Deploying Embedded Linux Systems

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Tux.png Applies to Linux


Introduction[edit | edit source]

Deployment of Embedded Linux systems is the typical operation which follows the development phase. When the application is ready and fully tested in the development environment, it's time to take the system to the field for the “real work”. This phase brings a lot of concerns to cope with, for example creating a suitable root filesystem, saving the data properly, and implementing successful on-the-field update strategies. This how-to guide lists some of the common issues related to the deployment of an embedded Linux system.

The development environment[edit | edit source]

The following figure illustrates the typical developing environment for an Embedded Linux system: it is composed by a host machine and a target machine.

Development env.png

The host (usually a PC or a virtual machine running the Linux operating system) is used by the developer to (cross-)compile the code that will run on the target, for example a DAVE Embedded Systems ARM CPU module such as Lizard or Naon. The Linux kernel running on the target is able to mount the root file system from different physical media. During the software development, it is very common to use a directory exported via NFS by the host for this purpose. Moreover, the linux kernel is usually retrieved by a simple network transfer protocol like tftp.

Moving to the field[edit | edit source]

When the system is ready to move to the field, most of times the pysical link between host and target used at the development stage must be removed. In the worst case, the system must run without any NFS filesystem or file transfer services, relying only on its hardware resources (for example, the on-board RAM and flash memories). These resources are obviously limited, due to the nature of the embedded systems. Generally speaking, the procedure used to deploy the system configuration highly depends on the specific application; however, some topics are quite common. The following sections shine a light on these topics.

Using an evaluation kit for the development stage[edit | edit source]

Often, it is convenient to carry out the development stage with an evaluation kit such as XUELK and XELK. This is the case, for instance, when the final hardware platform is not available yet.

It is worth remembering that, in this scenario, it is mandatory to port the software Board Support Package (BSP) to the final hardware platform when migrating from the evaluation kit. Conventionally, the BSP consists of:

  • Firmware (if any)
  • Bootloader (typically U-Boot) and, optionally, its device tree
  • Linux kernel and its device tree
  • Root file system.

If not properly ported, the BSP may cause irreversible damage to the platform or severe malfunctioning as it is strictly related to the underlying hardware. Therefore, it is strongly discouraged to run the binary files released for DAVE Embedded Systems' evaluation kits on different platforms unless you know what you are doing.

Root file systems[edit | edit source]

Linux needs a root file system: a root file system must contain everything needed to support the Linux system (applications, settings, data, ..). The root file system is the file system that is contained on the same partition on which the root directory is located. The Linux kernel, at the end of its startup stage, mounts the root file system on the configured root device and finally launches the /sbin/init, the first user space process and "father" of all the other processes. An example of root file system is shown below:

drwxr-xr-x  2 root     root     4096 2011-05-03 11:23 bin/
drwxr-xr-x  2 root     root     4096 2011-04-01 17:20 boot/
drwxr-xr-x  3 root     root     4096 2011-07-07 12:17 dev/
drwxr-xr-x 44 root     root     4096 2011-05-03 19:02 etc/
drwxr-xr-x  4 root     root     4096 2011-04-01 17:35 home/
drwxr-xr-x  5 root     root     4096 2011-05-03 11:23 lib/
drwxr-xr-x 12 root     root     4096 2011-07-07 12:03 media/
drwxr-xr-x  6 root     root     4096 2011-05-19 16:39 mnt/
drwxr-xr-x  2 root     root     4096 2011-03-11 05:21 proc/
drwxr-xr-x  2 root     root     4096 2011-05-03 11:23 sbin/
drwxr-xr-x  2 root     root     4096 2011-03-11 05:21 sys/
lrwxrwxrwx  1 root     root        8 2011-05-30 12:19 tmp -> /var/tmp/
drwxr-xr-x 11 root     root     4096 2010-11-05 19:36 usr/
drwxr-xr-x  8 root     root     4096 2010-12-12 11:30 var/

For more information on the Linux filesystem, please refer to The Linux filesystem explained


Strategies[edit | edit source]

The integrity of the root file system is mandatory to allow the kernel to complete the boot process and usually it is not required that the whole file system is writeable. For these reasons, usually the file system is splitted in (at least) two parts as shown in the following table:

Part File System type Access Physical medium
Minimal root file system ext2, cramfs, .. write protected ramdisk (*)
Storage file system UBIFS, JFFS2, YAFFS2, ext2/3, .. read/write NOR and NAND flashes, SSD, hard disk, ..

