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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260131
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260202
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20251126T200701Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260127T002334Z
UID:10000083-1769817600-1769990399@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:ELISA Project at FOSDEM 2026
DESCRIPTION:[vc_row type=”in_container” full_screen_row_position=”middle” column_margin=”default” column_direction=”default” column_direction_tablet=”default” column_direction_phone=”default” scene_position=”center” text_color=”dark” text_align=”left” row_border_radius=”none” row_border_radius_applies=”bg” row_position_desktop=”default” row_position_tablet=”inherit” row_position_phone=”inherit” overflow=”visible” overlay_strength=”0.3″ gradient_direction=”left_to_right” shape_divider_position=”bottom” bg_image_animation=”none”][vc_column column_padding=”no-extra-padding” column_padding_tablet=”inherit” column_padding_phone=”inherit” column_padding_position=”all” flex_gap_desktop=”10px” column_element_direction_desktop=”default” column_element_spacing=”default” desktop_text_alignment=”default” tablet_text_alignment=”default” phone_text_alignment=”default” background_color_opacity=”1″ background_hover_color_opacity=”1″ column_backdrop_filter=”none” column_shadow=”none” column_border_radius=”none” column_link_target=”_self” column_position=”default” gradient_direction=”left_to_right” overlay_strength=”0.3″ width=”1/1″ tablet_width_inherit=”default” animation_type=”default” bg_image_animation=”none” border_type=”simple” column_border_width=”none” column_border_style=”solid”][vc_column_text css=”” text_direction=”default”]FOSDEM is a free event for software developers to meet\, share ideas and collaborate. Every year\, thousands of developers of free and open source software from all over the world gather at the event in Brussels. \nThe ELISA Project Ambassadors will be at FOSDEM 2026\, actively participating across the event. They will be giving presentations\, joining discussions\, and meeting contributors and attendees in various developer rooms throughout the weekend. You can also connect with them at the Linux Foundation Europe stand\, where they will be available to talk about ongoing work\, community activities\, and how to get involved with ELISA. \nIn addition\, Philipp Ahmann\, ELISA TSC Chair\, Systems and Automotive WG Chair\, and Sr. OSS Community Manager at ETAS GmbH (BOSCH)\, will be giving a talk at FOSDEM 2026. Philipp will also be at the Linux Foundation Europe stand throughout the weekend for anyone who would like to learn more about the ELISA Project\, ask technical questions\, or discuss collaboration opportunities. \nFrom the TSC\, Kate Stewart (VP\, Dependable Embedded Systems\, The Linux Foundation) and Nicole Pappler (Senior Safety Expert & Founder at AlektoMetis.com) will also be at FOSDEM. \n  \nSession Highlight:\nCode\, Compliance\, and Confusion: Open Source in Safety-Critical Products \nOpen source is increasingly finding its place in functionally safe\, safety-critical systems but adoption remains complex. This talk explores the rapid progress of OSS in functional safety across Linux\, Zephyr\, Xen\, and automotive middleware\, while also addressing the real barriers holding it back\, from certification uncertainty to misunderstood safety concepts.  Learn more. \nBoF/Unconference\nBOF: Linux & Open Source Software for safety applications in Railways (Jan 31\, 2026 11:00 am – 11:55 am) \nDigitization requires efficient software development. Today\, this is no longer financially viable without the massive reuse of existing components and thus without the use of open source software as a generic product\, also in the context of safety applications. Therefore\, ways and means must be found to make open source software usable on a large scale for the railway sector. Due to the cooperative nature of open source software and the low competitive differentiation in the use of such generic products\, the collaboration of various stakeholders from the sector under the governance of a Foundation can useful and important. This BOF wants to explore\, if there is a critical mass to start a foundational backed project initiative for better spread of awareness for OSS in Railways and which activities exist to expand this approach for the safety-critical parts. \nSafety-Critical Linux: Challenges across industries (Sat\, Jan 31 – 12:00pm – 12:55pm) \nLinux is being used more often in safety-critical areas like cars\, planes\, medical devices\, robots\, and trains. But each industry faces similar challenges when trying to meet safety and certification requirements. This BoF is an open discussion about those real-world problems: timing and determinism\, documentation\, certification\, tooling\, and system design. Anyone interested in safety-critical Linux is welcome to join\, share experiences\, ask questions\, and explore where collaboration could help. Learn more. \n[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/elisa-project-at-fosdem-2026/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251211
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251214
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250925T073805Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251106T212544Z
UID:10000080-1765411200-1765670399@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Linux Plumbers Conference: Tokyo\, Japan 2025
DESCRIPTION:[vc_row type=”in_container” full_screen_row_position=”middle” column_margin=”default” column_direction=”default” column_direction_tablet=”default” column_direction_phone=”default” scene_position=”center” text_color=”dark” text_align=”left” row_border_radius=”none” row_border_radius_applies=”bg” overflow=”visible” overlay_strength=”0.3″ gradient_direction=”left_to_right” shape_divider_position=”bottom” bg_image_animation=”none”][vc_column column_padding=”no-extra-padding” column_padding_tablet=”inherit” column_padding_phone=”inherit” column_padding_position=”all” column_element_direction_desktop=”default” column_element_spacing=”default” desktop_text_alignment=”default” tablet_text_alignment=”default” phone_text_alignment=”default” background_color_opacity=”1″ background_hover_color_opacity=”1″ column_backdrop_filter=”none” column_shadow=”none” column_border_radius=”none” column_link_target=”_self” column_position=”default” gradient_direction=”left_to_right” overlay_strength=”0.3″ width=”1/1″ tablet_width_inherit=”default” animation_type=”default” bg_image_animation=”none” border_type=”simple” column_border_width=”none” column_border_style=”solid”][vc_column_text css=”” text_direction=”default”]The Linux Plumbers Conference is the premier event for developers working at all levels of the plumbing layer and beyond. \nTaking place on Thursday 11th\, Friday 12th and Saturday 13th of December\, this year we will be both in person and remote (hybrid). However to minimize technical issues\, we’d appreciate most of the content presenters being in-person. \nThe in-person venue is the Toranomon Hills Forum\, Tokyo\, Japan. \n\nLPC Microconference\n\n\nA microconference contains several sessions based on the same general topic. Each session will be between 15 to 30 minutes in length and be discussion oriented. \nSafe Systems with Linux MC \nAs Linux continues to be deployed in systems with varying criticality constraints\, progress needs to be made in establishing consistent linkage between code\, tests\, and requirements\, to improve overall efficiency and ability to support necessary analysis.\nThis MC addresses critical challenges in expectation management (aka requirements tracking)\, documentation\, testing\, and artifact sharing within the Linux kernel ecosystem. While tests are contributed for the code\, traditionally the underlying requirement that the tests satisfies is likewise not documented in a structured manner. This has resulted in a large amount of “tribal knowledge” associated with subsystems\, which results in technical debt when maintainers stop working on subsystems. \nTaking in the feedback from last year’s “Safe Systems with Linux” miniconference 1\, on how we can improve the documentation of the kernel’s design [1a] the ELISA (Enabling Linux in Safety Applications) community has focused on prototyping a template for capturing the requirements with volunteer linux kernel subsystem maintainers. The ELISA architecture team 2 has been meeting weekly and has developed a structured approach for documenting testable expectations with a template that allows embedding requirements directly with relevant code (as requested in the initial workshop) while maintaining machine readability and forming a base for improving testing with initiatives like KernelCI. The prototype format got initial review and feedback in December at the ELISA workshop at Goddard [3] and after incorporating that feedback in the workshop in Lund in May [4]. \nInitial pilots in the TRACING subsystem [5] have demonstrated the value of this approach\, even resulting in the identification and fixing of previously unknown issues. [6\,7]\nBuilding on the last year’s discussions\, the goal of this miniconference is to get wider feedback from additional maintainers and developers of different subsystems on the approach being proposed. \nPotential Topics\n\nProgress on Linux Kernel Requirements Framework\nDiscussing the SPDX-based template for low-level requirements\, lessons learned from initial pilots\, and plans for wider adoption.\nTechnical Debt Reduction\nHow documented requirements capture understanding of original functionality\, and can be leveraged for verification when code needs to be rewritten (ie. C to Rust)\, etc.\nRequirements-Driven Testing\nHow documented requirements can drive test case development and validation. Connecting relevant test cases with specific requirements and code\, should be able to yield more efficient testing.\nSemantic Aspects of Kernel Requirements\nExploring how to properly document expected behaviors with consideration for design elements that impact or are impacted by these behaviors.\nPractical Implementation Challenges\nAddressing the balance between detailed requirements documentation and maintaining kernel development velocity.\nRequired tools for automation\nProgress on tools to generate\, validate\, and track work products increasing dependability throughout the kernel development process.\nIndustry Adoption\nHow safety-critical industries are beginning to leverage these developments for certification and compliance purposes. How their safety engineers can participate in contributing formalized requirements to the kernel and providing linkage.\nRequirements as an Education Tool\nHow linux kernel documentation can mine the requirements\, and help new contributors understand kernel functionality and design intent and attract new upsteam developers\n\nSession Highlights:\n\nAspects of Dependable Linux Systems – Kate Stewart (Linux Foundation)\, Philipp Ahmann (Etas GmbH (BOSCH)) – 12 Dec 2025\, 10:00\nNVIDIA Approach for Achieving ASIL B Qualified Linux: minimizing expectations from upstream kernel processes -Igor Stoppa (nvidia) -12 Dec 2025\, 10:10am\nApplying Program Verification to Linux Kernel Code: Challenges\, Practices\, and Automation – Keisuke Nishimura – 12 Dec 2025\, 10:35\nDefining and maintaining requirements in the Linux Kernel – Chuck Wolber\, Gabriele Paoloni (Red Hat)\, Kate Stewart (Linux Foundation) – 12 Dec 2025\, 11:00\nKUnit Testing Insufficiencies – Matthew Whitehead (The Boeing Company) – 12 Dec 2025\, 12:00\nExploring possibilities for integrating StrictDoc with ELISA’s requirements template approach for the Linux kernel – Tobias Deiminger (Linutronix GmbH) – 12 Dec 2025\, 12:25\nBASIL: Open Source Traceability for Safety-Critical Systems” – Luigi Pellecchia – 12 Dec 2025\, 12:40\nTooling and Sharing Traceability Discussion – Luigi Pellecchia\, Matthew Whitehead (The Boeing Company)\, Tobias Deiminger (Linutronix GmbH) – 12 Dec 2025\, 12:55\nWrap up and next steps – Kate Stewart (Linux Foundation)\, Philipp Ahmann (Etas GmbH (BOSCH)) – 12 Dec 2025\, 13:20\n\nLearn more about the sessions here. \n\n[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/linux-plumbers-conference-tokyo-japan-2025/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Presentations,Industry Conference
