The characterization and analysis of non-functional properties has been a long time goal for real-time systems. Traditionally time and memory are the main focus of such analysis however the energy consumption is constantly growing in importance. In order to determine the energy consumption of a system and provide bounds for the worst-case energy consumption analysis (WCEC) both a precise energy consumption model and a formal analysis approach are needed. The Energy Consumption and Application on Real-Time Systems (ECARTS) workshop provides a venue for bringing together researchers and developers from academia and industry to promote cross-fertilization and discuss advances dealing with the application of energy consumption modeling and analysis to embedded and real-time systems. Of particular interest are ideas and contributions that present significant paradigm shifts, explore unique and unconventional approaches to important problems, or investigate fundamental departures from conventional wisdom in adopted solutions.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Applications of energy consumption analysis to real-time systems
Case studies and industrial experiences of WCEC analysis
Deterministic hardware for energy consumption analysis
Energy consumption analysis
Energy consumption analysis and hard real-time systems
Formal methods for energy consumption analysis
Integration of WCEC analysis in development processes
Interactions between WCET (worst-case execution time) analysis and WCEC (worst-case energy analysis).
Low-level energy consumption analysis, modeling and analysis of processor features
Measurement-based WCEC analysis
New models for energy consumption of real-time systems
Probabilistic energy consumption models
Processor and hardware design for energy consumption predictability
Program design for energy consumption predictability
Strategies to reduce the complexity of WCEC analysis
Tools for WCEC analysis
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