
MCS24CS1857309-SDV_SIS_Launch-ebook-R1c.pdf
UL Solutions Software Intensive Systems offers the automotive industry this look at how development processes are being impacted by the shift towards software-defined vehicles. A new mindset — and accompanying software-centric development approaches — makes innovation more rapid and affordable, while still maintaining a safety and security focused culture.
Here are some key takeaways:
The automotive industry has not yet reached consensus about what constitutes a software defined vehicle (SDV). In 2023, the World Economic Forum, in conjunction with Boston Consulting Group, developed a model for software defined vehicles that consists of six layers, starting with the mechanical vehicle platform and its components grouped in different computing zones as a foundation. A vehicle software platform acts as the main abstraction of the hardware, subsequent software layers contain common data-gathering and insights functions and the actual automotive applications like infotainment or propulsion and battery management. The top layer is formed by the “smart mobility ecosystem” in which the vehicle communicates with its surroundings, e.g. other vehicles and edge or cloud computing services.
Regardless of the actual definition, UL Software Intensive Systems recognizes that the automotive industry is moving away from historical models with complex vehicle architectures consisting of dozens of electrical control units (ECUs) from different suppliers towards simplified and centralized hardware architectures with mobility functionality and most of consumer value realized in software.
The end goal of the transition towards software defined vehicles remains to speed up innovation and shorten time to market by reducing complexity and eliminating redundancies and complications.
The automotive industry has seen a lot of hype about the transformational power of software defined vehicles (SDV). A confluence of competing factors has toned down the sky-high expectations around SDV, but as the conversation becomes more practical, the automotive industry is poised to enjoy significant speedup of innovation and long-term cost reductions through software-defined smart mobility.
In 2024, Automotive IQ surveyed 600 automotive software leaders about the current state of industry software development. Concern for software quality surged ahead of safety, which topped previous reports.
Source: State of Automotive Software Development Report: 2024
Software can be continuously updated. Consumers expect this constant improvement in mobile phones and laptops, but the sheer complexity of vehicles and the rest of the smart mobility ecosystem makes this much harder to achieve in the automotive industry.
While a product delivery mindset used to be sufficient for recent vehicles, a continuous delivery model is most appropriate in the new reality wherein software in abstracted from the hardware layers. Some vendors have already made the shift by moving from multi-year gate-based development processes towards software-centric models like DevOps (development and operations). To be applicable in the automotive world, tightly including security and safety is paramount, e.g. by adopting more advanced models like DevSecOps (development, security, and operations) or Industrial DevOps. Development teams need to be able to continously work on software platforms instead of being dispersed to other projects after a product launch.
In legacy automotive software development, some processes may have been run once or or twice a year. Today — and going forth — processes and workflows must be repeatable, quicker and iterable.
This is challenging, but certainly possible. Here’s how:
The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UN ECE) foster harmonization of vehicle and automotive regulations and mandate the adherence to security and safety standards.
SDVs are not isolated products; they are a part of a mobility ecosystem, so cybersecurity is a major concern.
Security standards for road vehicles such as ISO 21434 must be applied throughout the complete software stack. To secure SDVs after vulnerabilities have been identified, the ISO 24089 standard is expected to be followed by OEMs to perform the necessary software updates securely and safely, regardless of the updates being performed over-the-air or at the distributors. Automotive suppliers are required to maintain proper RXSWIN identifications for their software deliveries to efficiently segment out vehicle populations needing software updates.
To protect the whole mobility ecosystem in its entirety, a sole focus on the vehicle level is not sufficient. TISAX, a security standard based on ISO 27001 and optimized for automotive companies, addresses IT security also on an enterprise level to address risks in the IT infrastructure and organizations that are part of the overall ecosystem. In addition, new models like SPICE for IT Systems can be used to assess the overall quality of those systems.
As SDVs typically partition general compute from safety zones, validating functional safety can be limited to components in those respective zones, if freedom from interference between the different zones can be established. ISO 26262 (Functional safety) and ISO 21488 (Safety of the Intended Function – SOTIF) standards are still applicable to the components in those safety zones.
Safety and security can only be effectively addressed if development of systems and software fulfils certain quality criteria. To avoid inefficiencies, a holistic and consistent approach to safety, security and quality is advised and deeply integrated into the respective engineering processes.
For more than two decades, the automotive industry has used Automotive SPICE to increase quality of systems and software by requiring adherence to appropriate software and systems development processes. If implemented properly in engineering and not only being used as a checklist by quality managers, Automotive SPICE has been very effective to achieve high quality of results and consequently reduce rework.
The Automotive SPICE family of standards now features:
UL Solutions Software Intensive Systems (SIS) provides end-to-end partnership for the automotive industry. SIS brings 20+ years of industry experience powered by more than 400 experts to offer insights, services and software that empowers SDV innovation.
We can help you advance SDV development through:
MCS24CS1857309-SDV_SIS_Launch-ebook-R1c.pdf
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