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FAA grants RSC status to Linux-friendly RTOS

Mar 20, 2006 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — 1 views

A proprietary RTOS capable of running Linux binaries has been certified by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) as a re-usable software component (RSC). LynuxWorks says LynxOS-178's RSC acceptance will enable greater software reuse among integrators and developers of safety-critical aerospace and defense components.

According to LynuxWorks, LynxOS-178 is the first safety-critical RTOS to receive an “Advisory Circular AC 20-148 acceptance letter” from the FAA. The letter can be used to support “virtually any FAA Technical Standard Order,” the company claims. In other words, once certified, implementations of LynxOS-178 can be deployed on other hardware and with other software components without full re-certification.

CEO Inder Singh stated, “The LynxOS-178 RSC will lead to a dramatic reduction in the cost and schedule risks associated with [safety-critical projects]. This is very consistent with LynuxWorks' focus on software reuse through our conformance with open standards and our RTOS and Linux dual product strategy.”

LynuxWorks describes LynxOS-178 as a “time, space and resource partitioned” RTOS compliant with the IEEE POSIX standard, with DO-178B, level A, and with ARINC 653. The company launched LynxOS-178 in March of 2003, and in April of 2005, won a large contract to supply the RTOS to Boeing for a project involving the US military's Future Combat System (FCS). The RTOS's ability to run Linux applications played a large role in winning that contract, the company said at the time.


 
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.



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