Chapter 7 Software and the Challenge of Flight Control §



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Chapter 7
Software and the Challenge of Flight Control§
Nancy G. Leveson

Aeronautics and Astronautics

MIT

Introduction
A mythology has arisen about the Shuttle software with claims being made about it being “perfect software” and “bug-free” or having “zero-defects,”1,2 all of which are untrue. But the overblown claims should not take away from the remarkable achievement by those at NASA and its major contractors (Rockwell, IBM, Rocketdyne, Lockheed Martin, and Draper Labs) and smaller companies such as Intermetrics (later Ares), who put their hearts into a feat that required overcoming what were tremendous technical challenges at that time. They did it using discipline, professionalism, and top-flight management and engineering skills and practices. Many lessons can be learned that are still applicable to the task of engineering complex software systems today, both in aerospace and in other fields where software is used to implement critical functions.

Much has already been written about the detailed software design. This essay will instead take a historical focus and highlight the challenges and how they were successfully overcome as the Shuttle development and operations progressed. The ultimate goal is to identify lessons that can be learned and used on projects today. The lessons and conclusions gleaned are necessarily influenced by the experience of the author; others might draw additional or different conclusions from the same historical events.

To appreciate the achievements, it is necessary first to understand the state of software engineering at the time and the previous attempts to use software and computers in spaceflight.
Learning from Earlier Manned Spacecraft

Before the Shuttle, NASA had managed four manned spacecraft programs: Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and Skylab that involved the use of computers. Mercury did not need an on-board computer. Reentry was calculated by a computer on the ground and the retrofire times and firing attitude were transmitted to the spacecraft while in flight.3

Gemini was the first U.S. manned spacecraft to have a computer onboard. Successful rendezvous required accurate and fast computation, but the ground tracking network did not cover all parts of the Gemini orbital paths. The type of continuous updates needed for some critical maneuvers therefore could not be provided by a ground computer. The Gemini designers also wanted to add accuracy to reentry and to automate some of the preflight checkout functions. Gemini’s computer did its own self-checks under software control during prelaunch, allowing a reduction in the number of discrete test lines connected to launch vehicles and spacecraft. During ascent, the Gemini computer received inputs about the velocity and course of the Titan booster so that it would be ready to take over from the Titan’s computers if they failed, providing some protection against a booster computer failure. Switchover could be either automatic or manual, after which the Gemini computer could issue steering and booster cutoff commands for the Titan. Other functions were also automated and, in the end, the computer operated during six mission phases: prelaunch, ascent backup, orbit insertion, catch-up, rendezvous, and reentry.4

The computer for Gemini was provided by IBM, the leading computer maker at that time. Both NASA and IBM learned a great deal from the Gemini experience as it required more sophistication than any computer that had flown on unmanned spacecraft to that date. Engineers focused on the problems that needed to be solved for the computer hardware: reliability and making the hardware impervious to radiation and to vibration and mechanical stress, especially during launch.

At the time, computer programming was considered an almost incidental activity. Experts wrote the software in low-level, machine-specific assembly languages. Fortran had only been available for a few years and was considered too inefficient for use on real-time applications, both in terms of speed and machine resources such as memory. The instructions for the Gemini computer were carefully crafted by hand using the limited instruction set available. Tomayko suggests that whereas conventional engineering principles were used for the design and construction of the computer hardware, the software development was largely haphazard, undocumented, and highly idiosyncratic. “Many managers considered software programmers to be a different breed and best left alone.”3

The requirements for the Gemini software provided a learning environment for NASA. The programmers had originally envisioned that all the software needed for the flight would be preloaded into memory, with new programs to be developed for each mission.3 But the programs developed for Gemini quickly exceeded the available memory and parts had to be stored on an auxiliary tape drive until needed. Computers had very little memory at the time and squeezing the desired functions into the available memory became a difficult exercise and placed limits on what could be accomplished. In addition, the programmers discovered that parts of the software were unchanged from mission to mission, such as the ascent guidance backup function. To deal with these challenges, the designers introduced modularization of the code, which involved carefully breaking the code into pieces and reusing some of the pieces for different functions and phases of flight, a common practice today but not at that time.

