Panasonic Automotive Systems and Arm Partner to Standardize Software-Defined Vehicles

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YOKOHAMA, Japan & CAMBRIDGE, England, November 07, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Panasonic Automotive Systems Co., Ltd. (PAS) and Arm today announced a strategic partnership aimed at standardizing automotive architecture for Software-Defined Vehicles (SDVs). The two organizations share a common vision for creating a software stack with the flexibility to meet the current and future needs for automotive and have aligned on this through their active participation in SOAFEE*1, an industry-wide initiative that is driving greater collaboration in standardized software development across the automotive market. This new partnership will see PAS and Arm adopt and extend the device virtualization framework VirtIO to decouple automotive software development from hardware and accelerate automotive industry development cycles.

The automotive industry increasingly consolidated Electronic Control Units (ECUs) into a single powerful ECU such as Cockpit Domain Controller (CDC) or High-Performance Computer (HPC). This has made hypervisors and advanced chipsets more important than ever. However, many automakers and tier-1 suppliers are challenged by vendor-specific proprietary interfaces, which leads to increased costs and delivery time when transitioning from one vendor solution to another.

PAS and Arm recognize the need to shift from a hardware-centric to a software-first development model to address these challenges. By standardizing the interfaces between automaker and tier-1 supplier software stacks and the underlying hypervisors and chipsets these run on, it is easier for automotive partners to adopt the latest generations of technology optimized for their needs and use cases.

This new partnership will involve several key initiatives:

1. Utilizing VirtIO-based Unified HMI to standardize zonal architecture
PAS and Arm are leveraging VirtIO not only for virtualizing devices connected to the central ECU like CDC/HPC, but also for remote devices linked to zonal ECUs. The two organizations have demonstrated a groundbreaking proof-of-concept using PAS's open-source remote GPU technology, Unified HMI, to implement a Display Zonal Architecture built on Arm. This architecture distributes GPU loads from the central ECU to multiple zonal ECUs, reducing heat generation and harness weight without altering applications running on the central ECU. The flexible partitioning in the Mali?-G78AE GPU of Zonal ECUs allocates dedicated hardware resources to different workloads, enabling deterministic graphics performance in a Display Zonal Architecture. PAS and Arm are collaborating to provide a SOAFEE Blueprint and reference implementation of this work, aiming to standardize emerging zonal architectures in the automotive industry.