(*) As this file system is mounted over a volatile memory, modifications will be lost when the system will be turned off.

The first part is the actual root file system, it contains the minimum components to allow the system to boot properly and usually it does not require on-the-field upgrading. The other part is used to store applications binaries and files created and/or modified by the user, thus it must be mounted over a non-volatile memory device.

Creating the root file system[edit | edit source]

Building a root file system from scratch is definitively a complex task because several well known directories must be created and populated with a lot of files that must follow some standard rules. Usually, it's a good idea to start with a pre-packaged root file system, in order to skip the actual creation step, and letting you to work on the customization of the file system. You have two options:

  1. start from a big file system and remove all the components (packages, libraries, application binaries, ..) that you don't need
  2. start from a small file system and add all the components (packages, libraries, application binaries, ..) that you need

Option #2 is always preferrable, because it leads to a very space-optimized root file system, but it could be more demanding, especially when you need to save just little storage space compared to the size of the original RFS (in this case, you can easily go for Option #1).

Please see the Embedded distros article for an introduction on Embedded Linux distributions.

Please also refer to the following articles for additional information:

If you prefer to build the entire root file system, there are several possibilities that are described in the following sections.

OpenEmbedded[edit | edit source]

OpenEmbedded is a build framework for Embedded Linux. It offers a cross-compile environment which allows developers to create a complete Linux Distribution for embedded systems. Some of the OpenEmbedded advantages include:

  • support for many hardware architectures
  • multiple releases for those architectures
  • tools for speeding up the process of recreating the base after changes have been made
  • easy to customize
  • runs on any Linux distribution
  • cross-compiles 1000's of packages including GTK+, Qt, the X Windows system, Mono, Java, ...

OpenEmbedded is at the basis of some known distribution, like Angstrom, OpenMoko and others, and it can target a lot of different targets and architectures. Primarily, the project maintains and develops a collection of BitBake (a task execution manager derived from Gentoo's Portage) recipes The recipes consist of the source URL of the package, dependencies and compile or install options. During the build process they are used to track dependencies, cross-compile the package and pack it up, suitable to be installed on the target device. It's also possible to create complete images, consisting of root file system and kernel. As a first step the framework will build a cross-compiler toolchain for the target platform, then the build system builds all the packages included in the selected BitBake recipe, which can range from a single application to an entire Linux distribution.

Yocto[edit | edit source]

The Yocto project is an open source collaboration project that provides templates, tools and methods to help you create custom Linux-based systems for embedded products. It is derived from OpenEmbedded, but it provides a less steep learning curve, a graphical interface for Bitbake and very good documentation.

Yocto is sponsored by the Linux Foundation

At the time of this writing (May 2019), Yocto has become by far the most popular build system in the Linux embedded arena. Large silicon vendors such as NXP, Texas Instruments, and Xilinx base their BSPs on Yocto. That's why all the Linux development kits released by DAVE Embedded Systems are in turn based on Yocto for some years now.

Arago[edit | edit source]

Arago Project targets the TI OMAP, Sitara and DaVinci platform, providing a verified, tested and supported subset of packages and has been created to simplify the standard OpenEmbedded approach (mainly setup and interaction). In fact, setting up a complete OE/Bitbake system is a task recommended only to experienced users/developers, so the availability of a SDK that allows building applications for the target without learning OE/Bitbake is very important for the less-experienced audience.

Buildroot[edit | edit source]

Buildroot is a set of scripts and patches for the creation of a cross-compilation toolchain as well as the creation of a complete root file system.

Linux From Scratch[edit | edit source]

Linux From Scratch is a way to install a working Linux system by building all components of it manually. In particular, Cross Linux From Scratch allows the cross-compilation of a Linux root file system for embedded targets. The advantages to this method are a compact, flexible and secure system and a greater understanding of the internal workings of the Linux-based operating systems; this comes at the price of a time consuming and quite complex process.

Customizing the root file system[edit | edit source]

This step is clearly required to add to the basic root file system your custom application files (libraries, binaries, configuration files, ...)

Application dependancies[edit | edit source]

The applications executables that you have developed might depend on libraries that are not provided by the basic root file system. In this case these libraries must be added. To find out which libraries your applications depends on you can use the ldd and readelf tools. Please note that often you'll need to rebuild some libraries, cross-compiling them to match your target architecture.

