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Internet of Things Security: Evolution, Not Revolution September 10, 2013 Internet of Things Security: Evolution, Not Revolution In an always-connected world, the risk posed by cybersecurity threats is higher than ever. Time-tested security controls have mitigated many risks to IT systems, but the same threats to embedded devices, critical infrastructure, and data stored in the cloud have been neglected, putting our virtual and physical lives at risk. Device developers and manufacturers need to actively improve embedded device security by understanding the potential technical security gaps of connected embedded devices. While many IT- and enterprise-level security controls are suitable for critical infrastructure, the resource constraints and intermittent connectivity of embedded devices must be thoroughly understood before those security controls can be adapted to embedded and critical infrastructure use cases. This session will include the following topics:
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Critical Run-Time Components and Lifecycle Development Tools for Next-Generation Intelligent Network Elements September 11, 2013 Critical Run-Time Components and Lifecycle Development Tools for Next-Generation Intelligent Network Elements The network infrastructure is the backbone of the emerging intelligent connected world. Over the next several years, the number of connected devices and machines is expected to triple or even quadruple. Equipment providers must find ways to expand capacity, consolidate systems, and reduce costs. Intel and Wind River are spearheading the multi-core consolidation trend and enabling further consolidation and cost reduction through network functions virtualization (NFV). Join this session for answers to the following questions:
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Poster Chat: Wind River Simics Gives Boot Code a Boost—An Insyde Software Case Study on Accelerating Firmware Development Pre-Silicon
September 10, 2013
11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m./3:00 p.m.–4:30 p.m., Station 3
Presented by Guillaume Girard, Simics Project Manager, Intel Corporation; Steve Howard, Senior Technical Marketing Engineer, Intel Corporation; Anders Ravnborg, Director of Simulation Technology Center, Intel Corporation; Jeff Bobzin, Vice President, Software Architecture, Insyde Software; Martin Nicholes, Lead Architect, Insyde Software
Poster Chat – Wind River Simics Gives Boot Code a Boost—An Insyde Software Case Study on Accelerating Firmware Development Pre-Silicon
This poster chat reviews Insyde® Software's success in speeding InsydeH2O® firmware development on a new platform by leveraging Wind River Simics®. Insyde's server bring-up team was able to achieve power-on in 2–4 hours on the next-generation Intel server code-named Grantley—in large part by having access to the Simics simulation tool and models before silicon was available. Insyde's experience showed that Simics allows better access to platform models when customer reference boards (CRBs) are not yet available or are in short supply. Simics provides accurate platform models and leverages engineer experience with hardware debug tools such as Intel In-Target Probe (Intel ITP) to accelerate development. Powerful features like stopping on traps, replaying code flows, and saving platform states enable a rapid debug cycle.
Hands-On Lab: Intel Data Plane Development Kit and Wind River Intelligent Network Platform with Deep Packet Inspection
September 10, 2013
1:00 p.m.–3:15 p.m., Room 2000
Presented by Muthurajan Jayakumar, Platform Application Engineer, Intel Corporation; Abhishek Khade, Technical Marketing Engineer, Intel Corporation; Stephen Gooch, Solutions Readiness Engineer, Wind River; Mehdi Hashemian, Field Engineer Specialist, Wind River; Tony Vo, Platform Application Engineer, Intel Corporation
Hands-On Lab: Intel Data Plane Development Kit and Wind River Intelligent Network Platform with Deep Packet Inspection
In this lab, attendees will learn how to enhance packet processing performance using a combination of hardware and software acceleration. These techniques will benefit telecommunication infrastructure and networking applications. Methodologies covered in this lab are applicable to network functions virtualization (NFV) and software defined networking (SDN). Topics include the following:
Poster Chat: Intel System Studio—A Perfect Fit for Wind River Linux
September 11, 2013
11:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m./ 3:00 p.m.–4:30 p.m., Station 9
Presented by David Reyna, Senior Member, Technical Staff, Wind River; Noah Clemons, Technical Consulting Engineer, Parallel Programming Products, Intel Corporation
Poster Chat: Intel System Studio—A Perfect Fit for Wind River Linux
This poster chat illustrates the integration of Intel System Studio with the Wind River Linux application and system software build environment, as well as component deployment onto a Wind River Linux–based target.
The poster chat provides a detailed overview of the following:
Technical Session: Accelerating Software Development on Next-Generation Intel Architecture Microservers and Tablets with Wind River Simics
September 11, 2013
5:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m., Room 2008
Presented by Guillaume Girard, Simics Project Manager, Intel Corporation; Daniel Aarno, Engineering Manager, Intel Corporation
Poster Chat: Accelerating Software Development on Next-Generation Intel Architecture Microservers and Tablets with Wind River Simics
Wind River Simics is a powerful full-system simulator for firmware and software developers. This session will provide technical insights and details on the following:
Poster Chat: The Future of Software Defined Networking with the Intel Open Network Platform Switch Reference Design
September 12, 2013
10:45 p.m.–11:45 p.m., Room 2003
Presented by Gershon Schatzberg, Senior Product Line Manager, Open Network Software, Wind River; Recep Ozdag, Product Manager, Intel Corporation
Poster Chat: The Future of Software Defined Networking with the Intel Open Network Platform Switch Reference Design
Virtualized data center environments are driving the need for virtual machine mobility and network overlays using layer 3 tunneling mechanisms, which require coordination of forwarding tables across the network. Traditional distributed network control methods are no longer viable in this environment, and the industry is driving toward open standards in software defined networking (SDN).
This session will provide an overview of these new data center networks and how Intel and Wind River are working together to support an Open Network Platform (ONP) initiative to provide a programmable control plane and management APIs. Attendees will gain a better understanding of the various SDN approaches in the data center and how Intel and Wind River will provide user-programmable data center networking solutions. Topics include the following:
Wind River Open Virtualization Profile Fused with Intel DPDK
Wind River Intelligent Network Platform on Intel Rangeley
Wind River Intelligent Device Platform
Wind River VxWorks
Wind River Open Network Software