Lay a foundation for success with Tested Reference Architectures developed by Fortinet’s experts. Learn more in this white paper.
Moving to the cloud brings new challenges. How can you manage a larger attack surface while ensuring great network performance? Turn to Fortinet’s Tested Reference Architectures, blueprints for designing and securing cloud environments built by cybersecurity experts. Learn more and explore use cases in this white paper.
Download Now
Atera - an All-in-one platform for IT management
Ideal for IT departments and MSPs (managed service providers)
Your IT essentials, integrated & elevated. Take your IT management from automated to autonomous, download Atera's agent to start your free trial!
Real-Time Event Frameworks based on active objects & state machines
...The frameworks contain a selection of built-in real-time kernels (RTOS kernels), such as the cooperative QV kernel, the preemptive non-blocking QK kernel, and the unique preemptive, dual-mode (blocking/non-blocking) QXK kernel. Native QP ports and ready-to-use examples are provided for ARM Cortex-M (M0/M0+/M3/M4/M7/M33/...) as well as other CPUs. The QP RTEFs can also work with many traditional RTOSes and General-Purpose OSes, such as Linux and Windows.
Quantum Leaps (QPC) DPP example with LWIP on STM3220G eval board
This is a port of the Dining Philosopher Problem (DPP) using the Quantum Leaps (http://state-machine.com) hierarchical state machine framework with the Light Weight IP (LwIP) network stack (http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/lwip) and an ethernet driver implemented on the STM3220G-eval board (http://www.st.com/internet/evalboard/product/250374.jsp) running on stm32f207 Arm CortexM3 uProcessor.
The project is eclipse based and uses Code Sourcery cross compiler. See http://www.stf12.org/developers/CORTEX_STM32F2xx_Template.html for setup.
For debugger and flashing, the ST-Link V/2 was used.
FunkOS is an RTOS for 8-32 bit MCUs including AVR, MSP430, and CortexM3. Both C and C++ kernels avaiable. Key features include preemption, periodic events, device drivers, and mutex/semaphores. Includes a variety of graphics and filesystem middleware.
Please also check out FunkOS's big brother, Mark3OS. Mark3OS is slightly larger, but is more scalable, much more feature-rich, and supports a wider variety of devices.