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20251208T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20251210T170000
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250925T072959Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251127T202749Z
UID:10000079-1765180800-1765386000@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Open Source Summit: Tokyo\, Japan 2025
DESCRIPTION:[vc_row type=”in_container” full_screen_row_position=”middle” column_margin=”default” column_direction=”default” column_direction_tablet=”default” column_direction_phone=”default” scene_position=”center” text_color=”dark” text_align=”left” row_border_radius=”none” row_border_radius_applies=”bg” row_position_desktop=”default” row_position_tablet=”inherit” row_position_phone=”inherit” overflow=”visible” overlay_strength=”0.3″ gradient_direction=”left_to_right” shape_divider_position=”bottom” bg_image_animation=”none”][vc_column column_padding=”no-extra-padding” column_padding_tablet=”inherit” column_padding_phone=”inherit” column_padding_position=”all” flex_gap_desktop=”10px” column_element_direction_desktop=”default” column_element_spacing=”default” desktop_text_alignment=”default” tablet_text_alignment=”default” phone_text_alignment=”default” background_color_opacity=”1″ background_hover_color_opacity=”1″ column_backdrop_filter=”none” column_shadow=”none” column_border_radius=”none” column_link_target=”_self” column_position=”default” gradient_direction=”left_to_right” overlay_strength=”0.3″ width=”1/1″ tablet_width_inherit=”default” animation_type=”default” bg_image_animation=”none” border_type=”simple” column_border_width=”none” column_border_style=”solid”][vc_column_text css=”” text_direction=”default”]Open Source Summit: Tokyo\, Japan is the premier event for open source developers\, technologists\, and community leaders to collaborate\, share information\, solve problems\, and gain knowledge\, furthering open source innovation and ensuring a sustainable open source ecosystem. It is the gathering place for open-source code and community contributors. \nWhy Attend \n\nConnect with the people shaping open source\nLearn from maintainers\, architects\, and industry leaders\nDiscover new technologies and real-world solutions\nCollaborate on ideas that move projects forward\nGrow your skills\, your network\, and your career\n\nELISA project will be represented by our community members at the Safety Critical Track. \nThis track explores the intersection of open source and safety standards\, covering best practices for regulatory compliance\, security updates\, and safety engineering. Sessions will delve into requirements traceability\, quality assessments\, safety analysis methodologies\, and technical development for safety-critical systems. Learn more. \n\nSafety Critical Track Highlights\n\nKeynote: Space Grade Linux: Building a Safer\, Open Source Future for Space Systems – Ramon Roche\, General Manager\, Dronecode Foundation – Wednesday December 10\, 2025 09:10 – 09:25 JST\n\n\n\n\nA Human-Centric Quality Assurance Process for Open Source Software Projects – Wendi Urribarri & Carlos Ramirez\, Woven by Toyota – Wednesday December 10\, 2025 11:10 – 11:50 JST\nComparison and Proposal of Vulnerability Management Approaches in Yocto-Based Linux for the CRA – Akihiko Takahashi\, Fujitsu Limited – Wednesday December 10\, 2025 12:00 – 12:40\nJST\nDriving Safety Forward: Lessons Learned From Deploying OSS in Real-world Automotive – Jaylin Yu\, EMQ – Wednesday December 10\, 2025 14:00 – 14:40 JST\nDecoding Safe(ty) Linux Architectural Approaches for Critical Systems – Philipp Ahmann\, Etas GmbH – Wednesday December 10\, 2025 14:50 – 15:30 JST\nLF Energy 101: How Open Source Is Powering the Digital Energy Transition – Darshan Chawda & Nao Nishijima\, Hitachi -Wednesday December 10\, 2025 16:40 – 17:20 JST\n\nLearn more about the Safety Critical talks here. \nRegister for the event here. \n\n\n[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/open-source-summit-tokyo-japan-2025/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251104
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251106
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250715T134946Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251020T085855Z
UID:10000071-1762214400-1762387199@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:ELISA Project at the Open Source Summit: Seoul\, South Korea 2025
DESCRIPTION:Open Source Summit is the premier event for open source developers\, technologists\, and community leaders to collaborate\, share information\, solve problems\, and gain knowledge\, furthering open source innovation and ensuring a sustainable open source ecosystem. It is the gathering place for open-source code and community contributors. \nA Cross-Domain Home for the Entire Open Source Ecosystem\nOpen Source Summit is not a single-focus\, niche event—it’s the big tent that unites the full spectrum of open source technologies and communities. Whether you work in cloud infrastructure\, Linux kernel development\, AI/ML\, embedded systems\, DevOps\, security\, or safety-critical systems\, Open Source Summit offers a shared space to exchange ideas\, make connections\, and learn across domains. It’s where technologists who don’t typically land in the same room get a chance to collaborate. \nAt the same time\, Open Source Summit brings in the leaders and practitioners who support the ecosystem from non-technical angles: open source program office (OSPO) staff\, legal experts\, policy advocates\, standards organizations\, equity champions\, community managers\, and foundation leaders. Together\, they help shape the frameworks\, culture\, and strategy that make open source work. \nA Strategic Gathering for Open Source’s Future\nThis event serves as a strategic checkpoint for the open source movement. It’s where conversations happen about not only what’s being built—but how and why. From sustainability and funding models to licensing\, AI alignment\, security\, and governance\, Open Source Summit brings clarity and direction to a fast-changing open source landscape. \nWhether you’re deep in code or focused on enabling the communities and structures that support it\, this is where your work gains momentum and impact. \nELISA Project will be part of the Safety Critical Software Track. This track explores the intersection of open source and safety standards\, covering best practices for regulatory compliance\, security updates\, and safety engineering. Sessions will delve into requirements traceability\, quality assessments\, safety analysis methodologies\, and technical development for safety-critical systems. \nSafety Critical Software Track Sessions:\nDriving Safety Forward: Lessons Learned From Deploying OSS in Real-world Automotive – Jaylin Yu\, EMQ\nWednesday November 5\, 2025 13:35 – 14:05 KST \nWhile OSS in Automotive is seen as the holy grail to solve SDV complexity challenges with faster time to market and higher performance\, it still lacks practical real-world examples and showcases that address OSS usage in compliance with the stringent safety and security demands of Automotive. In this talk\, the author shares his real-world story of bringing OSS into mass production vehicles. This includes the impact of a healthy open-source community and how academic research helped solve security gaps\, leading to increased system stability. This also embraces the impact of the software supply chain\, providing a proven approach\, refined through failures\, helping to lower dependency risk for MQTT-based remote vehicle diagnostics.The session is rounded out by highlighting the link between system utilities and safety functions\, covering time synchronization\, dependency management\, and data integrity within a Linux system\, which impact the selection of a file system\, and what happens when a customer suddenly requires STR. The audience will leave the session with a holistic impression of what to consider when creating a secure\, safe\, OSS-based SDV automotive system. Add this session to your schedule. \nDO-330 Qualification of Enhanced LLVM Structural Coverage Tool – Minji Park & Seojin Kim\, The Boeing Company\nWednesday November 5\, 2025 14:15 – 14:45 KST \nStructural coverage identifies parts of the code that were not exercised during testing\, which is crucial for the reliability of safety-critical applications. The tools used in this verification process must be qualified for confident use.This talk introduces ongoing efforts at Boeing to qualify an enhanced LLVM structural coverage tool\, an open-source solution\, to comply with RTCA DO-330 standards. Our goal is to utilize this tool to generate coverage data and fulfill the code coverage requirements outlined in RTCA DO-178C for safety-critical avionics software.This talk is connected to the session\, “Measuring Code Coverage of the Linux Kernel in Accordance with RTCA DO-178C Considerations\,” presented at the 2024 Embedded Open Source Summit North America.The talk will provide an overview of the DO-330 requirements and outline our qualification steps\, including validation and verification activities. These efforts are aimed at ensuring that the data generated by the tool is considered reliable evidence for DO-178C objectives. In addition\, we will discuss the challenges faced during the qualification of this open-source tool and the approaches we have taken to overcome them. Add this session to your schedule. \nIntroduction and Consideration of Temporal Partitioning in Avionics With Open Source Eco-System – Haesun Kim & Gihwan Kwon\, The Boeing Company\nWednesday November 5\, 2025 14:55 – 15:25 KST \nThe ARINC 653 standard is crucial for the development of integrated modular avionics (IMA) systems\, providing a framework for partitioning and managing resources in safety-critical applications. This presentation explores the requirements of ARINC 653 and the considerations necessary for implementing it within an open-source environment through an operating system. We discuss the motivation for adopting ARINC 653 in IMA systems and highlight how it extends beyond a traditional POSIX environment by offering enhanced capabilities for resource management and fault tolerance\, which are essential for the rigorous demands of avionics systems. Add this session to your schedule. \nSmarter Code\, Sneakier Risks: Supply Chain Security in the Age of AI – Lavakush Biyani\, Harness\nWednesday November 5\, 2025 15:55 – 16:25 KST \nAI-powered code assistance tools are reshaping how we develop software\, but they also introduce new and unexpected security risks. While helpful\, these tools can unintentionally introduce vulnerabilities by suggesting insecure\, misleading\, or unverified dependencies due to incomplete or inaccurate context. This creates new risks in the software supply chain.In this talk\, we will explore real-world examples of AI-generated code leading to security issues and demonstrate how to detect these threats by analyzing code changes\, generating AI Bills of Materials (AIBOMs)\, tracking unexpected dependencies\, and monitoring builds for unusual behavior. We will also cover how to identify subtle risks such as dependency confusion by tracking package versions and changes over time.I will also cover how to add these checks into CI/CD pipelines without slowing down the development cycle\, giving DevSecOps teams and developers practical ways to stay secure in an AI-driven