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Book Overview & Buying
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Table Of Contents
Offensive Automotive Cybersecurity
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Even with the shift toward centralized computing systems, electronic control units (ECUs) built on microcontrollers (MCUs) continue to be workhorses for automotive sensing and actuation. Unlike the high-performance system-on-chips (SoCs) found in vehicle computers and advanced driver-assistance systems, traditional MCU-based ECUs leverage constrained resources to perform deterministic real-time control. These MCUs typically integrate a CPU core (or a few cores) with limited on-chip memory and peripherals, optimized to interface directly with a mixture of vehicle sensors and actuators. They run lightweight real-time operating systems (RTOS) or even bare metal, in contrast to the rich operating systems on automotive SoCs. You will find microcontroller-driven ECUs throughout a modern vehicle, where they manage specific functions such as engine control, anti-lock braking, airbag deployment, power steering, and body control. Many of these functions are safety...
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