Future Airborne Capability Environment (FACE)

Triton

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"FACE technical standard debuts to foster interoperability, reuse of military avionics software across common development platform"
January 31, 2012
By Courtney Howard
Executive Editor

Source:
http://www.avionics-intelligence.com/articles/2012/01/face-technical-standard.html

SAN FRANCISCO, 31 Jan. 2012. U.S. Navy and U.S. Army officials joined forces with aerospace and defense industry leaders, including executives from Lockheed Martin and Rockwell Collins, to help ensure warfighters can benefit from continued software innovations, both more quickly and more affordably, despite anticipated U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) budget cuts. The Future Airborne Capability Environment (FACE) Consortium has released the FACE Technical Standard, providing guidelines for creating a common operating environment to support applications across multiple DOD avionics systems.

The open avionics standard is intended to enable developers to create and deploy applications across the entire spectrum of military aviation systems through a common operating environment, increasing capability, security, safety, and agility while also reducing costs. FACE officials reveal that several product developments by industry and procurements by government customer organizations are underway based on the FACE standard.

Developed in collaboration with 39 consortium member organizations, including Lockheed Martin, NAVAIR, Rockwell Collins, and U.S. Army PEO Aviation, the FACE Technical Standard promotes industry-government collaboration in a trusted environment, using proven processes and governance by The Open Group. The standard introduces interoperability into an environment that has traditionally relied on the use of tightly coupled individual systems each with unique interfaces.

"The introduction of the FACE Technical Standard is an important milestone in extending interoperability among the armed forces and creating a common platform for avionics that enables systems to work together across each of the branches of the U.S. military," explains Allen Brown, president and CEO, The Open Group. "It is our hope this standard will accelerate the open and secure development of products within the Department of Defense's Airborne community by enabling industry-government collaboration."

"Modular open systems are very important to the industry, our military customers, and the warfighter," says Dave Nieuwsma, vice president and general manager of Airborne Solutions at Rockwell Collins. "We have seen the benefits of such systems within military rotary wing and tanker / transport aircraft and are pleased to participate as a sponsor member of the FACE Consortium. This publication, along with the forthcoming conformance certification process, will promote the use of widely adopted open industry standards, minimizing the cost and schedule of technology insertions and capability upgrades."

The FACE Consortium, formed as a government/industry partnership to define an open avionics environment for all military airborne platform types, is an aviation-focused professional group made up of industry suppliers, customers, and users. It is intended to provide a vendor-neutral forum for industry and government to work together to develop and consolidate open standards, best practices, guidance documents, and business models.

Members of the FACE Corsortium include:
Sponsors: Lockheed Martin, NAVAIR, Rockwell Collins, and U.S. Army PEO Aviation.

Principals: ATK, BAE Systems, Bell Helicopter, Boeing, Elbit Systems of America, GE Aviation Systems, General Dynamics, Green Hills Software, Harris Corporation, MITRE, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Sikorsky Aircraft, Textron Systems, US Army AMRDEC, and Wind River.

Associates: CMC Electronics, Curtiss-Wright Controls Electronic Systems, Defense Photonics Group, Donatech Corporation, Esterel Technologies, FMS Secure Solutions, GoAhead Software, LynuxWorks, Microsoft, Objective Interface Systems, Physical Optics Corp., Presagis, Real-Time Innovations, Stauder Technologies, System Planning Corporation, System Support Associates, Tucson Embedded Systems, ViaSat, and Zodiac Data Systems.
 
"Army to define common operating environment for FACE Consortium avionics work"
February 23, 2012
By John Keller
Editor

Source:
http://www.militaryaerospace.com/articles/2012/02/army-to-define-common-operating-environment-for-face-consortium-avionics-work.html

REDSTONE ARSENAL, Ala., 23 Feb. 2012. U.S. Army aviation officials are reaching out to industry for ideas on developing open-systems helicopter avionics hardware and software that will help cut costs and reduce maintenance requirements by increasing competition among defense contractors, reusing avionics components, and promoting rapid technology insertion for avionics system upgrades.

The Army Research, Development, and Engineering Command (RDECOM) Aviation and Missile Research, Development, and Engineering Center (AMRDEC) at Redstone Arsenal, Ala., released a request for information (W58RGZ-12-R-0270) Tuesday for the Future Airborne Capabilities Environment (FACE) Reference Common Operating Environment (COE) project to create an open avionics architecture that will function as a laboratory-based prototype to support avionics development, testing, and demonstration.

This project is part of efforts of a consortium of military and industry avionics experts called the Future Airborne Capability Environment (FACE) Consortium, which is part of the Open Group. The FACE consortium seeks to capitalize on continuing software innovations quickly and more affordably in the face of current and future U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) budget cuts.

AMRDEC's FACE COE project has a general interest in developing efficient and inexpensive helicopter avionics applicable to a wide variety of rotorcraft and other vertical-lift aircraft, as well as a specific interest in eliminating proprietary black-box stove-piped avionics subsystems that are costly to upgrade and maintain. The FACE COE project seeks to do this by integrating and certifying avionics at a higher level of abstraction than is done today.

The common operating environment that Army experts expect to result from the FACE COE project must conform to the technical standard for the FACE Reference Architecture, version 1.0. AMRDEC experts will acquire and host third-party software components on the FACE reference COE to analyze FACE acquisition strategies, integration approaches, and airworthiness certification.

The FACE Consortium formed, in part, to meet a DOD need to develop common aircraft architecture and subsystems with an emphasis on commonality for use across the next generation of military vertical-lift aircraft. AMRDEC is one of 39 FACE Consortium members, which include Lockheed Martin, U.S. Naval Air Systems Command, Rockwell Collins, and the Army program executive office for aviation.

AMRDEC's FACE COE project seeks to capitalize on existing, proven industry technology to develop a FACE reference COE, which should include one bus-based computer with at least two fault redundant MIL-STD-1553 databuses; three Ethernet ports; four configurable RS-232, RS-422, or RS-48 serial ports; one card with four computer processors supported by at least two ARINC-653 real-time operating system (RTOS) software vendors; spare card slots for additional processors; one 28-volt embedded power supply; one graphics card with support for FACE graphics services; and commercial-grade hardware with equivalent military-avionics-grade hardware.

FACE COE software should have an ARINC-653 operating system; two different guest real time operating systems hosted in the ARINC-653 operating system; board support packages (BSP) and FACE I/O services for exposing hardware capabilities on each RTOS; simple RTOS IPC based FACE transport services implementation; advanced middleware-based FACE Transport Services; and FACE graphics service.
 
Thank you for posting Triton. FACE is the most important issue currently in DoD for many reasons...
 
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