world. Add this session to your schedule. \nDetecting Double Free With BPF – Bojun Seo\, LG Electronics\nWednesday November 5\, 2025 16:35 – 17:05 KST \nDouble free vulnerabilities remain a critical security and safety issue in C and C++ programs. These errors\, where memory is freed multiple times\, can lead to crashes or exploitable security flaws. Developers usually rely on static and dynamic analysis tools\, which effectively catch most issues during testing. However\, detecting double frees in production environments\, particularly in embedded systems\, is challenging. The reason is that conventional debugging tools often alter the memory footprint and introduce significant overhead\, frequently failing to reproduce the issue due to these changes\, so-called Heisenbug. This talk introduces a novel double free detection tool leveraging BPF(Berkeley Packet Filter). By collecting data in a separate process\, this tool preserves the target process’s memory footprint\, minimizing interference. With significantly lower overhead compared to traditional debugging tools\, it enhances the reliability of detecting double frees in production\, especially in performance-sensitive embedded systems. I will demonstrate how BPF’s lightweight tracing capabilities improve memory safety\, offering an effective solution for real-world double free detection. Add this session to your schedule. \nTelco Supply Chain Security: Implementing ISO 18974 & SBOM – Haksung Jang\, SK Telecom\nWednesday November 5\, 2025 17:15 – 17:45 KST \nAs the digital transformation of the Telco industry accelerates\, the use of open source is surging. However\, this has also led to unprecedented complexity and security risks in the software supply chain. This session presents a core strategy to address these challenges: supply chain management centered on the latest international standard\, ISO/IEC 18974 (Open Source Security Assurance)\, and SBOM (Software Bill of Materials). Based on SK Telecom OSPO’s real-world adoption case and the activities of the OpenChain Korea Work Group\, we will share the practical process of establishing an open source security governance framework tailored for the Telco environment. Attendees will gain actionable guidance and lessons learned for policy-making\, automated SBOM generation and verification\, and collaboration with supply chain partners\, moving beyond mere theory. Add this session to your schedule. \n\nTo learn more about the event and register\, check here.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/open-source-summit-seoul-south-korea-2025/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference,Safety-Critical Software Summit
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251028
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251029
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250925T071717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251020T082046Z
UID:10000076-1761609600-1761695999@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:The Linux Foundation Europe Member Summit
DESCRIPTION:The Linux Foundation Europe Member Summit is an annual gathering for Linux Foundation Europe members\, along with invited speakers\, sponsors and media. \nThis event cultivates collaboration\, open innovation\, and partnerships among those in the private public sectors working to drive digital transformation through open collaboration. It is a must-attend for business and technical leaders looking to advance a Europe-wide open source strategy and mobilise resources in their organisations to collaboratively influence the largest shared technology investment of our time. \nThe event will feature prominent speakers from the private and public sectors and existing and upcoming Linux Foundation projects\, as well as offer an opportunity for members of LF Europe to share their organisational priorities and put forward collaboration opportunities to the Linux Foundation Europe Advisory Board and membership at large. \nLearn more and register for the event here. \nThe next day\, the LF Europe Roadshow opens its doors to a wider audience of developers\, policymakers\, and community leaders. It will bring together developers\, community leaders\, industry\, and policymakers for a full day of exchange. The program is built around two parallel tracks that reflect the most pressing themes for open source today. \nThe week concludes in Brussels with the European Open Source Security Forum\, co-hosted by OpenSSF and the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS). This invite-only event will unite policymakers\, security experts\, and open source leaders to advance impactful security initiatives and policy efforts. The program will include: \n\nKeynotes from European policymakers\nPanels on regulation\, CRA readiness\, and emerging technologies such as quantum security\nTargeted discussions on cybersecurity skills and future EU policy frameworks\n\nThis Forum provides a unique platform to align Europe’s policy direction with open source security priorities\, ensuring that community voices are represented at the highest levels. \nELISA Project at the Linux Foundation Europe Member Summit\n\n\nWe are excited to share that at the upcoming Linux Foundation Europe Member Summit\, ELISA Project Ambassador Philipp Ahmann (ETAS) will present “Driving Automotive with Open Source: From Compliance to Collaboration.”\nPhilipp will explore how automakers and suppliers can align safety and security requirements with open collaboration covering practical processes\, tooling\, and community models that turn compliance evidence into shared engineering momentum.\nIf you are attending\, add this session to your agenda and connect with the ELISA Project to learn how our working groups help make Linux fit for safety-critical use. Learn more. \nPhilipp will also participate in a Panel Discussion: Open Source Enabling Industrial Innovation with Paul Brooks\, Rockwell Automation; Christophe Villemer\, Savoir-faire Linux; Renzo Cherin\, Lloyds Banking Group moderated by Paula Grzegorzewska\, Linux Foundation. \nThis session will bring together representatives from diverse vertical industries\, including manufacturing\, energy\, finance\, and beyond\, to explore how open source is enabling them to achieve their strategic goals. Each panelist will begin with a 15-minute presentation highlighting experience in their specific sector. Then\, we will host a 30min panel discussion which will examine the role of open source technologies and joint collaboration in fostering innovation\, effectiveness\, and long-term growth. Learn more.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/the-linux-foundation-europe-member-summit/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250905
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250908
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250717T054609Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250717T054609Z
UID:10000073-1757030400-1757289599@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Opportunity Open Source Conference 2025
DESCRIPTION:Join the open source community at IIT Kanpur from September 5-7\, 2025 for a gathering that brings together developers\, enthusiasts\, industry experts\, and academics to explore the latest trends\, tools\, and projects in open source. \nThe Open Source Conference (OOSC 3.0)\, is a premier event dedicated to fostering innovation\, collaboration\, and learning in the open-source community. This gathering brings together developers\, enthusiasts\, industry experts\, and academics to explore the latest trends\, tools\, and projects in open source. \nBe a part of the vibrant open-source community this year\, at IIT Kanpur. Whether you are a developer\, student\, researcher\, or enthusiast\, the OOSC offers something for everyone. Join us to learn\, innovate\, and contribute to the open-source movement. \nShare your expertise\, projects\, and experiences with the community. \nLearn more about the event and register here.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/opportunity-open-source-conference-2025/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2025/07/Screenshot-2025-07-17-at-07.44.11.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250825
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250828
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250715T142144Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250715T142144Z
UID:10000072-1756080000-1756339199@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Open Source Summit: Amsterdam\, Netherlands 2025
DESCRIPTION:Open Source Summit is the premier event for open source developers\, technologists\, and community leaders to collaborate\, share information\, solve problems\, and gain knowledge\, furthering open source innovation and ensuring a sustainable open source ecosystem. It is the gathering place for open source code and community contributors. \nWhy Attend\n\nConnect with the people shaping open source\nLearn from maintainers\, architects\, and industry leaders\nDiscover new technologies and real-world solutions\nCollaborate on ideas that move projects forward\nGrow your skills\, your network\, and your career\n\nELISA Project at the Open Source Summit\, Amsterdam\, Netherlands 2025\nWe are excited to announce that the ELISA (Enabling Linux in Safety Applications) Project will be participating in the upcoming Open Source Summit Europe\, taking place August 25-27\, 2025 in Amsterdam\, Netherlands. \nAs a proud Bronze Sponsor of this year’s event\, ELISA will also be part of the Safety-Critical Software Summit\, one of the focused tracks within Open Source Summit Europe \nThis is a key opportunity to connect with developers\, system architects\, functional safety experts\, and open source contributors working at the intersection of Linux and safety-critical systems. \nWhat to Expect from ELISA Project at Open Source Summit Europe?\nYes\, we have a booth and we would love to see you there!\nStop by Booth #29 to: \n\nLearn more about ELISA’s mission and progress\nSee how Linux can support safety-critical systems across industries\nExplore tools\, processes\, and working group initiatives\nCheck out live demos\nMeet with project members\, contributors and users\nPick up your favourite ELISA branded giveaways\n\nAnd if you have been following ELISA for a while\, you may have noticed we have refreshed our logo!\nCome by the booth to grab special edition stickers and updated designs featuring the new logo. Quantities are limited\, so be sure to stop by early! \nWhether you are in automotive\, industrial\, medical\, or another safety-focused domain\, this is a great opportunity to ask questions and see how ELISA might support your work. \nELISA Talks and Sessions\nThe ELISA Project will also be featured in the Safety Critical Software track sessions. You can find the full schedule information here. \nThis track explores the intersection of open source and safety standards\, covering best practices for regulatory compliance\, security updates\, and safety engineering. Sessions will delve into requirements traceability\, quality assessments\, safety analysis methodologies\, and technical development for safety-critical systems. \nJoin the ELISA Community\nIf you are interested in functional safety or contributing to the project\, we would love to have you involved. Learn more. \nJoin the community discussion here in the ELISA Project discord server. \n👋 See You in Amsterdam\nThe ELISA Project is proud to be part of Open Source Summit Europe 2025 and the growing conversation around safety-critical open source systems. From booth activities to in-depth technical talks\, this is a great opportunity to learn\, connect\, and collaborate. \nDon’t forget to stop by Booth #29\, attend our talks at the Safety-Critical Software Summit\, and meet the people behind the project. \nWe look forward to seeing you in Amsterdam!
