appln = graph of event-driven components RFM Radio byte Radio Packet UART Serial Packet ADC Tempphoto Active Messages clocks bit byte packet Route map routersensor appln application HW SW Example: ad hoc, multi-hop routing of photo sensor readings

10 10/5/2001MRL Systems10 Quantitative Analysis... 3450 B code 226 B data Components Packet reception work breakdown Percent CPU UtilizationEnergy (nj/Bit) AM 0.05%0.20%0.33 Packet 1.12%0.51%7.58 Radio handler 26.87%12.16%182.38 Radio decode thread 5.48%2.48%37.2 RFM 66.48%30.08%451.17 Radio Reception --1350 Idle-54.75%- Total 100.00% 2028.66

11 10/5/2001MRL Systems11 TOS Execution Model commands request action –ack/nack at every boundary –call cmd or post task events notify occurrence –HW intrpt at lowest level –may signal events –call cmds –post tasks Tasks provide logical concurrency –preempted by events Migration of HW/SW boundary RFM Radio byte Radio Packet bit byte packet event-driven bit-pump event-driven byte-pump event-driven packet-pump message-event driven active message application comp encode/decode crc data processing

12 10/5/2001MRL Systems12 Dynamics of Events and Threads bit event filtered at byte layer bit event => end of byte => end of packet => end of msg send thread posted to start send next message radio takes clock events to detect recv

13 10/5/2001MRL Systems13 Event-Driven Sensor Access Pattern clock event handler initiates data collection sensor signals data ready event data event handler calls output command common pattern char TOS_EVENT(SENS_OUTPUT_CLOCK_EVENT)(){ return TOS_CALL_COMMAND(SENS_GET_DATA)(); } char TOS_EVENT(SENS_DATA_READY)(int data){ return TOS_CALL_COMMAND(SENS_OUTPUT_OUTPUT)((data >> 2) &0x7); }

14 10/5/2001MRL Systems14 Tiny Active Messages Sending –Declare buffer storage in a frame –Request Transmission –Naming a handler –Handle Completion signal Receiving –Declare a handler –Firing a handler »automatic »behaves like any other event Buffer management –strict ownership exchange –tx: done event => reuse –rx: must rtn a buffer TOS_FRAME_BEGIN(INT_TO_RFM_frame) { char pending; TOS_Msg msg; } TOS_FRAME_END(INT_TO_RFM_frame);...TOS_COMMAND(SUB_SEND_MSG)(TOS_MSG_BCAST, AM_MSG(INT_READING), &VAR(msg)))... char TOS_EVENT(SUB_MSG_SEND_DONE)( TOS_MsgPtr sentBuffer){...} TOS_MsgPtr TOS_MSG_EVENT(INT_READING)(TOS_MsgPtr val){... return val; }

15 10/5/2001MRL Systems15 TinyOS Execution Contexts Hardware Interrupts events commands Tasks

16 10/5/2001MRL Systems16 Typical application use of tasks event driven data acquisition schedule task to do computational portion char TOS_EVENT(MAGS_DATA_EVENT)(int data){ struct adc_packet* pack = (struct adc_packet*)(VAR(msg).data); printf("data_event\n"); VAR(reading) = data; TOS_POST_TASK(FILTER_DATA);... 128 Hz sampling rate simple FIR filter dynamic software tuning for centering the magnetometer signal (1208 bytes) digital control of analog, not DSP ADC (196 bytes)

17 10/5/2001MRL Systems17 Tasks in low-level operation transmit packet –send command schedules task to calculate CRC –task initiated byte-level datapump –events keep the pump flowing receive packet –receive event schedules task to check CRC –task signals packet ready if OK byte-level tx/rx –task scheduled to encode/decode each complete byte –must take less time that byte data transfer i2c component –i2c bus has long suspensive operations –tasks used to create split-phase interface –events can procede during bus transactions

18 10/5/2001MRL Systems18 Example: Radio Byte Operation Pipelines transmission – transmits single byte while encoding next byte Trades 1 byte of buffering for easy deadline Separates high level latencies from low level real-time requirements Encoding Task must complete before byte transmission completes Decode must complete before next byte arrives Encode Task Bit transmission Byte 1 Byte 2 RFM Bits Byte 2 Byte 1Byte 3 Byte 4 start …

19 10/5/2001MRL Systems19 Task Scheduling Currently simple fifo scheduler Bounded number of pending tasks When idle, shuts down node except clock Uses non-blocking task queue data structure

20 10/5/2001MRL Systems20 DARPA-esq demo UAV drops nodes along road, –hot-water pipe insulation for package Nodes self configure into linear network Calibrate magnetometers Each detects passing vehicle Share filtered sensor data with 5 neighbors Each calculates estimated direction & velocity Share results As plane passes by, –joins network –upload as much of missing dataset as possible from each node when in range 7.5 KB of code!

21 10/5/2001MRL Systems21 Re-exploring networking Fundamentally new aspects in each level –encoding, framing, error handling –media access control –transmission rate control –discovery, multihop routing –broadcast, multicast, aggregation –active network capsules (reprogramming) –security, network-wide protection New trade-offs across traditional abstractions –density independent wake-up –proximity estimation –localization, time synchronization New kind of distributed/parallel processing

22 10/5/2001MRL Systems22 6 Challenges Optimizing for efficient modularity –narrow interfaces for robustness –components for application specific composition –encapsulated state and concurrency –creation distinct from composition –without sacrificing code generation –optimize for energy Analysis for jitter bounds and other system properties –need to get back to the radio bit layer every 50 us +- 10 –many paths through potential higher level activities »tasks preemptible by events –can you make guarantees about all paths

23 10/5/2001MRL Systems23 Challenge 6-pack Whole Program code generation for network capsules –compile away module boundaries and indirection for efficiency –incremental update of a few components is common –compute the change in the infrastructure and update capsules –append-only flash adds to challenge Analysis for verification of system invariants –Dawson Engler has shown big wins for Flash magic, linux,... –system designers formulate invariants, specialized analysis routines check

24 10/5/2001MRL Systems24 6-pack continued Programming environments for event-driven execution –high concurrency, in lots of places at once –relationship between FSMs important –visualization is key Programming language for unstructured aggregates –currently program message protocol for each node »infer global behavior from local function –design to specify the global behavior –build on data parallel, SPMD, scan operations, set languages

25 10/5/2001MRL Systems25 To learn more http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~culler http://tinyos.millennium.berkeley.edu/ http://webs.cs.berkeley.edu/

26 10/5/2001MRL Systems26 Characteristics of the Large Concurrency intensive –data streams and real-time events, not command-response Communications-centric Limited resources (relative to load) Huge variation in load Robustness (despite unpredictable change) Hands-off (no UI) Dynamic configuration, discovery –Self-organized and reactive control Similar execution model ( component-based events) Complimentary roles (eyes/ears of the grid) Huge space of open problems...and Small


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