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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF JANUARY 4,1996 PSA#1503JPL, Dorothy Quinlan, Mail Stop 190-220, 4800 Oak Grove Drive,
Pasadena, CA 91109-8099 A -- DEVELOPMENT OF A SELF-CONFIGURING INTERFACE STANDARD FOR
SPACECRAFT GUIDANCE, NAVIGATION, AND CONTROL AVIONICS SOL 95/9 DUE
011596. Contact Point: Dorothy Quinlan, (818) 354-7063; FAX (818)
354-4152. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California Institute of
Technology (JPL/CIT), operating under a prime contract with the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), is surveying
industry for potential sources capable of supporting JPL in the
Development of a Self-Configuring Interface Standard for Spacecraft
Guidance, Navigation, and Control (GN&C) Avionics. The Laboratory, with
support from NASA's Office of the Chief Engineer, is developing
information interface standard for spacecraft GN&C Avionics. The
standard will be responsive to a mandate from the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) GN&C Committee on Standards (CoS)
for a self-configuring, plug-and-lay interface layered on top of
AS-1773 fiber optic serial bus physical and data link layers, and will
become part of a national standard to be published by the AIAA. A
self-configuring network, for the purpose of this effort, is a system
consisting of a computer plus several input/output peripheral devices
in which the computer learns how to communicate with the peripherals
based on information provided to it over the communication medium by
the peripherals themselves. The design and implementation goals are
provided in Attachment 1 - Self-Configuring Interface Standard Design
and Implementation Goals. Attachment 1: (1) Self-Configuring Interface
Standard Design and Implementation Goals. Attachment 1: (1) Allow
partial compliance through manual communication of the Information
Management Key (IMK); (2) Minimize constraints that must be imposed on
peripheral devices in order to implement the structure of the
self-configuring network; (3) Minimize the quantity and complexity of
new hardware that must be added to peripheral devices to make them
compliant with the standard. It is not required that the peripheral
include a general-purpose computer or processor; (4) Minimize the
changes that must be made to existing peripheral device hardware
designs to make them compliant with the standard. The structure of the
IMK must be flexible for each type or class of peripheral device; (5)
In addition to the GN&C Avionics, the interface standard should be
easily extendible to all spacecraft avionics; (6) The input/output
driver software or software set that makes use of the information
contained in the IMKs should be general-purpose and reusable, and
should conveniently fit within an eventual global architecture of
reusable software modules; (7) Defense the standard so that it is
compliant with the International Standards Organization (ISO) Open
System Interconnect (OSI) model. In particular, define the GN&C
interface standards so that its layers can evolve independently as
various technologies evolve, such as new physical layers, higher data
rates, new data link protocols, etc. In a complete implementation, the
bus controller would query the peripheral devices for an IMK message,
which would contain all the information the input/output driver
software hosted in the GN&C computer requires to be able to
communication with that peripheral. To allow partial compliance upon
initial introduction of the standard, peripheral device vendors should
be able to communicate the IMKs for their device manually through
either electronic means or a written table. Institutional and personnel
skills desired include: (1) Self-configuring networks or interfaces
(e.g., computer peripheral, FAX machines): (2) Computer network
protocol design; (3) Computer communication; (4) Information system
design; (5) Spacecraft avionics; (6) Spacecraft information or data
systems; and (7) Spacecraft guidance, navigation, and control systems.
The Laboratory anticipates that a competitive Request for Proposal
(RFP) will be issued to interested organizations in February 1996 to
provide support in the design of the GN&C self-configuring function,
and to document the design in the form of a Draft Interface Standard
Specification. If your organization wishes to be considered as a
potential source for the procurement, you are requested to: (1) Submit
a written request for placement on the source list; and (2) Supportive
information regarding your organization's ability to provide support
for the effort described in Attachment 1 no later than January 15,
1996. This is a request for information only and is used for planning
purposes. It does not constitute a commitment, implied or otherwise,
that JPL will take procurement action in this particular matter.
Neither JPL nor the Government will be responsible for any costs
incurred in furnishing this information. This is not a solicitation or
Request for Proposal (RFP). (363) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0009 19960103\A-0009.SOL)
A - Research and Development Index Page
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