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/open-source-summit-amsterdam-netherlands-2025/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Presentations,Industry Conference,Safety-Critical Software Summit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2025/07/OSSEU-2025_sponsor-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250728
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250802
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250612T212613Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250612T212613Z
UID:10000069-1753660800-1754092799@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:IEEE International Conference on Space Mission Challenges for Information Technology / Space Computing Conference (SMC-IT/SCC 2025)
DESCRIPTION:We are thrilled to share that the ELISA Project is proudly serving as a Silver Sponsor for the IEEE International Conference on Space Mission Challenges for Information Technology / Space Computing Conference (SMC-IT/SCC 2025) taking place Monday\, July 28 through Friday\, August 1\, 2025\, at the California Science Center in Los Angeles. This unique event brings together system designers\, engineers\, computer architects\, scientists\, practitioners\, and space explorers with the objective of advancing information technology\, and the computational capability and reliability of space missions. The forums will provide an excellent opportunity for fostering technical interchange on all hardware and software aspects of space missions. The joint conferences will focus on current systems practice and challenges as well as emerging hardware and software technologies with applicability for future space missions. \nSystems in all aspects of the space mission will be explored\, including flight systems\, ground systems\, science data processing\, engineering and development tools\, operations\, telecommunications\, radiation-tolerant computing devices\, reliable electronics\, space-qualifiable packaging technologies. The entire information systems lifecycle of the mission development will also be covered\, such as conceptual design\, engineering tools development\, integration and test\, operations\, science analysis\, quality control. \nRegister for the event using this link. \nOur ELISA Project community members will be on the ground in LA\, and we would love to connect with you there. \nWe hope to see you at SMC-IT/SCC 2025!
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/ieee-international-conference-on-space-mission-challenges-for-information-technology-space-computing-conference-smc-it-scc-2025/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2025/06/1500x500-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250324
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250328
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250210T174733Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250304T230626Z
UID:10000063-1742774400-1743119999@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:2025 FSW Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Stoke Space in conjunction with The Jet Propulsion Laboratory\, The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory\, The Aerospace Corporation\, The Southwest Research Institute and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center\, is hosting the 18th Annual Workshop on Spacecraft Flight Software (FSW 2025) in Seattle\, Washington from March 24th to 27th\, 2025 \n\n\n\n\nIn the last several years\, there has been a significant increase in the next generation of flight system architectures for space. Some of the advancements have been in multicore\, soft-core\, FPGA’s\, space computers\, operating systems\, flight software and machine learning. This presents many opportunities in the space industry\, as well as some significant challenges. \nELISA Project members Matt Weber\, Chief Software Architect at Boeing\, and Michael Monaghan\, Computer Engineer at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center\, will be at the workshop on Wednesday\, March 26 at 11:20-11:45 am to give a presentation titled\, “Making Penguins Fly.”  \n\nThis presentation will touch on the objectives\, challenges\, and developments of the Enabling Linux in Safety Applications (ELISA) foundation’s Aerospace and Space Grade Linux working group (WG.) The presentation will include specific topics from a Dec 10-12 Goddard Space Flight Center workshop.  ELISA was formed to make it easier for companies to build and certify Linux-based safety-critical applications – systems whose failure could result in loss of human life\, significant property damage\, or environmental damage. ELISA members are working together to define and maintain a common set of tools and processes that can help companies demonstrate that a Linux-based system meets the necessary safety requirements for certification. The Aerospace Working Group develops use cases to inform and influence Linux architecture and related tools\, works to derive technical requirements for avionics operating systems\, and seeks to enhance and expand avionics software lifecycle processes\, practices\, and tools to enable the use of Linux in avionics systems that are certified to high design assurance levels. Space grade Linux\, which recently made its open-source debut as an ELISA Special Interest Group (SIG)\, is a collaborative\, open-source project bringing together space agencies\, industry\, academia\, and non-profit organizations to establish a trusted ecosystem of Linux-based\, open-source software for mission-critical spacecraft operations. \n\n\n\nOther themes of  the technical presentations include: \n\n\n\n\n\nResiliancy\, safety\, and security\n\n\n\n\n\n\nArtificial intelligence\, machine learning\, and onboard data processing\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSpace networking\n\n\n\n\n\n\nOnboard data storage and representation\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFlight software architectures\, frameworks\, and software buses\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSoftware enabled mission concepts\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDigital twin\, config management\, and software enabled emulation\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDevOps\, continuous integration\, and automated testing\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFSW\, embedded processor\, and FPGA interactions\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFlight Operating Systems\n\n\n\n\n\n\nNew languages (bring your non-C work)\n\nTo learn more about the workshop or to register\, visit the main event website here: https://flightsoftware.org/workshop/FSW2025.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/2025-fsw-workshop/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2025/02/Screenshot-2025-02-10-at-9.35.11 AM.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250201
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250203
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20250123T125234Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250128T003815Z
UID:10000062-1738368000-1738540799@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Meet ELISA Project at FOSDEM 2025
DESCRIPTION:How many of you are planning to attend FOSDEM 2025? \nAre you planning to speak at the event or attend as an participant to learn? \nWhat topics excite you the most this year? Whether you are interested in embedded systems\, open source innovation\, safety or security\, FOSDEM 2025 promises to be a hub of activity for everyone in the developer community. \nThis time there will be talks from the ELISA Project community. You will have the chance to meet the community ambassadors\, some of whom will be available at the Zephyr Project stand at Building K\, Level 1. \nDon’t miss the opportunity to engage with these experts and learn about the latest developments in the ELISA community! \nMark your calendar to attend these ELISA Project talks! \nSaturday\, February 1:\nEnhancing Testing Strategies for Critical Systems: Statistical Path Coverage\n\nTrack: Testing and Continuous Delivery\nSpeaker: Imanol Allende\, OpenTech GmbH\nRoom: UD6.215\nDay: Saturday\nStart: 10:30\nEnd: 10:55\n\nModern embedded and autonomous systems are pushing the boundaries of software complexity\, especially in critical applications. Traditional testing methods often struggle to meet the demands of these systems\, particularly when operating on resource-sharing architectures running complex operating systems like Linux. To address this challenge\, we introduce Statistical Path Coverage (SPC)\, a novel statistical approach designed to enhance test effectiveness by statistically focusing on the execution paths exercised by target applications. \nThis presentation will discuss how SPC can quantify execution path coverage\, estimate the risk of untested paths\, and support assurance. We will also introduce DB4SIL\, a tool leveraging FTrace to collect and analyze execution traces\, enabling actionable insights into the kernel’s behavior during testing campaigns. Through examples\, we will demonstrate how SPC and DB4SIL can guide developers in prioritizing testing efforts\, improving test coverage\, enabling continuous monitoring\, and reducing risk in complex\, software-driven systems. \nThe Trustable Software Framework: A new way to measure risk in continuous delivery of critical software\n\nTrack: Testing and Continuous Delivery\nSpeaker: Paul Sherwood\, Codethink\nRoom: UD6.215\nStart: 11:00\nEnd: 11:25\n\nMany of the international standards for software in critical systems (e.g. IEC 61508\, ISO 26262) are published under restrictive licences\, at high prices. They broadly discourage the use of FOSS\, by imposition of processes that do not align with modern open source best practices such as continuous delivery and automated testing. As a result some industries such as automotive\, medical and aerospace\, are locked in to proprietary software. \nThis talk will introduce the Trustable Software Framework (TSF)\, a new free and open source project which establishes an evidence-based method for measuring the actual risks involved in continuous delivery of software in critical systems. \nTSF is applicable over the entire software supply chain\, including CICD tools and infrastructure\, build dependencies\, operating systems\, target applications and test environments\, and is intended to measure risk on projects delivering critical systems which demand reliability\, availability\, security and safety. \nObtaining Safety & Security Certifications for L4Re\n\nTrack: Microkernel and Component-Based OS\nSpeaker: Marcus Hähnel\nRoom: UB4.136\nDay: Saturday\nStart: 16:50\nEnd: 17:15\n\nIn this talk I will share some details on the path towards the recently obtained Security (EAL4+\, German GEHEIM) and Safety (ISO26262 ASIL-B\, SIL-2) certifications that have been achieved for the L4Re Operating System Framework. I will show some details on where generic software development\, operating systems\, and third-party code clash with the expectations of the safety norms. I will also shed some light on the challenges we face in maintaining these certifications while staying true to the open source nature of the system with contributions form a multitude of actors from various fields. I will conclude with an outlook of the things to come and how we want to ensure that open source microkernel-based operating systems can be a vital cornerstone to safe & secure systems. \nSunday\, February 2:\nIntro to the SPDX Functional Safety Model\n\nTrack: Software Bill of Materials (SBOM)\nSpeaker: Nicole Pappler\, Alektometis.com\nRoom: H.2213\nDay: Sunday\nStart: 09:30\nEnd: 10:00\n\nWhile SPDX provides with its relationships already a good starting base to model the internal dependencies\, setting all actions and work products that are part of a functional safety release of a project sparked some discussions in the Functional Safety community. This talk lines out the main discussion points with the different viewpoints discussed in the SPDX FuSa group\, along with matching prototype models. \nBASIL an open source tool that supports requirements traceability with design SBOM\n\nTrack: Software Bill of Materials (SBOM)\nSpeaker: Luigi Pellecchia\, Red Hat\nRoom: H.2213\nDay: Sunday\nStart: 13:30\nEnd: 14:00\n\n\n\nBASIL is an open source software quality management tool that has been developed to simplify the definition and maintenance of traceability matrix in Safety Critical applications. Even if BASIL provides several features as the management of quality related work items and a test execution framework\, usually in critical applications we have to deal with complex toolchains. Due to that it is mandatory to have a way to share data between tools in a consistent way. Join us in a session where we will see how BASIL is supporting SPDX to share quality related work items as a SBOM. \n\n\nAutomotive BOF\n\n Track: BOF – Track B\n Room: H.3242\n Day: Sunday\n Start: 13:00\n End: 14:00\n\nThis Birds of a Feather (BoF) session at FOSDEM will focus on the growing intersection of open source and the automotive industry\, highlighting the latest advancements\, challenges\, and opportunities for collaboration. As the automotive sector increasingly adopts open-source software\, it is driving innovation in areas such as in-vehicle systems\, autonomous driving\, and vehicle connectivity. Key projects like Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) and the ELISA (Enabling Linux in Safety Applications) initiative are at the forefront of this transformation\, providing open-source frameworks for developing scalable\, secure\, and reliable automotive software. This session will bring together developers\, engineers\, and enthusiasts to discuss how these initiatives are shaping the future of mobility and explore how open-source communities can work together to solve the unique challenges of the automotive domain. \nAttendees will have the opportunity to share experiences\, discuss key technical topics such as real-time operating systems\, safety-critical systems\, and compliance with automotive standards (e.g.\, ISO 26262)\, and explore potential new collaborations. The session will delve into the importance of open standards\, the growing need for security in connected vehicles\, and how projects like AGL and ELISA enable safer\, more efficient automotive software development. By fostering cross-industry dialogue and strengthening the automotive open-source ecosystem\, this session aims to inspire future collaborations that can help define the next generation of smart\, connected\, and autonomous vehicles. \nIf you would like to meet our community experts at FOSDEM or you have any project related questions\, please feel free to contact us at info@elisa.tech. \nWe look forward to meeting you!
