Robust Safety for Autonomous Vehicles through Reconfigurable Networking
Abstract
Autonomous vehicles bring the promise of enhancing the consumer experience in
terms of comfort and convenience and, in particular, the safety of the
autonomous vehicle. Safety functions in autonomous vehicles such as Automatic
Emergency Braking and Lane Centering Assist rely on computation, information
sharing, and the timely actuation of the safety functions. One opportunity to
achieve robust autonomous vehicle safety is by enhancing the robustness of
in-vehicle networking architectures that support built-in resiliency
mechanisms. Software Defined Networking (SDN) is an advanced networking
paradigm that allows fine-grained manipulation of routing tables and routing
engines and the implementation of complex features such as failover, which is a
mechanism of protecting in-vehicle networks from failure, and in which a
standby link automatically takes over once the main link fails. In this paper,
we leverage SDN network programmability features to enable resiliency in the
autonomous vehicle realm. We demonstrate that a Software Defined In-Vehicle
Networking (SDIVN) does not add overhead compared to Legacy In-Vehicle Networks
(LIVNs) under non-failure conditions and we highlight its superiority in the
case of a link failure and its timely delivery of messages. We verify the
proposed architectures benefits using a simulation environment that we have
developed and we validate our design choices through testing and simulations