Safety-Critical Linux: Challenges across industries
UD2.119 | Day 1 | 12:00 - 12:55 | Speakers: Kate Stewart, Philipp Ahmann, Susan Remmert
Abstract
Linux is being used more often in safety-critical areas like cars, planes, medical devices, robots, and trains. But each industry faces similar challenges when trying to meet safety and certification requirements. This BoF is an open discussion about those real-world problems: timing and determinism, documentation, certification, tooling, and system design. Anyone interested in safety-critical Linux is welcome to join, share experiences, ask questions, and explore where collaboration could help.
Attachments
Speakers
Kate has been working with Open Source communities for over 25 years. She was one of the founders of the SPDX project, and is a technical committee co-lead. Since she joined the Linux Foundation in 2015, she has been instrumental in launching the Zephyr, RT Linux and ELISA projects.
Philipp Ahmann is a Senior OSS Community Manager at ETAS GmbH (a Robert Bosch GmbH subsidiary), specializing in safety-critical automotive open source software and processes. With 15+ years' experience in Linux automotive platforms, he has held roles from software engineer to project & line manager. He also has experience in technical business development and product management for embedded open source software products. He currently holds the position of the Technical Steering Committee Chair for the Linux Foundation ELISA project to Enable Linux in Safety Applications and is member of the Linux Foundation Europe Advisory Board.
External Links
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