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Air Traffic Control Software System Failure Case Study – As-is Scenario Presented by Stanley Dam For SE 6361 Advanced Requirement Engineering 10/25/2013.

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Presentation on theme: "Air Traffic Control Software System Failure Case Study – As-is Scenario Presented by Stanley Dam For SE 6361 Advanced Requirement Engineering 10/25/2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 Air Traffic Control Software System Failure Case Study – As-is Scenario Presented by Stanley Dam For SE 6361 Advanced Requirement Engineering 10/25/2013

2 Overview Introduction About The System Software Glitch Known Problem and Solution What Went Wrong?

3 Introduction At about 5:00PM PST on Tuesday, September 14, 2004 air traffic controllers lost voice contact with 400 airplanes they were tracking over the southwestern United States Control Center located in Palmdale, CA Controlled traffics above 13,0000 ft in 460,000 square km of airspace

4 Introduction (cont.) Planes started to head one another In at lease five cases airplanes came within minimum separation distances Two airplane accidents almost occurred Disrupted about 800 flights Impacted over 30,000 passengers

5 About The System Voice Switching and Control System (VSCS) – Controllers use a touch-screen to select a phone line to connect to other controllers – Or to select radio frequency to talk to flight crews VSCS Control Subsystem Upgrade (VCSU) – Control system for VSCS – Monitors VSCS health status by continually running built-in test (BIT) Developed by Harris Corp., Melbourne, Florida

6 Software Glitch Inside the VCSU control system unit is a countdown timer VCSU uses that timer as a pulse to send out periodic queries to the VSCS Timer starts at 2 32 (~4 billion ms or ~50 days) When timer hits zero, system can no longer time itself, and it shuts down

7 Known Problem and Solution Multiple incidents reported indicating the system shutdown on its own after about 50 days The manufacturer, Harris Corp., was aware of the problem but didn’t know how it would impact the system After a system reboot, everything seemed to be working fine FAA released a maintenance procedure that required a system reboot every 30 days

8 What Went Wrong? The technician failed to perform the reset that must occur every 30 days Internal clock within the system subsequently shut down the system The backup system also failed within a minute after it was turned on

9 Questions?


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