Book Image

Embedded Systems Architecture - Second Edition

By : Daniele Lacamera
5 (1)
Book Image

Embedded Systems Architecture - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Daniele Lacamera

Overview of this book

Embedded Systems Architecture begins with a bird’s-eye view of embedded development and how it differs from the other systems that you may be familiar with. This book will help you get the hang of the internal working of various components in real-world systems. You’ll start by setting up a development environment and then move on to the core system architectural concepts, exploring system designs, boot-up mechanisms, and memory management. As you progress through the topics, you’ll explore the programming interface and device drivers to establish communication via TCP/IP and take measures to increase the security of IoT solutions. Finally, you’ll be introduced to multithreaded operating systems through the development of a scheduler and the use of hardware-assisted trusted execution mechanisms. With the help of this book, you will gain the confidence to work with embedded systems at an architectural level and become familiar with various aspects of embedded software development on microcontrollers—such as memory management, multithreading, and RTOS—an approach oriented to memory isolation.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1 – Introduction to Embedded Systems Development
4
Part 2 – Core System Architecture
8
Part 3 – Device Drivers and Communication Interfaces
13
Part 4 – Multithreading

TLS

Link-layer protocols often provide some basic security mechanisms to guarantee the authentication of the client connecting to a specific network and encrypt data by using symmetric keys such as AES. In most cases, authentication at the link layer is sufficient to guarantee a basic level of security. Nevertheless, pre-shared, well-known keys often used in LR-WPAN network stacks may be vulnerable to multiple kinds of attacks, and using a pre-shared key would allow an attacker to decipher any traffic that has been previously captured on the same link if the key was compromised. In other scenarios, encryption alone is not sufficient to guarantee that the other endpoint is what it claims to be, or that the data flow has not been altered during transmission.

A device that takes part in an IoT-distributed system is required to implement a higher grade of security, especially in embedded devices that do not protect the memory in any way and where any backdoor means that attackers can...