Elektrobit Unveils Industry-First Software Platform for Next-Gen Vehicle Electronics Architecture

December 01, 2020

Press Release

Elektrobit Unveils Industry-First Software Platform for Next-Gen Vehicle Electronics Architecture

EB xelor brings together production-proven OS and safety software to jump-start the new vehicle design process and reduce engineering costs by 30% or more.

Elektrobit (EB) announced EB xelor, an industry-first software platform designed to streamline the development of next-generation automotive electronics architectures based on high-performance computing (HPC). According to the company, EB xelor provides car makers and Tier 1 suppliers with an upgradable software foundation for connected and intelligent vehicles, allowing them to focus less on automotive infrastructure and more on innovation and profitability: developing differentiating features and functions for their vehicles.

EB xelor brings together software from EB, open-source and third-party software, plus tools, and services that are critical for HPC environments but won't necessarily differentiate one vehicle from another. Per the company, by choosing EB xelor, car makers and Tier 1s can save the time, resources, and staff required to source and integrate these elements on their own. Based on its experience with car makers on production projects involving software for HPC architectures, EB conservatively estimates savings of up to 30% in overall engineering costs.

EB xelor integrates a high-performance functional safety software stack based on Linux and Adaptive AUTOSAR, a realtime and safety software stack based on Classic AUTOSAR using EB tresos, a hypervisor, plus software for HPC updates and platform health management capabilities. It also includes tools and services to automate builds and facilitate integration. The EB xelor platform is optimized for HPC environments using system-on-a-chip (SoC) devices from NXP and Renesas. Car makers can then add their own vehicle-specific software on top of these stacks.

"The automotive industry is undergoing a major paradigm shift. Every car maker is grappling with how to deal with the increased complexity of vehicle electronics engineering systems. It is requiring them to effectively 'reinvent' their vehicle architectures and become experts at procuring and integrating non-differentiating software, unnecessarily draining resources and pushing budgets to their limits," explained Maria Anhalt, Chief Technology Officer at Elektrobit. "With EB xelor, EB draws upon its decades of expertise to do the heavy lifting for the car maker. We're providing preintegrated, production-proven software that will jump-start the process."

While EB xelor is a new product, it is based on software and technology used in vehicles on the road today.

For more information, visit: elektrobit.com