The paper describes the design and performance of a real time I/O (RIO) subsystem that supports real time applications running on off-the-shelf hardware and software. The paper provides two contributions to the study of real time I/O subsystems. First it describes how RIO supports end-to-end, prioritized traffic to bound the I/O utilization of each priority class and eliminates the key sources of priority inversion in I/O subsystems. Second, it illustrates how a real time I/O subsystem can reduce latency bounds on end-to-end communication between high-priority clients without unduly penalizing low priority and best-effort clients
Published in:
Real-Time Technology and Applications Symposium, 1999. Proceedings of the Fifth IEEE
Date of Conference: 1999