DornerWorks Wins SBIR Phase II Award to Develop Open-Source Hypervisor


GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., July 31, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Following the successful completion of a Phase I grant in 2011, the US Navy Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR) has awarded DornerWorks a Phase II grant worth $750,000, with a potential option that would extend the grant to a total of $1M. SPAWAR focuses on information dominance for the Navy, thus they are funding continued research & development at DornerWorks to develop an embedded ARINC 653 open-source hypervisor. A hypervisor is virtualization technology that allows multiple operating systems to run simultaneously on a single computer. While virtualization is common in large scale computing facilities such as data warehouses, it has appeared on desktop computers in recent years, and now is making its way into embedded computing that are running behind the scenes in much of the digital world around us.  A hypervisor isolates each software application from the others running on the same computer, providing reliability, security, and safety. It prevents a bug in one software program from affecting the other programs on the same system. Equally important for the Navy, this isolation also provides security against intentional attacks from malware such as software viruses.

The DornerWorks grant project, titled "Safe, Secure, and High Performance Hypervisor: A Partitioning Approach to Isolating Untrusted Software" aims to extend the Xen open-source hypervisor to comply with the ARINC 653 standard, which guides the partitioning of software running on a single computing platform in safety-critical applications, particularly for aerospace. Principle investigator for the grant, Steven H. VanderLeest, is Vice-President of Research & Development at DornerWorks and also a Professor of Engineering at Calvin College. VanderLeest says that this new grant "will enable DornerWorks to further develop an innovative product that has excellent potential for a variety of applications." One unique feature of their approach is the release of the software as open-source.   VanderLeest indicates that interested parties can thus "try out the technology for free and then later pay a reasonable price for the related certification artifacts and tools that provide the evidence of high levels of safety and security design assurance."

About DornerWorks 

DornerWorks is a premier electronic and software engineering firm specializing in the design of safety-critical systems for the medical, aerospace, automotive, and industrial markets. The company focuses on custom development of electronics hardware (printed circuit boards and FPGA computer chips) and embedded software such as device drivers and operating system interfaces. Founded in 2000 by David K. Dorner, DornerWorks has grown into one of the most sought after embedded engineering firms in the country. With an impressive staff of over 50 that includes PhD's, patent holders, multi-degreed engineers, and a Six Sigma Black Belt, DornerWorks has the talent and experience to tackle the most demanding projects. DornerWorks is an ISO 13485, AS9100 and ISO 9001 certified company.   For more information, visit the DornerWorks web site (http://www.dornerworks.com).

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