Specific devices[edit | edit source]

Usually the embedded system provides custom devices for which developers had to write specific device drivers. To enable the support for these devices, the proper device files must be created in /dev.

Drivers built as modules[edit | edit source]

In embedded system the device drivers are typically statically linked to the kernel. In case they are built as modules you have to:

  • install them in the root file system
  • provide the command line utilities (*) required to handle the modules

Since the loadable kernel modules is a huge topic, it is recommended to read the Linux Loadable Kernel Module HOWTO available at this URL: http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Module-HOWTO/.

(*) for kernels 2.4 you must use the modutils (http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/modutils/)
(*) for kernels 2.6 you must use the mod-init-tools (http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/module-init-tools/)

Boot scripts[edit | edit source]

After the kernel is booted and initialized, the kernel starts init, the first user-space application, which commonly is /sbin/init. Init is responsible for starting system processes as defined in the /etc/inittab file. Init typically will start at least an instances of "getty" which waits for console logins which spawn one's user shell process. Upon shutdown, init controls the sequence and processes for shutdown. The init process is never shut down. It is a user process and not a kernel system process although it does run as root.

The boot scripts (typically /etc/inittab and /etc/rc.sh) must be modified in order to automatically execute some operations at boot such as launching user-space applications and mounting file systems (i.e. Sysfs).

Please note that init implementations can differ: Busybox offers its own version while other distributions, like Angstrom, can provide the classic System V version. More modern distros, like Ubuntu, implements Upstart, a complete replacement of the init daemon. For further information on the init process, please visit this page.

Non-volatile memories partitioning scheme[edit | edit source]

In general, many different schemes can be implemented. Cost, reliability, speed are just some of the parameters to be considered when designing the partitioning scheme. This article shows two quite different schemes on the same platform, for example.

Startup sequence[edit | edit source]

Configuring the boot loader[edit | edit source]

Handling the serial port[edit | edit source]

U-Boot implements a text console on the serial port. This console can be used to stop the startup sequence to allow an interactive session with the human operator. This is very useful during debug operations, but by default, any character the bootloader receives during the startup sequence stops this process. As a side effect, any spurious character received from the serial port devoted to the console is able to prevent the bootloader to complete the automatic boot process (and typically to start the operating system).

For this reason, before moving to the field it is highly recommended to configure the bootloader to halt the sequence when receiving a specific string instead. Fortunately, Autoboot process is deeply configurable: parameters defining the retry behaviour and the strings used to stop booting can be specified. Please read the README.autoboot file, provided inside the documentation directory of the U-Boot sources, for more details.

Automating operations at boot loader level[edit | edit source]

Modern boot loaders such as U-Boot allows automating boot operations in an extremely flexible fashion. Thanks to the scripting capabilities, it is possible to execute complex scripts. For more details, see for instance this tutorial or this page.

Boot time[edit | edit source]

Some applications require a quick boot time. When deploying an embedded Linux system, this time has to be evaluated in order to verify if it matches the system requirement, if any. Should the boot sequence is too long, several techniques can be used to speed it up. For more details, please see this page or this article.

Generally speaking, it is worth to remember that different type of memories can lead to largely different boot times. A common scenario is the following:

  • The proof of concept (PoC) of a new product is developed using a microSD card as boot memory. Everything is stored there: bootloader, o.s. kernel, root file system, etc.
  • Then, the software is deployed onto the target according to the final production configuration by using SoM's onboard non-volatile memories. See this real case as an example. Due to the fact that a large portion of the software is stored onto the NAND flash, the overall boot time may increase significantly. Why?
    • microSD card has a synchronous interface to the host, while raw NAND flashes used on DAVE Embedded Systems system-on-modules have not. Data communication between the system-on-chio (SoC) and the memory is much slower.
    • More importantly, raw NAND flashes are unmanaged memories. Unlike microSD cards, they don't embed a controller for handling the commands received from the host and taking care of low-level management of the underlying memory (which is based on NAND flash technology as well⁠). This includes but is not limited to wear leveling, bad blocks management, and read errors handling. In the case of raw NAND flashes, these tasks are all performed by the operating system running on the host processor.

On-the-field software upgrades[edit | edit source]

One of the greatest challenges for embedded systems manufacturers is to guarantee that the software on the system can be updated in the easiest way. On-the-field software upgradability is a major requirement that allows to replace bogus code and to enhance application features. How to perform this operation is highly platform-dependent. The following section shows in detail a specific situation.

