An Energy-interference-free Hardware-Software Debugger for Intermittent Energy-harvesting Systems
We propose the Energy-interference-free Debugger, a hardware and software platform for energy-interference-free monitoring and debugging of intermittent systems.
April 2, 2016
International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems (ASPLOS) 2016
Authors
Alexei Colin (Disney Research/Carnegie Mellon University)
Graham Harvey (Disney Research/Carnegie Mellon University)
Brandon Lucia (Carnegie Mellon University)
Alanson Sample (Disney Research)
An Energy-interference-free Hardware-Software Debugger for Intermittent Energy-harvesting Systems
Energy-autonomous computing devices have the potential to extend the reach of computing to a scale beyond either wired or battery-powered systems. However, these devices pose a unique set of challenges to application developers who lack both hardware and software support tools. Energy harvesting devices experience power intermittence which causes the system to reset and power-cycle unpredictably, tens to hundreds of times per second. This can result in code execution errors that are not possible in continuously- powered systems and cannot be diagnosed with conventional debugging tools such as JTAG and/or oscilloscopes. We propose the Energy-interference-free Debugger, a hardware and software platform for energy-interference-free monitoring and debugging of intermittent systems without adversely effecting their energy state. The Energy-interference-free Debugger re-creates a familiar debugging environment for intermittent software and augments it with debugging primitives for effective diagnosis of intermittence bugs. Our evaluation of the Energy-interference-free Debug- ger quantifies its energy-interference-freedom and shows its value in a set of debugging tasks in complex test programs and several real applications, including RFID code and a machine-learning-based activity recognition system.