Five steps to FlexRay
Bernd Elend, NXP Semiconductors
Jan 25, 2007 (1:36 PM), commsdesign.com
FlexRay comes onto the road with single-channel high-speed power-train, driver-assistance, and comfort automotive electronics applications. On the new BMW X5, FlexRay is used in suspension control, allowing for a gentle learning phase with low risk for engineers and developers before applying the fault-tolerant, deterministic protocol to safety relevant driving functions using two communication channels and bus guardian supervision.
In developing FlexRay applications, there are five basic steps that design engineers can apply leading to a robust network topology.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- NFC wireless interface supporting ISO14443 A and B with EEPROM on SMIC 180nm
- DDR5 MRDIMM PHY and Controller
- RVA23, Multi-cluster, Hypervisor and Android
- HBM4E PHY and controller
- LZ4/Snappy Data Compressor
Related White Papers
- Five Vital Steps to a Robust Testbench with DesignWare Verification IP and Reference Verification Methodology (RVM)
- Five steps to reliable, low-cost, bug-free software with static code analysis
- 5 Steps to Confront the Talent Shortage With IP-Centric Design
- The five facets of SoC design complexity
Latest White Papers
- TROJAN-GUARD: Hardware Trojans Detection Using GNN in RTL Designs
- How a Standardized Approach Can Accelerate Development of Safety and Security in Automotive Imaging Systems
- SV-LLM: An Agentic Approach for SoC Security Verification using Large Language Models
- Enabling Chiplet Design Through Automation and Integration Solutions
- Shift-Left Verification: Why Early Reliability Checks Matter