American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
1
Emphasizing Understandability, Flexibility, and Verifiability
in a Spacecraft Fault Management Autonomy System
George J. Cancro
1
, Russell J. Turner
2
, Christopher C. Monaco
3
, Daniel S. Wilson
3
, Lillian Nguyen
3
, Michael J.
Pekala
2
, Christopher C. Olson
3
, and Eliezer G. Kahn
3
The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, MD, 20723
Surveying the current state of practice of spacecraft autonomy, one can detect many
different attributes of the various autonomy systems currently employed to maintain the
safety of the spacecraft. In an effort to move beyond the state of practice, Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Lab has focused on three of these attributes not found together
in current systems: Understandability, Flexibility and Verifiability. Understandability
defines the ability to specify and review the autonomy system in such a way that any non-
software domain expert or system engineer can understand the design. Flexibility defines
the ability to modify the design pre- and post-launch in parts without patching or without
complete code uploads. Verifiability defines the ability to exhaustively and rapidly verify
correct autonomy system behavior before it is uploaded to the spacecraft. With the goal of
attaining all three of these attributes, JHU/APL has designed and developed a new
autonomy system called ExecSpec (short for Executable Specification). The system has
been progressed to TRL 5 and is now poised for infusion into future spacecraft programs.
ExecSpec is a new visual programming approach to autonomy system development
that enables any system designer or domain expert to visually create spacecraft
functionality and autonomous behavior in the form of up-loadable specification diagrams.
ExecSpec allows developers to interactively construct autonomy systems by drawing
diagrams of individual Finite State Machines (FSM) and linking them together to form
autonomy components and subsystems. The diagram components are easily
understandable by non-software domain experts and system engineers, allowing for
system-level review of the autonomy system design. The diagram components can either
be built from scratch, or instantiated from libraries of reusable FSM components.
In contrast to current software capabilities, ExecSpec is not a code generator but
rather an interpreter-based system which enables the uploading diagrams directly to an
on-board FSM execution engine, allowing the autonomy system to be rapidly and safely
modified at any time in a project's lifecycle and thus reducing overall lifecycle and
maintenance costs. This makes the system inherently flexible to post launch modifications
and enables changes on the individual FSM level such that new FSM diagrams can be
added or interchanged. The resulting diagram behavior produced by ExecSpec can be
tested directly through interactive stimulation of system inputs or by playing back scripted
input scenarios. Model checking tools can also be used to rapidly verify that the diagrams
obey specified constraints and requirements, and the uploaded system behavior can be
visually monitored during flight. This combination of interactive testing, model checking
and in-flight monitoring ensures autonomy systems built within ExecSpec can be
exhaustively verified in a rapid manner.
This paper will describe in detail the three attributes chosen by JHU/APL,
including the driving need for each, then go on to describe how the new ExecSpec system
meets these attributes. Finally, the paper will describe the current state of the ExecSpec
development and plans for infusion into future spacecraft systems.
1
Assistant Group Supervisor of Embedded Applications Group, Space Department.
2
Senior Member of Technical Staff, System and Information Science Group
3
Senior Member of Technical Staff, Space Department
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