Managing power in embedded applications using dual operating systems
Loc Truong, EETimes
EEtimes (6/28/2011 3:01 PM EDT)
Energy consumption is becoming more of a concern as it is receiving an increasingly larger percentage of the overall operating costs. Imagine superstores with lines and lines of check-out lanes, each with a cash register, a credit-card reader, a scanner and a weight measuring station.
It is a waste if these equipments are not designed to be energy efficient with abilities to power down between customers or during non-operating hours. When multiplied by the number of stores, the number of cities and the operating life of the product, the total accumulated portion of the energy bill that could be saved is in the millions of dollars.
Many of today’s operating systems, like Linux, come with power management support. The features have been available on the mainstream kernel since Linux made headways to lower power portable devices like smart phones, tablets and ebook readers. So even though your design is a plugged-in appliance, you can embrace the “go green” initiative from the ground up by taking advantage of the power management features that are already in place and incorporate them.
In this article I will first review power savings techniques available with today’s powered (i.e. plugged-in) system-on-chip (SoC)-based embedded systems and quickly move on to the discussion of how two operating systems (OSes), each with its own power methodologies, can cooperate at the system level to provide power management services.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- PUF FPGA-Xilinx Premium with key wrap
- ASIL-B Ready PUF Hardware Premium with key wrap and certification support
- ASIL-B Ready PUF Hardware Base
- PUF Software Premium with key wrap and certification support
- PUF Hardware Premium with key wrap and certification support
Related White Papers
- How productive is your R&D organization?
- The ripple effect
- The rise and fall of productivity
- Opinion: Challenges and techniques to meet power budget in complex systems
Latest White Papers
- e-GPU: An Open-Source and Configurable RISC-V Graphic Processing Unit for TinyAI Applications
- How to design secure SoCs, Part II: Key Management
- Seven Key Advantages of Implementing eFPGA with Soft IP vs. Hard IP
- Hardware vs. Software Implementation of Warp-Level Features in Vortex RISC-V GPU
- Data Movement Is the Energy Bottleneck of Today’s SoCs