As a general rule of thumb, it is highly recommended to avoid package-based systems such as rpm or deb to implement reliable software upgrade mechanisms.

U-Boot/Linux system[edit | edit source]

We assume the system software/firmware is composed by the following components stored in flash memory (NOR and/or NAND):

  • U-Boot bootloader with redundant environments
  • Linux kernel
  • Root file system (read/write but not persistent)
  • Additional file system (read/write, persistent)

We also assume that Linux MTD subsystem provides partitions accordingly:

  • /dev/mtd0 -> U-Boot code
  • /dev/mtd1 -> U-Boot environment #1
  • /dev/mtd2 -> U-Boot environment #2
  • /dev/mtd3 -> Linux kernel
  • /dev/mtd4 -> root file system
  • /dev/mtd5 -> additional file system

Basically, we can upgrade the system through the bootloader or through the kernel.

Finally, we assume that only the aforementioned components should be upgraded. In case the system equips external microcontrollers, FPGAs, CPLDs, etc, different strategies must be taken into account depending on the particular case.


Warning-icon.png Please note that, in case of problems (e.g. power failures) in the middle of U-Boot upgrading, the system might get in an unrecoverable state. Warning-icon.png


Upgrade approaches[edit | edit source]

We can depict the following approaches to on the field upgrading, depending on the system capabilities and operating environments:


U-Boot-based upgrading[edit | edit source]

  • With the help of the U-Boot commands (tftpload, protect, erase and cp) we can download and store kernel images, file system images and U-Boot itself in the target system.
  • The main disadvantage is that this procedure usually requires to physically access the system, attaching to the serial console through a serial cable and using a PC with a terminal emulator software.
  • Implement software upgrade procedures in u-boot, though possible, is not so easy, due to the limited set of commands provided by the u-boot shell. Moreover, U-Boot usually doesn't support all the available storage devices (for example, on a system with both NOR and NAND flash, it's possible that u-boot supports just the NOR, not allowing to program the NAND flash from the command line).
  • Due to the previous considerations, automatic upgrade procedures are hard to implement.


Linux-based upgrading[edit | edit source]

  • System running Linux can be updated from user space using standard applications and tools. Most of the times the upgrade procedures can be created using common shell commands and scripts.
  • Usually, when the system provides a GUI, the upgrade function is integrated in the application interface and can be activated and controlled by the user through graphical elements.
  • If the network is available, it's a good point that the embedded system is able to run programs like a tftp client, a ftp server/client, a ssh client (with scp program) or the wget program: with these tools, the system can easily retrieve the upgrade packages from the network.
  • When the network is unavailable, a typical approach is to provide the end-user with a storage device (e.g. usb pen drive or SD card) with the software upgrade packages. This device can then be plugged to the system to run the upgrade.
  • When preparing the final root file system, it's fundamental to add all the application binaries and libraries required to implement the upgrade procedures.
  • It's always possible to access the u-boot environment variables from user space, both for read and write operations. These operations can be performed using the fw_printenv/fw_setenv programs contained in the tools/env directory of the u-boot sources.
  • In some cases, the upgrade procedures can be activated automatically:
    1. running periodic checks on some resource on the network
    2. running periodic checks on some place on the local storage (e.g. a directory on the local file system which can be remotely written by ftp)
    3. triggering the start when detecting an attached storage device containing the software upgrade
  • A typical strategy on headless systems is to create custom init scripts that perform checks on the file system at boot, looking for upgrade packages and triggering the upgrade procedure when required.
  • Please note that, in order to erase and write MTD flash partitions, their writability flag must be set in Linux. Usually the MTD partition dedicated to u-boot is protected against write in Linux, so an update of the kernel is required before storing a new u-boot image. Updating U-Boot is not a common operation during the system lifetime, but sometimes it is required to solve some bugs or implement new features.


Local upgrading[edit | edit source]

When the system doesn't allow remote access, an operator must locally access the system through its user interface (in the best case) or through the serial port (in the worst case). If the system provides a USB port, SD, MMC or PCMCIA slot, the system can retrieve the upgrade packages from those memory devices; if the user interface features a sort of upgrade command, the operator should just plug the device and activate the upgrade function. The serial port is the last option to connect to the system and manually send the proper commands to complete the upgrade procedure.