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/meet-elisa-project-at-fosdem-2025/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Presentations,Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240416
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240419
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20240222T010140Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240222T010140Z
UID:10000046-1713225600-1713484799@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Safety-Critical Software Summit (Seattle\, Wa)
DESCRIPTION:The Safety-Critical Software Summit will be hosted in Seattle\, Washington on April 16-18. As open source is found more and more in safety-critical applications\, the need to evaluate open source software that meets safety standards has increased. This event\, sponsored by ELISA\, gathers safety experts and open source developers to enable and advance the use of open source in safety-critical applications. \nThe safety-critical track will take place on Thursday\, April 18. \n \nAdd these to your schedule here. Register here. \nVisit the main event website for more updates: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/embedded-open-source-summit/.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/safety-critical-software-summit-seattle-wa/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2024/02/scss_1200x628_onelogo.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240203
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240205
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20240130T212007Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240130T212007Z
UID:10000045-1706918400-1707091199@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:FOSDEM (Brussels\, Belgium)
DESCRIPTION:FOSDEM\, which takes place on February 3-4 in Brussels\, is a free event for software developers to meet\, share ideas and collaborate. Every year\, thousands of developers of free and open source software from all over the world gather at the event in Brussels. This event is expecting 636 speakers\, 591 events\, and 65 tracks. \nThe ELISA Project will be featured in a presentation on Saturday\, February 3. For more information or to register for the event\, visit the FOSDEM website. \n2:30 pm – 2:55 pm: How open source projects approach Functional Safety – Nicole Pappler & Philipp Ahmann \nOpen Source is a winning solution for many industries already – and now even safety critical applications want to make use of it. While “security” is a capability of open source since many years\, a few years ago using open source in safety critical applications seemed to be impossible even to think about. Nowadays it has become a valid option for upcoming applications. This kind of application that should save lives\, or at least not harm anyone. However\, with advancements in technology and safety integrity standards\, open source is becoming a valid option for upcoming safety critical applications. This talk will provide an overview of how open source projects approach their integration to safety critical applications. Depending on the expectations of these applications\, there are different solutions to address their needs. The talk will introduce example projects such as ELISA\, the Zephyr Project\, and the Xen Project\, which are currently addressing these expectations with various mechanisms and approaches. \nCheck out other Zephyr-related sessions here.  \nTo view the complete schedule and dev rooms like SBOM\, Embedded\, Automotive and more\, visit the main event website: https://fosdem.org/2024/
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/fosdem-brussels-belgium/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Presentations,Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2024/01/FOSDEM-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240201
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240202
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20240119T175239Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240119T175239Z
UID:10000044-1706745600-1706831999@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Software Heritage Symposium and Summit 2024 (Paris\, France + Online)
DESCRIPTION:The Software Heritage Symposium and Summit 2024 is scheduled to take place on February 1\, 2024\, starting at 2:00pm at the UNESCO headquarters. This hybrid event allows registrations from the general public for both in-person and online attendance. To secure your spot\, please complete this simple registration form. Confirmation will be promptly provided based on seat availability. \nSoftware Heritage\, the universal source code archive\, was launched in 2016 by Inria (France). Software Heritage’s  ambitious goal is to collect\, preserve and share all software source code\, building an essential infrastructure at the service of cultural heritage\, digital development\, science\, industry\, and society as a whole.  As part of the event we will gather to take stock of the achievements and status of the initiative\, and to highlight the relevance of its mission in the context of today’s dynamic digital innovation landscape\, including rapid changes in the field of generative artificial intelligence. \nIn 2021\, we have celebrated the 5th anniversary of Software Heritage with the first annual Symposium. A second Symposium took place in 2023. This is Software Heritage’s 3rd Symposium event. \nThe half-day event\, which will follow a hybrid format of virtual and on-site participation at the UNESCO Headquarters\, will focus on several major dimensions of relevance to the Software Heritage archive: \n\nSoftware source code as documentary heritage and an enabler for historical research\nScientific challenges for analyzing and learning from preserved Source Code\nSoftware source code as a first class research output in the Open Science ecosystem\nSoftware source code as enabler for innovation and sharing in industry and administration\n\nAt 2:45 pm\, Kate Stewart\, Vice President of Dependable Embedded Systems at the Linux Foundation\, will participate in Industry and Public Administration Panel. Other panelists include: \n\nGuillaume Avrin\, National coordinator for artificial intelligence\, Direction Générale des Entreprises\nOmar Mohsine\, Open Source coordinator\, United Nations Office of Information and Communications Technology\nMarc Palazon\, CEO Groupe SMILE and Board member Numeum\n\nThis event is managed completely by Software Heritage. For more details about the agenda or to register\, visit the event website.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/software-heritage-symposium-and-summit-2024-paris-france-online/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Presentations,Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231113
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231116
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20230926T233454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230926T233454Z
UID:10000039-1699833600-1700092799@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Linux Plumbers Conference (Richmond\, Virginia)
DESCRIPTION:The Linux Plumbers Conference\, the premier event for developers working at all levels of the plumbing layer and beyond\, takes place in Richmond\, Virginia on November 13-15. The event will be in-person at the Omni Richmond Hotel and remotely\, however most of the presenters will be in-person. Learn more about the conference on the main conference website. \n \nELISA will be represented in a presentation by Philipp Ahmann\, Technical Business Development Manager at Robert Bosch GmbH and Chair of the ELISA Project Technical Steering Committee. The session has been accepted but not yet scheduled. As details are updated\, we’ll update our event listing. \nNovember 14 at 4:30 – 5:15 pm: Putting Linux into Context – Towards a reproducible example system with Linux\, Zephyr & Xen \nDemos on embedded systems using Linux are plentiful\, but when it comes to reproducing them\, things get complicated. Additionally\, on decent embedded systems Linux is only one part of the system and interacts with real-time operating systems and virtualization solutions. This makes reproduction even harder. \nWithin the Linux Foundation’s ELISA project\, we started to create a reproducible example system consisting of Linux\, Xen\, and Zephyr on real hardware. This is the next step after we achieved a reproducible system with a pure Linux qemu image. \nThe idea is to have documentation\, a continuous integration including testing\, which can be picked up by developers to derive and add their own software pieces. In this way they should be able to concentrate on their use case rather than spending effort in creating such a system (unless they explicitly want this). We also show how to build everything from scratch. The assumption is that only in this way it is possible to get a system understanding to replace elements towards their specific use cases. \nWe had challenges finding good hardware\, tools\, freely available GPU drivers and more and we are still not at the end. A good system SBOM is also creating additional challenges\, although leveraging the Yocto build system has provided some advantages here. \nWhile we are setting up the first hardware with documentation from source to build to deployment and testing on embedded hardware\, we aim to have at least two sets of all major system elements like Linux flavor\, a choice of virtualization technique\, real-time OS and hardware. Only when software elements and hardware can be exchanged\, we identify clear interfaces and make a system reproducible and adoptable. \nOpen Questions are: \n\nWhat will be a good next hardware to extend this PoC scope?\nWhere do open source\, security\, safety\, and compliance come best together?\nWhich alternative real-time operating systems and virtualization should be incorporated?