Another lesson was learned about the need for software specifications. McDonnell-Douglas created a Specification Control Document, which was forwarded to the IBM Space Guidance Center in Oswego to validate the guidance equations. Simulation programs, written in Fortran, were used for this validation.

Despite the challenges and the low level of software technology at the time, the Gemini software proved to be highly reliable and useful. NASA used the lessons learned about modularity, specification, verification, and simulation in producing the more complex Apollo software. In turn, many of the lessons learned from Apollo were the basis for the successful procedures used on the Shuttle. Slowly and carefully NASA was learning how to develop more and more complex software for spacecraft.

After the success with Gemini, the software ambitions for Apollo stretched the existing technology even further. Although computer hardware was improving, it still created extreme limitations and challenges for the software designers. During Mercury, the ground-based computer complex supporting the flights performed one million instructions per minute. Apollo did almost 50 times that many—approaching one million instructions per second.3 Today, the fastest computer chips can execute 50 billion instructions per second, or 50,000 times the speed of the entire Apollo computer complex. George Mueller, head of the NASA Office of Manned Space Flight, envisioned that computers would be “one of the basic elements upon which our whole space program is constructed.”5 But first, the problems of how to generate reliable and safe computer software had to be solved. The handcrafted, low-level machine code of Gemini would not scale to the complexity of later spacecraft.

In 1961, NASA contracted with Draper Labs (then called the MIT Instrumentation Lab) for the design, development, and construction of the Apollo guidance and navigation system, including software. The plans for using software in Apollo were ambitious and caused delays.

Much of the computing for Apollo was done on the ground. The final Apollo spacecraft was autonomous only in the sense it could return safely to Earth without help from ground control. Both the Apollo Command Module (CM) and the Lunar Exploration Module (LEM) included guidance and control functions, however. The CM’s computer handled translunar and transearth navigation while the LEM’s provided for autonomous landing, ascent, and rendezvous guidance. The LEM had an additional computer as part of the Abort Guidance System (AGS) to satisfy the NASA requirement that a first failure should not jeopardize the crew. Ground systems backed up the CM computer and its guidance system such that if the CM system failed, the spacecraft could be guided manually based on data transmitted from the ground. If contact with the ground was lost, the CM system had autonomous return capability.

Real-time software development on this scale was new to both NASA and MIT—indeed to the world at that time—and was considered to be more of an art than a science. Both MIT and NASA originally treated software as a secondary concern, but the difficulty soon became obvious. When testifying before the Senate in 1969, Mueller described problems with the Apollo guidance software, calling Apollo’s computer systems “the area where the agency pressed hardest against the state of the art,” and warning that it could become the critical path item delaying the lunar landing.5 He personally led a software review task force that, over a nine month period, developed procedures to resolve software issues. In the end, the software worked because of the extraordinary dedication of everyone on the Apollo program.

In response to the problems and delays, NASA created some important management functions for Apollo including a set of control boards—the Apollo Spacecraft Configuration Control Board, the Procedures Change Control Board, and the Software Configuration Control Board—to monitor and evaluate changes. The Software Configuration Control board, chaired for a long period by Chris Kraft, controlled all onboard software changes.3

NASA also developed a set of reviews for specific points in the development process. For example, the Critical Design Review (CDR) followed the preparation of the requirements definition, guidance equations, and engineering simulation of the equations and placed the specifications and requirements for a given mission under configuration control. The next review, a First Article Configuration Inspection (FACI) followed the coding and testing of the software and the production of a validation plan and placed the software under configuration control. The Customer Acceptance Readiness Review (CARR) certified the validation process after testing was completed. The Flight Readiness Review was the final step before clearing the software for flight. This review and acceptance process provided for consistent evaluation of the software and controlled changes, which helped to ensure high reliability and inserted much needed discipline into the software development process. The control board and review structure became much more extensive for the Shuttle.

Like Gemini, computer memory limitations caused problems, resulting in the abandonment of some features and functions and resulting in the use of tricky programming techniques to save others. The complexity of the resulting code led to difficulty in debugging and verification and therefore to delays. MIT’s distance from Houston also created communication problems and compounded the difficulty in developing correct software.