Remote upgrading[edit | edit source]

When the system features a LAN or internet connection, a remote-update strategy can be implemented. If the machine can be contacted (for example using a telnet or ssh connection), it is quite simple to activate a script that executes all the necessary commands to complete the upgrade procedure.

Note: building Dropbear SSH server for ARM platform

Dropbear is a light SSH suite, with client and server applications. It could be built as a multibinary application, like the famous Busybox: a single executable that can be used for SSH server, SSH client, scp, etc.

For example, to build Dropbear for the Zefeer platform, the user must:

  • Set the environment variables:
    1. export PATH=/usr/local/eldk41arm/usr/bin:$PATH
    2. export ARCH=arm
    3. export CROSS_COMPILE=arm-linux
  • Run the configuration tool:
    ./configure –build=ARCH --host=CROSS_COMPILE
  • Run the make tool
    make PROGRAMS=”dropbear dbclient scp” MULTI=1 STATIC=1

More information is available in README, INSTALL and MULTI files included in the Dropbear distribution. Please note that for recent systems, as Lizard and Naon, Dropbear can be installed from pre-built packages (please refer to the distribution's package-manager documentation).

Security[edit | edit source]

Nowadays, a large number of newly designed embedded systems are used in Internet-connected products. As such, these systems have to face severe issues in terms of cybersecurity. This topic is huge and it is obviously beyond the scope of this document. It is worth remembering, however, that modern SOCs provide a rich set of native functionalities that address this issue. For instance, see this page or this technical note. These documents show how some of such functionalities were leveraged on DAVE Embedded Systems products.

For a more general discussion about the security of Internet-connected devices, see for example the IoT Security foundation website or this paper by Microsoft.

Licensing[edit | edit source]

It is known that a GNU/Linux system is based on a large amount of open source software. Consequently, the manufacturers of a product embedding such software must deal with the open source license compliance.

This topic is beyond the scope of this document, but a couple of links are provided anyway:

  • This article provides an overview of license-related legal issues
  • Yocto build system generates automatically a manifest file to make the compliance management easier. For more details, please refer to [link]

Certifications[edit | edit source]

In general, all the products must conform to a set of standards in order to get the certificates required to be sold (CE marking and FCC_Declaration_of_Conformity are two well-known examples.

In many cases, software modifications to the Board Support Package (BSP) or the user applications are required to pass the compliance tests dictated by these regulations (*). In a typical scenario, these modifications are usually carried out after the development of the user applications. Nevertheless, these changes must be committed to the source repositories in order to be part of the production images that are stored into the product.


(*) A common example is the enabling of the spread-spectrum technique to reduce the electromagnetic emission peak associated with a digital clock, which is usually implemented at boot loader level.

Misc[edit | edit source]

Watchdog[edit | edit source]

Typically, during application development, the watchdog device included in the embedded system is turned off. Before moving to the field, enabling the watchdog is often a mandatory choice (*). The use of this peripheral is a little bit tricky because it involves both U-Boot and Linux. The following sequence shows the typical scenario when the system is working on the field:

  1. Processor comes out of reset; internal watchdog is disabled
  2. U-Boot enables watchdog (timeout = 5 s); U-Boot main loop will take care of refreshing it
  3. Before giving control to Linux kernel, U-Boot will set up long (e.g 180 seconds) timeout. This is required in order to allow the kernel to complete the boot stage and to run the application that will handle the watchdog refresh
  4. Once the kernel boot process has completed, watchdog application will open the watchdog device file and will take care of its refresh (timeout = 10 s)

To enable watchdog support in U-Boot, source code must be modified and the bootloader must be recompiled. Usually, this means enabling CONFIG_WATCHDOG and CONFIG_xxx (where xxx is the name of the watchdog device).

Once Linux is started (and if the kernel is compiled with watchdog support), watchdog is refreshed by a simple application like the one shown below:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(int argc, const char *argv[]){
        int fd=open("/dev/watchdog",O_WRONLY);
        if(fd==-1){
            perror("watchdog");
            exit(1);
        }
        while(1){
            write(fd,"\0",1);
            fsync(fd);
            sleep(5);
        }
}

This requires the character device file:

crw-r--r-- 1 root root 10, 130 Oct 3 2006 /dev/watchdog

which can be created using the following command:

mknod /dev/watchdog c 10 130


(*) Enabling the watchdog functionality has several system-level consequences as well. As such, system integrators need the freedom to decide whether to enable it or not. For instance, there are applications for which the system integrators do not want to enable the watchdog. They prefer that their final users are aware of software hangs and that the users reset the board manually. Of course, this approach might not make any sense in case of unattended devices.


