Design

Management platform supports popular operating systems

23rd January 2014
Staff Reporter
0

Supporting popular operating systems, the RDM Embedded 12.0 has been released by Raima. The RDM Embedded 12 supports the latest versions of Wind River’s VxWorks, QNX Neutrino and Green Hills INTEGRITY, as well as Windows CE and Linux ARM.

 

With RDM Embedded 12 supporting these operating systems, users are provided with freedom to develop outstanding database solutions for the hardware and software platforms of their choosing, according to the requirements of their individual markets.

RDM Embedded 12 is a database management system which claims to offer the highest performance and stability, even on resource constrained systems, when compared with conventional database solutions.The system provides support for both 32-bit and 64-bit in-memory real-time operating systems, with the support for symmetric multiprocessing enabling developers to take full advantage of the latest multi-processor hardware for improved live real-time processing.

A range of features are offered with the system which optimize standalone operation on resource-limited systems, such as the way the runtime library allocates the memory required for cache and other necessary storage. The memory that the database is allowed to use can be either limited or preallocated, increasing stability. This is facilitated through a function that specifies a limit, and an optional pointer to preallocated memory.

Raima CTO Wayne Warren commented: “These platforms are utilised by key industry leaders in areas such as the automotive, aerospace, defense, industrial automation, industrial safety, medical, secure mobile, security, telecom and networking markets. Now with RDM Embedded 12, real-time system developers in these sectors can take full advantage of features such as support for multi-core processors, in-memory limitation, encryption, shared memory and a host of other high performance features.”

The Rijndael/AES algorithm for encryption and decryption is now available to aid security issues. The algorithm supports the use of 128-, 192- or 256-bit keys.

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