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/linux-plumbers-conference/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Presentations,Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230718
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230722
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20230719T190128Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T190128Z
UID:10000034-1689638400-1689983999@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:IEEE Space Mission Challenges for Information Technology - Space Computing Conference
DESCRIPTION:The International Conference on Space Mission Challenges for Information Technology (SMC-IT) and the Space Computing Conference (SCC) gather system designers\, engineers\, computer architects\, scientists\, practitioners\, and space explorers with the objective of advancing information technology\, and the computational capability and reliability of space missions. The forums will provide an excellent opportunity for fostering technical interchange on all hardware and software aspects of space missions. The joint conferences will focus on current systems practice and challenges as well as emerging hardware and software technologies with applicability for future space missions. \nSystems in all aspects of the space mission will be explored\, including flight systems\, ground systems\, science data processing\, engineering and development tools\, operations\, telecommunications\, radiation-tolerant computing devices\, reliable electronics\, space-qualifiable packaging technologies. The entire information systems lifecycle of the mission development will also be covered\, such as conceptual design\, engineering tools development\, integration and test\, operations\, science analysis\, quality control. \nThe conference will run 18-21 July 2023\, at Caltech\, Pasadena\, CA. \nKate Stewart\, Vice President of Dependable Embedded Systems at the Linux Foundation\, will give a keynote on Thursday\, July 20 at 10:15-11:45 am about open source in space.   \nLearn more about the conference here.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/ieee-smc-it-scc-2023/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Presentations,Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230701
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20230124T190255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230124T190255Z
UID:10000027-1687824000-1688169599@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Safety-Critical Software Summit (Prague\, Czech Republic + Virtual)
DESCRIPTION:As open source is found more and more in safety-critical applications\, the need to evaluate open source software that meets safety standards has increased. The Safety-Critical Software Summit\, sponsored by the ELISA Project\, will take place on June 27-30 in Prague\, Czech Republic and virtually. The event gathers safety experts and open source developers to enable and advance the use of open source in safety-critical applications. \nSubmit to speak here. \nSponsor here. \nLearn more on the main event website here.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/critical-software-summit/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/svg+xml:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2023/01/Safety-Critical-Software-Summit-logo-black.svg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230510
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230513
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20230316T170716Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230316T170716Z
UID:10000030-1683676800-1683935999@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Open Source Summit North America (Vancouver\, Canada)
DESCRIPTION:Open Source Summit is the premier event for open source developers\, technologists\, and community leaders to collaborate\, share information\, solve problems\, and gain knowledge\, furthering open source innovation and ensuring a sustainable open source ecosystem. It is the gathering place for open-source code and community contributors. Join us for the Open Source Summit North America\, hosted in Vancouver\, Canada\, and virtually on May 10-12. \nELISA will be represented in a few presentations including: \nWednesday\, May 10 at 11:10 – 11:50 am: How Do You Know You’re Done – After a Security Fix? – Kate Stewart\, The Linux Foundation & Peter Brink\, UL Solutions \nRequirements are at the heart of designing a system with safety considerations. When building the system\, having a detailed and accurate record of all the components and build information is necessary for safety analysis. When a component vulnerability fix comes in though\, how do you know the system conforms with the safety claims after applying the fix? This talk will go into some approaches for leveraging the SBOM data to improve the automation and confidence in the analysis necessary to know you’re done. Add this to your schedule here. \n\n\nWednesday\, May 10 at 12:05 – 12:45 pm: Reproducible Multi Element System Composition with Linux\, Xen & Zephyr – Philipp Ahmann\, Robert BOSCH GmbH \n\n\n\n\nLooking at system architectures for complex safety-critical systems\, similarities can be observed across various industries. Beside a rich OS (such as Linux)\, typically an RTOS and virtualization or containers are involved. However\, when it comes to prototyping such systems\, the existing guidelines are limited and reproducing demos is hard and time consuming. Compared to traditional (safety-critical) systems\, created by strictly following the v-model\, existing open source software can boost the system creation & understanding by fast and iterative prototyping. The ELISA project’s systems working group focuses on creating such an exemplary system architecture using Linux\, Xen and Zephyr in a reproducible form. This includes step-by-step documentation for users on different expert levels and various entry points to approach these systems. It also includes picking up new requirements such as a system SBOM and a strong interaction as well as collaboration with other open source projects. Beside the state of the previously mentioned activities\, the talk highlights other ELISA working groups focusing on Linux Kernel\, processes\, tools\, and use cases. A basic understanding about challenges and chances of using open-source projects for safety-critical workloads rounds up the talk. Add this to your schedule here.\n\n\nTo see all sessions or to register for the Open Source Summit North America\, visit the main conference website here.\n\n\n\n 
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/open-source-summit-north-america-vancouver-canada/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230426
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230429
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20230327T132046Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230327T132046Z
UID:10000031-1682467200-1682726399@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Linaro Connect 2023 (London)
DESCRIPTION:Join the ELISA Project talk at this year’s Linaro Connect 2023 event in London. \nDate & Time: Friday\, April 28 • 11:20am – 11:35am \nTopic: Update on the ELISA project – Enabling Linux in Safety Applications \nSpeakers: \nPhilipp Ahmann\, Product Manager Embedded Open Source\, BOSCH \nKate Stewart\, VP\, Dependable Embedded Systems\, The Linux Foundation \n\n\n\n\nThe ELISA project has taken on the challenge to make it easier for companies to build and certify Linux-based safety-critical applications. ELISA members are defining and maintaining a common set of elements\, processes and tools that can be incorporated into specific Linux-based\, safety-critical systems amenable to safety certification.\n\n\n\nThis session will give an overview of the goals and technical strategy of the ELISA project. It provides information about the different work groups\, their interaction\, and contributions. These work groups focus on Linux Features for Safety-Critical Systems\, Software Architecture\, Open Source Engineering Process\, Tool Investigation and Code Improvement. They are complemented by vertical use case working groups from the field of Automotive\, Medical and Aerospace. Methodologies and tools in use\, existing challenges\, and why the different puzzle pieces are all needed for enabling Linux in safety-critical applications\, are covered. \nAttendees will leave the session with an understanding where the ELISA project stands today and what comes next. A discussion of how this work can complement other Linaro initiatives will be explored. \nLearn more about the talk here.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/elisa-project-linaro-event-2023/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230308
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230310
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20230228T164849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230228T164849Z
UID:10000028-1678233600-1678406399@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Automotive Grade Linux All Member Meeting (Berlin\, Germany)
DESCRIPTION:The Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) All Member Meeting takes place March 8-9 in Berlin\, Germany and brings the AGL community together to learn about the latest developments\, share best practices and collaborate to drive rapid innovation across the industry. Learn more here. \nThe ELISA Project will be represented at the meeting with a presentation by Philipp Ahmann\, Chair of the ELISA TSC and Product Manager at Robert Bosch GmbH. The presentation titled\, “Tell-Tale Mysteries: ELISA and Needlefish in the Functional-Safety Hollow\,” will take place on Thursday\, March 9 at 10:50-11:30 am. (CEST) \nBuilding up on the talk “Elements towards functional safety use cases with Linux in Automotive” at the Automotive Linux Summit 2022 in Japan\, this presentation provides a (safety focused) quick start for engineers into the ELISA flavor of AGL’s instrument cluster demo including workload tracing\, a trimmed down kernel configuration and a mock of a safety monitoring app. All different kinds of equipment to start your (safety) analysis Linux adventure with a good support by an qemu image built in ELISA’s CI. A glimpse on the upcoming work packages like “improvement of the safety monitoring app” and “kernel analysis” with the help of workload tracing shows what comes next. Finally\, the talk closes by building a bridge from the pure Linux based qemu system to an exemplary multiple operating system architecture with Xen\, Zephyr and Linux on automotive hardware; another ELISA activity. Add it to your schedule here. \nLearn more on the main event website: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/agl-amm/.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/automotive-grade-linux-all-member-meeting-berlin-germany/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2023/02/Screenshot-2023-02-28-at-8.50.05-AM.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230204
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230206
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20230124T184829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230124T184829Z
UID:10000026-1675468800-1675641599@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:FOSDEM (Brussels)
DESCRIPTION:FOSDEM \, held in Brussels on February 4-5\, is a free event for software developers to meet\, share ideas and collaborate.More than 8000+ developers of free and open source software from all over the world gather at the event for more than 755 lectures\, devrooms and lightning talks. Learn more about FOSDEM on the main conference website here. \nPhilipp Ahmann\, Chair of the ELISA Project Technical Steering Committee and Technical Business Development Manager at Robert Bosch GmbH\, will give an ELISA presentation on Saturday\, February 4 at 1 -1:50 pm. \nTitle: The ELISA Project – Enabling Linux in Safety Applications. Project insights and Overview \nDescription: \n\nThe ELISA project aims to make it easier to build and certify Linux-based safety-critical applications. This lecture will give an overview of the goals and technical strategy of the ELISA project. It provides information about the different work groups\, their interaction\, and contributions. Attendees will leave the talk with an understanding where the ELISA project stands today and what comes next. They get insights which methodologies and tools are used\, which challenges exist\, and why the different puzzle pieces are all needed for enabling Linux in safety-critical applications. \n\n\nSafety-critical systems as addressed by the ELISA project are those\, where failure could result in loss of human life\, significant property damage or environmental damage. ELISA members are working together to define and maintain a common set of tools and processes that can help companies demonstrate that a specific Linux-based system meets the necessary safety requirements for certification. These existing working groups focus on Linux Features for Safety-Critical Systems\, Software Architecture\, Open Source Engineering Process\, Tool Investigation and Code Improvement. They are complemented by vertical use case working groups dealing with Automotive\, Medical\, and Aerospace. \nLearn more about the conference: https://fosdem.org/2023/
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/fosdem/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2023/01/download.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221205
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221207
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20221114T200900Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221114T200900Z
