Diagnosis of a class of distributed discrete-event systems

被引:37
作者
Baroni, P [1 ]
Lamperti, G
Pogliano, P
Zanella, M
机构
[1] Univ Brescia, Dipartimento Elettron & Automazione, I-25123 Brescia, Italy
[2] Energia SpA, I-20124 Brescia, Italy
来源
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SYSTEMS MAN AND CYBERNETICS PART A-SYSTEMS AND HUMANS | 2000年 / 30卷 / 06期
关键词
asynchronous discrete-event systems; communicating automata; diagnosis; distributed systems;
D O I
10.1109/3468.895897
中图分类号
TP3 [计算技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
Discrete-event modeling can be applied to a large variety of physical systems, such as digital hardware, quelling networks, communication networks, and industrial protection systems, in order to support different tasks, including fault detection, monitoring, and diagnosis. This paper focuses on the model-based diagnosis of a class of distributed discrete-event systems, called active systems. An active system, which is designed to react to possibly harmful external events, is modeled as a network of communicating automata, where each automaton describes the behavior of a system component. Unlike other approaches based on the synchronous composition of automata and on the off-line creation of the model of the entire system, the proposed diagnostic technique deals with asynchronous events and does not need any global diagnoser to be built. Instead, the current approach features a problem-decomposition/solution-composition nature whose core is the on-line progressive reconstruction of the behavior of the active system, guided by the available observations. This incremental technique makes effective the diagnosis of large-scale active systems, for which the one-shot generation of the global model is almost invariably impossible in practice. The diagnostic method encompasses three steps: 1) reconstruction planning; 2) behavior reconstruction; and 3) diagnosis generation, Step 1 draws a hierarchical decomposition of the behavior reconstruction problem. Reconstruction is made up in Step 2, where an intensional representation of ail the dynamic behaviors which are consistent with the available system observation is produced. Diagnosis is eventually generated in Step 3, based on the faulty evolutions incorporated within the reconstructed behaviors. The modular approach is formally defined, with special emphasis on Steps 2 and 3, and applied to the power transmission network domain.
引用
收藏
页码:731 / 752
页数:22
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