Setting the MAC address of network interfaces[edit | edit source]

In case the system provides an Ethernet interface, it must be guaranteed that each device is delivered with a unique MAC address. MAC addresses are managed by IEEE Registration Authority:

IEEE Registration Authority

IEEE Standards Department

445 Hoes Lane

Piscataway NJ 08854

Phone: (732) 562-3813

Fax: (732) 562-1571

http://standards.ieee.org/contact/form.html

For more details see also:

DAVE Embedded Systems owns an IAB (Individual Address Block, a set of 4096 addresses), that is in the public listing, so everyone can find out that an address is associated to DAVE Embedded Systems. Note that the registration authority provides only IABs and OUIs (16000000+ addresses), and that a company is not allowed to request another IAB until at least 95% of the MAC addresses of the previous IAB have been used.

Customers who build their products using DAVE Embedded Systems' SOMs (AXEL Lite, AXEL ULite, BORA, ORCA,...) usually provide MAC numbers by themselves by acquiring them from IEEE. In fact, there are many reasons for this. Three can be stressed:

  • A CPU module is NOT an end-product. It is not a product that goes directly to the final user as a LAN PCI board, or a printer server. So, in case of CPU modules, who gets a CPU module and build its own product with it, is responsible for handling the MAC address.
  • Even if DAVE Embedded Systems programs the MAC address in flash (as an example) at the manufacturing stage, the customer may erase, overwrite, modify this number for the actual CPU module. Also, the strategy and the position (NOR, NAND, E2PROM,...) of the MAC address may vary. DAVE Embedded Systems cannot guarantee - in other words - that MAC address is maintained in the form and position it had when delivered.
  • An end-product hosting a DAVE Embedded Systems CPU module is not always a DAVE Embedded Systems' product. When it is (and there are some examples), DAVE Embedded Systems puts the proper MAC address on the product. When it's not, DAVE can't provide MAC addresses: as already stated, the list of DAVE's MAC addresses is public, and by reading this list everybody can see that the product manufacturer is DAVE Embedded Systems, which is not true.

Handling different product models[edit | edit source]

It is quite common to manufacture different product models on the top of the same hardware platform. In such cases, it is convenient to use a unified software for all models. DAVE Embedded Systems provides the ConfigID mechanism that can be exploited to achieve this goal. ConfigID can be exploited at boot loader level, at kernel level, and at application level.


Deployment Checklist[edit | edit source]

Here below, a list of topics that should be taken into account for Product design and deployment on the field.

This checklist tries to cover the most known project/product aspects which should be - at least - carefully understood and answered before a product is installed on the field.

Non volatile storage[edit | edit source]

  • Partitioning scheme
    • Endurance/reliability: NOR/NAND/SD/eMMC evaluation respect to reliability, costs, write cycles, data retention, data dimension
    • Redundant scheme or Recovery partition (A/B or A + recovery)

Boot sequence[edit | edit source]

  • boot time requirements (in terms of seconds) and behaviours
  • BSP boot time analisys
    • u-boot, kernel, minimal rfs
    • application startup

Applications[edit | edit source]

  • special framework required: Java, Qt, Javscript engines

Accessibility[edit | edit source]

  • serial console: availability (vs security)
    • startup configuration: boot stop with special character

Upgrade[edit | edit source]

  • upgrade on the field
  • Local or Remote
    • with recovery or redundant partitions
      • tracking of upgrade failures for maintenance information
    • On The Field: removable peripherals usage (SD, USB) and "non expert" upgrade

Security[edit | edit source]

  • "Security by design": take into account security requirements at the beginning of the project
  • useful guideline formalized by da Microsoft for Azure Sphere

Recovery and service[edit | edit source]

  • complete automatic Disaster recovery
  • complete - manually assisted - Disaster recovery
  • partial Disaster recovery
  • restore to Manufacturer configuration
  • Service Mode

Licensing[edit | edit source]

  • specific license requirements, i.e. Qt library

Certification[edit | edit source]

  • EMC certification
  • other specific certification requests (or document requirement like MTBF, etc.)

Various[edit | edit source]

  • Watchdog
    • in case of WDT intervention: tracking of watchdog event for software analysis
  • MAC addresses handling: see IEEE registration authority
  • runtime automatic detection and configuration: possible usage of ConfigID technique