UID:10000023-1670198400-1670371199@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Open Source Summit Japan (Yokohama\, Japan + Virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Open Source Summit Japan\, hosted on December 5-6 in Yokohama\, Japan and virtually for attendees around the world\, is the premier event for open source developers\, technologists\, and community leaders to collaborate\, share information\, solve problems and gain knowledge\, furthering open source innovation and ensuring a sustainable open source ecosystem. It is the gathering place for open source code and community contributors. Register here. \nOpen Source Summit is a conference umbrella\, composed of a collection of events covering the most important technologies\, topics\, and issues affecting open source today. At Open Source Summit Japan\, those events include: LinuxCon\, CloudOpen\, Automotive Linux Summit\, Open AI + Data Forum\, OSPOCON\, CONTAINERCON\, Critical Software Summit\, Community Leadership Conference\, Emerging OS Forum and Embedded IoT Summit.  \nELISA will be represented on-site at the conference in several sessions including: \nMonday\, December 5 at 11-11:40 am: Elements Towards Functional Safety Use Cases with Linux in Automotive – Philipp Ahmann\, Product Manager at Robert Bosch GmbH and Chair of the ELISA Project Technical Steering Committee\nLinux is common sense in Automotive; for infotainment\, display clusters or gateways. Centralization of embedded control units increase the demand of mastering complexity of large vehicle computers. Functional safety becomes more and more important. As part of instrument clusters\, warning signs (so called tell tales) are an ideal entry point to address safety criticality in Automotive use cases. Their demands to the operating system help to explain the way forward towards more complex use cases from the domain of e.g. driver assistance.  \nThis talk will describe elements needed to enable Linux in safety critical automotive use cases based on the tell tale use case as addressed within the Linux Foundation’s ELISA project. It shows similarities and differences to other use cases like park distance control or surround view and supports the the Automotive Grade Linux instrument cluster. By setting the use case into a wider system context of a centralized vehicle computer architecture\, it allows adopters a step-by-step approach to enable Linux in safety critical applications and increase the responsibility of Linux in smaller chunks. An overview of the activities within the other ELISA project working groups and their relation to the automotive working group completes the talk. Add this to your schedule here. \nTuesday\, December 6 at 10-10:20 am: Keynote – Kate Stewart\, Vice President of Dependable Embedded Systems at the Linux Foundation\nKate’s keynote will feature ELISA. \nWednesday\, December 7 at 9 am – 12:30 pm: ELISA Mini-Summit (pre-registration required)\nEnabling Linux in Safety Applications (ELISA) aims to create a shared set of tools and processes to help companies build and certify Linux-based safety-critical applications and systems whose failure could result in the loss of human life\, significant property or environmental damage. \n9:00 – 10:00 am – ELISA Project Overview\nJoin the ELISA mini summit for an overview of the ELISA project\, the activities of the various working groups (WGs) and how the WGs interact and work together to tackle the challenges in advancing open source in safety-critical systems and bridge the gap between functional safety and Linux kernel development velocity. \n10:00 – 10:15 am – Break (refreshments will be served) \n10:15 – 11:00 am – Systems Working Group deep-dive\nTake a deeper look into the Systems WG launched this year. Many products across various industries share the same architectural elements\, including container technologies\, RTOS requirements\, or virtualization. This demands safety analysis at the system level. Understand why and how this WG is exploring the implications of using Linux in those mixed criticality systems by creating a reference system for further analysis. Learn also about collaboration with other open source communities such as AGL\, Xen\, and SPDX. \n11:00 – 11:45 am – Automotive Working Group\nUsage of Linux is common sense in many Automotive use cases such as infotainment\, display clusters\, or gateways. This session will describe elements needed to enable Linux in safety critical automotive use cases starting with warning signs of instrument clusters\, also known as tell tales\, and going forward the evolutionary path towards more complex use cases such as driver assistance. By framing use cases in a wider system context of a centralized vehicle computer architecture\, it allows adopters a step-by-step approach to enable Linux in safety critical applications and to increase the responsibility of Linux in smaller chunks. \n11:45am – 12:00 pm Open Discussions\nStick around for open discussions and Q&As with the speakers. The speakers will provide pointers to onboard those who are interested in collaborating to further the work of the ELISA project. \nHow to Register: Pre-registration is required\, open to in-person attendees\, and there is a $10 registration fee. To register for the ELISA Mini Summit\, add it to your Open Source Summit Japan registration. \nLearn more about Open Source Summit Japan or register for the event on the main event website here: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-japan/.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/open-source-summit-japan-yokohama-japan-virtual/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220913
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220917
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20220720T184641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220720T184641Z
UID:10000018-1663027200-1663372799@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Open Source Summit Europe (Dublin\, Ireland + Virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Open Source Summit Europe\, which takes place in Dublin\, Ireland + virtually on September 13-16\, is the premier event for open source developers\, technologists\, and community leaders to collaborate\, share information\, solve problems\, and gain knowledge\, furthering open source innovation and ensuring a sustainable open source ecosystem. It is the gathering place for open-source code and community contributors. Register here to attend in person or virtually: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-europe/register/. \nELISA will be featured in a few different sessions at the conference: \nMonday\, September 12: \n2 – 5 pm: ELISA Forum – pre-registration is required. Learn more here. \nThursday\, September 15:\n4:10- 4:50 pm: Enabling Linux in Safety-Critical Applications (ELISA) insights – Philipp Ahmann\, an ELISA Project Ambassador & Chair of the Automotive Working Group and Business Development Manager at Robert Bosch GmbH\, and Elana Copperman\, an ELISA Ambassador & Chair of the Linux Features for the Safety-Critical Systems Working Group and System Safety Architect at Mobileye \nThe ELISA project has taken on the challenge to make it easier for companies to build and certify Linux-based safety-critical applications. ELISA members are defining and maintaining a common set of elements\, processes and tools that can be incorporated into specific Linux-based\, safety-critical systems amenable to safety certification. This talk will give an overview of the goals and technical strategy of the ELISA project. It provides information about the different work groups\, their interaction and contributions. These work groups focus on Linux Features for Safety-Critical Systems\, Software Architecture\, Open Source Engineering Process\, Tool Investigation and Code Improvement. They are complemented by use case work groups dealing with Automotive\, Medical and wider Industrial IoT systems. Attendees will leave the talk with an understanding where the ELISA project stands today. They get insights which methodologies and tools are used\, which challenges are tackled next by the work groups and why the different puzzle pieces are all needed for enabling Linux in safety-critical applications. Add it to your schedule here. \n6 – 6:40 pm: Safety + Open Source Software: Where it Started & Where it’s Going – Kate Stewart\, ELISA Project Ambassador and Vice President of Dependable Embedded Systems at the Linux Foundation\, and Shuah Khan\, Chair of the ELISA Project Technical Steering Committee and Kernel Maintainer & Linux Fellow at the Linux Foundation \nAdd it to your schedule here. \nTo register or learn more about Open Source Summit Europe\, visit the main event website: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-europe/. \n 
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/open-source-summit-europe-dublin-ireland-virtual/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220912T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220912T170000
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20220720T172341Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220720T172341Z
UID:10000017-1662991200-1663002000@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:ELISA Forum (Dublin\, Ireland)
DESCRIPTION:Are you attending Open Source Summit Europe\, hosted in Dublin\, Ireland + virtually on September 13-16? If you’ll be on-site at the conference\, we invite you to join the ELISA community at the ELISA Forum on Monday\, September 12 from 2-5 pm.  \nTake a look at the agenda below and add the forum ($35) to your OSSummit registration here: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-europe/register/. \nAgenda: \n2-3 pm\nJoin the ELISA Forum for an overview of the ELISA project\, the activities of the various working groups (WGs) and how the WGs interact and work together to tackle the challenges in advancing open source in safety-critical systems and bridge the gap between functional safety and Linux kernel development velocity. \n3-4:30 pm\nThere will then be an introduction and interactive session to apply the System-Theoretic Process Analysis (STPA) methodology to a sample use case. STPA is a fairly new methodology that helps identify risks and hazards of mixed criticality systems. Because several ELISA WGs rely on STPA\, this interactive session will help participants gain a better understanding of the work within ELISA. \n4:30-5 pm\nThe overview and STPA sessions will be led by ELISA project representatives\, Gabriele Paoloni at Red Hat and Philipp Ahmann at Robert Bosch GmbH. Both representatives will also be available toward the end of the Forum for open discussions and Q&A as well as point to resources and documentation to onboard those who are interested in collaborating to further the work of the ELISA project. \nHow to Register: Pre-registration is required. To register for ELISA Forum\, add it to your Open Source Summit Europe registration.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/elisa-forum-dublin-ireland/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220621
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220625
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20220505T185248Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220505T185248Z
UID:10000014-1655769600-1656115199@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Embedded Linux Conference (Austin\, TX + Virtual)
DESCRIPTION:This year\, Open Source Summit North America is the premier event for open source developers\, technologists\, and community leaders to collaborate\, share information\, solve problems\, and gain knowledge\, furthering open source innovation and ensuring a sustainable open source ecosystem. It is the gathering place for open-source code and community contributors. Open Source Summit is a conference umbrella\, composed of a collection of events covering the most important technologies\, topics\, and issues affecting open source today – including Embedded Linux Conference and Critical Software Summit. \nTo register for the event for an in-person or virtual attendance\, click here on the main event site. \nThe ELISA Project will be represented in several sessions at the conference. \nOn Wednesday\, June 22:  \n1:45 -2:25 pm: Enabling Linux in Safety Applications (panel discussion) \nModerator: Jeffrey Osier-Mixon\, Red Hat (ELISA Ambassador) \nPanelists: Gabriele Paoloni\, Red Hat (ELISA board chair) Kate Stewart\, Linux Foundation (ELISA Executive Director) Paul Albertella\, CodeThink (Open Source Engineering Process) Elana Copperman\, Intel (Linux Features) Philipp Ahmann\, Bosch GmbH (Automotive) Milan Lakhani\, Codethink (Medical Devices)  \nMeeting business and safety objectives while building safety critical applications is a huge challenge for any industry\, particularly those who have not had previous experience with open source and Linux. ELISA’s charter is to help industries navigate technical and non-technical challenges in order to bring the benefits of open source to safety applications and help organizations provide the rigor needed for certification. This panel features ELISA working group leads who will share their vision of making Linux a prominent player for FuSa applications in several industries. Join us to learn more about the project and how you can contribute to the community’s overall success. Add this to your schedule here. \n1:45 – 2:25 pm: Finding the Path from Embedded to Edge using Product Lines \nSpeakers: Steffen Evers\, Bosch.IO & Philipp Ahmann\, Robert Bosch GmBH \nLinux is used for many embedded device classes today. However\, it is increasingly desirable to connect these devices with each other and with the cloud. Embedded container technology can be used to make this easier by merging server/cloud and embedded technologies. However\, it also leads to more challenges e.g. in respect to security\, safety\, traceability\, and SBOMs. Using Linux across multiple device classes and product lines\, and adding cloud technology\, causes the complexity and efforts to explode. \nIn this talk\, we describe how Bosch\, and others\, use embedded containers and “reference systems” to avoid redundant work and get a large number of embedded projects under control. \nA reference system is an adjustable compilation of tools along with a pre-configured bundle of packages for a common use case and defined set of devices. This reuse significantly reduces development and maintenance costs\, and speeds up the time to market. In this way\, reference systems can form the base for your product lines. \nBosch uses the in-house Debian-based embedded distribution “Apertis” as the basis for several reference systems\, e.g. for automotive infotainment systems. In doing so we push as many efforts as possible from individual projects into Apertis\, as the meta-layer. Thereby\, the users can focus more on the actual functionality and applications. e.g. one issue that we have addressed in the context of software management is the handling of GPLv3 in embedded devices. Another topic has been mainline support for kernel drivers. \nAdd this to your schedule here. \nOn Thursday\, June 23:  \n1:15-1:35 pm: Ask the Experts Session with Kate Stewart on SPDX\, Safety Critical Software & Embedded Systems \nSit down with open source experts to gain knowledge 1:1 and ask all your pressing questions! No sign-up necessary – just stop by! \n2:05-2:45 pm: BOF: SBOMs for Embedded Systems: What’s Working? What’s Not? \nWith the recent focus on improving Cybersecurity in IoT & Embedded\, the expectation that a Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) can be produced\, is becoming the norm. Having a clear understanding of the software running on an embedded system\, especially in safety critical applications\,  like medical devices\, energy infrastructure\, etc. has become essential.  