Upgrade for ECU code generator

A Dspace UK product story
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team Jul 13, 2004

Version 2.0 of TargetLink, the production code generator, offers all the benefits of its predecessor plus an enormous range of brand-new functions.

Version 2.0 of TargetLink, the production code generator, offers all the benefits of its predecessor plus an enormous range of brand-new functions.

Numerous innovations will boost efficiency and cut ECU development times.

The major new features include the generation of code for OSEK/VDX-compliant real-time operating systems from Matlab/Simulink, the new Dspace Data Dictionary for model-independent data management, and an innovative tool for automatic scaling of models by the worst-case method.

Other efficiency-boosting features are a new blockset concept that makes teamwork more cost-effective, and incremental code generation, which allows code generation for a specific subsystem in which a modification has been made.

Additionally, TargetLink 2.0 offers code coverage analysis at a mouse-click, without any other tool required.

TargetLink is easy to integrate into existing development environments.

In addition, TargetLink 2.0 provides a new freely installable blockset that allows models to be exchanged even without a TargetLink licence.

Support of OSEK/VDX-compliant operating systems is another of TargetLink 2.0's major new features.

OSEK operating system objects and services can be specified on block diagram level, and TargetLink generates all the code.

The new Dspace Data Dictionary is a central data container that holds all the information relevant to code generation, independently of model partitioning.

In conjunction with TargetLink 2.0, it simplifies data storage for complex ECU development and supports teamwork in project groups.

Worst-case autoscaling dramatically shortens the time developers' need for fixed-point scaling.

Plant models and stimulus signals are no longer required.

The developer can specify value ranges and data types at model boundaries.

TargetLink then propagates these through the model, after which scaling is performed by the worst-case method.

The new blockset in TargetLink 2.0 can be installed and used on any computer that has Matlab/Simulink installed.

This means that models can be exchanged freely without the need for extra TargetLink licences.

Thus TargetLink can be used cost-efficiently by several developers at once.

Not what you're looking for? Search the site.

Back to top Back to top

Google Ads

 

Contact Dspace UK

Related Stories

Contact Dspace UK

 

Newsletter sign up

Request your free weekly copy of the Engineeringtalk email newsletter ...

Articles by product category

All suppliers A - Z

A Pro-talk Publication

A Pro-talk publication