A major European vendor of city-wide traffic management systems is porting its flagship traffic light controller to Linux and real-time Java. Signalbau Huber says its Actros controller will better meet safety-critical requirements after moving to Sysgo ELinOS/PikeOS 4.1 with Aonix’s PERC real-time Java runtime.

Currently, Signalbau Huber’s Actros controller is based on Debian GNU/Linux 3.2. Versions based on the new software implementation are expected to begin testing by year’s end. The migration will enable engineers to move from several different CPUs to one CPU, [while] keeping security-critical functions and Linux separated.
Signalbau Huber is one of Germany’s two largest traffic managment system vendors. The company’s systems are used in Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Prague, Budepest, Vienna, Poland, Warsaw, and Benelux, among other European locations.
Signalbau Huber’s installations comprise one or two central traffic management systems per city. These are typical PC systems with lots of network connectivity and database-based application software. Connected to these systems by VPNs, “special networks,” dial-up modems, and even GPRS and UMTS are Linux-based Actros controllers designed for placement in each intersection.
Click to view a larger size
The Actros controller runs Linux on a single x86-compatible control-plane processor. A CAN (controller area network) backplane supports multiple switching card modules, each based on an Infineon XC164 microcontroller. The switching cards use MOSFETs (metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor) to send voltages to connected signals — including pedestrian and traffic lights. With a full complement of switching cards, a single Actros controller can control 196 individual signals, Lock said.
Signalbau Huber’s current, Debian 3.0-based Actros controller uses an AMD SC520 “control processor” clocked at 133MHz. It also has a “security processor” that will be obviated by the new ELinOS/PERC architecture. The company has not yet finalized its choice of processors for next-generation Actros controllers, but is evaluating AMD’s LX800.
The new design’s control processor will run Sysgo’s ELinos 4.1 embedded Linux implementation, including PikeOS, Sysgo’s real-time, POSIX-compatible execution environment add-on. The Linux component will provide a browser-based management interface accessible over the network or to on-site technicians. The real-time PikeOS environment, meanwhile, will host Aonix’s PERC real-time Java component.
Two safety-critical applications will run under PERC. The first of these real-time Java applications is a traffic control program specific to each intersection, enabling engineers to program light behavior in Java. The second is an OCIT (open communication interface for road traffic control systems) networking stack that handles most communications with the central management system.
After an initial period of evaluation, Signalbau Huber has been working on the migration to ELinOS/PERC for about half a year.
Choosing Linux will prepare Signalbau Huber for the future as it’s a flexible and scalable system.