Regulatory authorities have recognized this and are starting to expect it as a condition for engagement.  This BOF will provide an overview of the emerging regulatory landscape\, as well as examples of how SBOMs are already being generated today for embedded systems by open source projects such as Zephyr\, Yocto and others\,  followed by a discussion of the gaps folks are seeing in practice\, and ways we might tackle them. \n\n2:55-3:35 pm: Static Partitioning with Xen\, LinuxRT\, and Zephyr: A Concrete End-to-end Example – Stefano Stabellini\, AMD \n\n\nStatic partitioning enables multiple domains to run alongside each other with no interference. They could be running Linux\, an RTOS\, or another OS\, and all of them have direct access to different portions of the SoC. In the last five years\, the Xen community introduced several new features to make Xen-based static partitioning possible. Dom0less to start multiple static domains in parallel at boot\, and Cache Coloring to minimize cache interference effects are among them. Static inter-domain communications mechanisms were introduced this year\, while “ImageBuilder” has been making system-wide configurations easier. An easy-to-use complete solution is within our grasp. This talk will show the progress made on Xen static partitioning. The audience will learn to configure a realistic reference design with multiple partitions: a LinuxRT partition\, a Zephyr partition\, and a larger Linux partition. The presentation will show how to set up communication channels and direct hardware access for the domains. It will explain how to measure interrupt latency and use cache coloring to zero cache interference effects. The talk will include a live demo of the reference design. Add this to your schedule here.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/embedded-linux-conference-austin-tx-virtual/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220512
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220513
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20220505T183105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220505T183105Z
UID:10000011-1652313600-1652399999@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Automotive Technologies Virtual Conference
DESCRIPTION:Produced by Embedded Computing Design\, the Automotive Technologies virtual conference on May 12 will cover five key areas related to the design of today’s and tomorrow’s automobiles. It will look at these topics in great technical detail\, cover the hardware\, software\, and everything in between. \n\nIn-Vehicle Infotainment (IVI)\, including Vehicle Networking and Connectivity\nAdvanced driver assistance systems (ADAS)\nHybrids\, Electric Vehicles\, and the Powertrain\nAutonomous Drive\nSafety and Security\n\nThe ELISA Project will be featured at the conference with a session led by Shuah Khan\, ELISA Chair of the Technical Steering Committee and Linux Fellow at The Linux Foundation\, and Philipp Ahmann\, Chair of the ELISA Automotive Working Group and Technical Business Development Manager at Bosch GmbH. The session titled\, “The Linux Foundation’s ELISA Project: Enabling Linux for Safety in Automotive Applications\,” will be available on demand on Thursday\, May 12 at 9 am EDT. \nRegister for the event at the main event site here.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/automotive-technologies-virtual-conference/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220413
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220414
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20220406T152517Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220406T152517Z
UID:10000010-1649808000-1649894399@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:AGL Tech Day! (Virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) is hosting its annual AGL Tech Day on April 13\, 2022 at 3 -6 pm JST/8-11 am CEST/11 pm – 2 am PST. AGL Tech Day! is a one-day event\, bringing together the AGL community to discuss the most recent technology updates and connect with other community members. It is an invitation-only event for member companies of The Automotive Grade Linux Foundation and invited guests. \nKate Stewart\, VP of Dependable Embedded Systems at The Linux Foundation\, and Philipp Ahmann\, technical business development manager at Robert Bosch GmbH and ELISA Project ambassador and TSC member\, will be at AGL Tech Day to present ELISA Project updates\, specifically progress from the Automotive Working Group. \nLearn more about event by clicking here on the main event website: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/agl-linux-tech-day/program/schedule/. \n  \nhttps://events.linuxfoundation.org/agl-linux-tech-day/
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/agl-tech-day-virtual/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://elisa.tech/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2022/04/Screen-Shot-2022-04-06-at-8.09.38-AM.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211214
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211216
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20211029T162435Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211029T162435Z
UID:10000005-1639440000-1639612799@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Open Source Summit/Automotive Linux Summit Japan
DESCRIPTION:Open Source Summit Japan 2021 is now a Virtual Experience\, happening December 14-15 on the Japan Standard Time Zone (UTC+09:00). All times for the ELISA related events have been updated to reflect the Pacific Time Zone.  \nAs with past virtual experiences\, know that we are taking thoughtful actions to create an immersive digital experience that provides you with interactive content and collaboration experiences. You will have the ability to network with other attendees\, attend presentations with live Q&A\, interact with sponsors real-time\, and much more – all virtually\, from anywhere. To register for the event\, visit the main conference page: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-japan/register/. \nELISA will be represented at the conference in the following presentations: \nMonday\, December 13 at 5:20-5:40 pm PST: Keynote Presentation \nSpeaker: Kate Stewart\, Vice President of Dependable Embedded Systems at The Linux Foundation  \nAdd this to your schedule here. \nTuesday\, December 14 at 6-6:50 pm PST: A Path to Automotive Safety Certification for Open Source?  \nSpeaker: Paul Sherwood\, Chairman of Codethink Limited \nWith the rise of connected and autonomous vehicles\, the key requirement for automotive software systems focuses on safety and security. The need to ensure certification against ISO 26262 and similar safety regulations has been one of the main barriers to choosing AGL for advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS)\, automated driving\, and safety-critical components. Codethink has been working on a process-driven certification model\, allowing practitioners to make credible assertions about the safety of the construction and maintenance of software consumed from open source repositories\, in collaboration with ELISA and Exida. This talk will describe the foundation of the certification model\, demonstrate the application of the model to construct a system capable of hosting a significant portion of the AGL software distribution\, and discuss the implications of this for organizations seeking to consume AGL in a safety-critical context. Add this to your schedule here. \nTuesday\, December 14 at 10:30 – 11:20 pm PST: Functional Safety certification methodology for Red Hat In Vehicle OS  \nSpeaker: Gabriele Paoloni\, Red Hat \nSo far no vendor was able to Functional Safety certify a complex Linux based OS. Red Hat takes this challenge seriously. Join us in the conversation where Red Hat will share its plan and vision to leverage the strength of open source and community development model to solve this problem. Add this to your schedule here. \nTuesday\, December 14 at 11:30 pm – 12:20 am PST on Wednesday\, December 15: FuSA BoF – Community Efforts in Automotive Linux Functional Safety  \nSpeakers: Jeffrey Osier-Mixon & Gabriele Paolini\, Red Hat \nThis BOF is an informal discussion and a chance to connect with people working toward functional safety certification efforts in an automotive context. It follows on Gabriele’s presentation on Red Hat’s proposed methodology for certification against ISO 26262. The goal is to advance certification for Linux in automotive\, beyond IVI\, and to chart a path for FuSa certification in other contexts. Work is being done in ELISA to develop methodologies for certification in a number of contexts. Your voice is welcome at this BoF and also within ELISA – we hope you join us. Add this to your schedule here. \nRegistration costs US $50. To register or to see the complete schedule\, please visit the main conference page here. \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/open-source-summit-automotive-linux-summit-japan/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211203
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211205
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20211105T175328Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211105T175328Z
UID:10000007-1638489600-1638662399@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:OLF (Ohio LinuxFest)
DESCRIPTION:OLF (formerly known as Ohio LinuxFest)\, which will take place at the Hyatt Regency Columbus on December 3 and 4\, is a grassroots conference for the GNU/Linux/Open Source Software/Free Software community that started in 2003 as a large inter-LUG (Linux User Group) meeting and has grown steadily since. It is a place for the community to gather and share information about Linux and Open Source Software. \nKate Stewart\, Vice President of Dependable Embedded Systems\, will be on-site to give a keynote titled “Hobbyist Code Goes to Mars.” \nThirty years ago\, Linus Torvalds announced the start of what would become the Linux kernel\, and later explained some of his thinking in a book – “Just for fun: The Story of an Accidental Revolutionary” .   Linux has since evolved to be one of the most important open source projects in history for embedded applications.   Along similar lines\, OpenEmbedded started off as a hobbyist project targeting handhelds\, and evolved into the Yocto Project which is behind the scenes all around us.    Both projects are part of the open source software stack that Ingenuity is running on Mars today.   They illustrate the need for embedded applications to focus on getting things right – bugs are a lot harder to fix on Mars than they are on your desktop here on earth.  Incorporating software engineering best practices that have been learned since the early Apollo space mission is the next big challenge for all of us interested in creating safety critical embedded systems based on open source that we can all depend on\,  on this planet\, and others! \nRegister for the conference here or see the complete schedule on the main event website here.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/olf-ohio-linuxfest/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210929
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211002
DTSTAMP:20260414T145511
CREATED:20210825T190455Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210825T190455Z
UID:10000004-1632873600-1633132799@elisa.tech
SUMMARY:Linux Security Summit (Seattle\, Washington + Virtual)
DESCRIPTION:The Linux Foundation is hosting its Linux Security Summit on September 29 – October 1 in Seattle\, Washington\, as well as virtually. This is a technical forum for collaboration between Linux developers\, researchers\, and end users. Its primary aim is to foster community efforts in analyzing and solving Linux security challenges. \nElana Copperman\, an ELISA Project Ambassador and System Safety Architect at Mobileye (part of Intel)\, will be giving a presentation titled “Where do Security and Safety Meet?” on Thursday\, September 30 at 11:05-11:50 am PDT.  \nSystem security and safety have common goals\, yet often follow divergent development paths. We are taking a look at the Linux kernel configuration features\, many of which were originally designed for security\, which can be used to enable safety critical applications. In this talk\, we will give an overview of our recent work researching existing kernel features important to enable safety critical applications. The kernel configurations are mapped onto Common Weakness Enumerations\, but more significantly we demonstrate how they are specifically relevant to support basic safety features such as kernel memory or avoiding race conditions. The work is in the context of ELISA (https://elisa.tech)\, striving to promote the acceptance of Linux in industries such as avionics\, medical devices\, and automotive\, for which safety is an essential requirement. Our goal is to discuss our work with the Linux kernel developers engaged in the Linux Self-Protection Project and others interested in this area. Add this to your schedule here. \nThis year’s event will be held in a hybrid format.  Registrants can choose to attend in-person in Seattle or virtually. To learn more or to register\, visit the main event website.
URL:https://elisa.tech/event/linux-security-summit/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference
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END:VCALENDAR