When it appeared that the software would be late, MIT added more people to the software development process, which simply slowed down the project even more. This basic principle that adding more people to a late project makes it even later is well-known now, but it was part of the learning process at that time. Configuration control software was also late, leading to delays in supporting discrepancy 6 reporting. Another mistake made was to take shortcuts in testing when the project started to fall behind schedule.

The 1967 launch pad fire gave everyone time to catch up and fix the software, as later the Challenger and Columbia accidents would for the Shuttle software. The time delay allowed for significant improvements to be made. Howard “Bill” Tindall, who was NASA’s watchdog for the Apollo software, observed at the time that NASA was entering a new era with respect to spacecraft software: no longer would software be declared complete in order to meet schedules, requiring the users to work around errors. Instead quality would be the primary consideration.3 The Mueller-led task force came to similar conclusions and recommended increased attention to software in future manned space programs. The dynamic nature of requirements for spacecraft should not be used as an excuse for poor quality, it suggested. Adequate resources and personnel were to be assigned early to this “vital and underestimated area.”5 The Mueller task force also recommended ways to improve communication and make coding easier.

Despite all the difficulties encountered in creating the software, the Apollo software was a success. Mueller attributed this success to the “extensive ground testing to which every subsystem was subjected, the simulation exercises which provided the crews with high fidelity training for every phase of the flights, and the critical design review procedures … fundamental to the testing and simulation programs.”5

In the process of constructing and delivering the Apollo software, both NASA and the MIT Instrumentation Lab learned a lot about the principles of software engineering for real-time systems and gained important experience in managing a large real-time software project. These lessons were applied to the Shuttle. One of the most important lessons was that software is more difficult to develop than hardware. As a result,


  • software documentation is crucial,

  • verification must proceed through a sequence of steps without skipping any to try to save time,

  • requirements must be clearly defined and carefully managed,

  • good development plans should be created and followed, and

  • adding more programmers does not lead to faster development.

NASA also learned to assign experienced personnel to a project early, rather than using the start of a project for training inexperienced personnel.

Skylab was the final large software effort prior to the Shuttle. Skylab had a dual computer system for attitude control of the laboratory and pointing of the solar telescope. The software contributed greatly to saving the mission during the two weeks after its troubled launch and later helped control Skylab during the last year before reentry.3 The system operated without failure for over 600 days of operation. It was also the first onboard computer system to have redundancy management software. Learning from their previous experience, the software development followed strict engineering principles, which were starting to be created at that time in order to change software development from a craft to an engineering discipline.

There were some unique factors in Skylab that made the problem somewhat easier than Apollo. The software was quite small, just 16K words, and the group of programmers assigned to write it was correspondingly small. There were never more than 75 people involved, not all of whom were programmers, which made the problems of communication and configuration control, which were common in larger projects, less important. Also, IBM assigned specialists in programming to the software in contrast to Draper Labs, which used spacecraft engineering experts. Draper and IBM had learned that the assumption that it was easier to teach an engineer to program than to teach a programmer about spacecraft was wrong.3

Limitations in memory were again a problem. The software resulting from the baselined requirements documents ranged from 9,000 words to 20,000 in a machine with only 16,000 words of memory. Engineers made difficult choices about where to cut. Memory limitations became the prime consideration in allowing requirements changes, which ironically may have actually contributed to the success of the software given the difficult problems that ensue from requirements changes.

Tomayko concludes that the Skylab program demonstrated that careful management of software development, including strict control of changes, extensive and preplanned verification activities, and the use of adequate development tools, results in high quality software with high reliability.3 However, the small size of the software and the development teams was also an important factor.
Challenges to Success for the Shuttle

The Space Shuttle design used computers in much more ambitious ways than previous spacecraft. The Shuttle onboard computers took the lead in all checkout, guidance, navigation, systems management, payload, and powered flight functions. These goals pushed the state of the art at the time so NASA was required to create new solutions to problems that had not previously been faced. At the same time, they realized that conservatism was important to success. The result was often a compromise between what was desirable and what could be done with confidence.

The full scope of what needed to be accomplished was not recognized at first. NASA engineers estimated the size of the flight software to be smaller than that of Apollo. The cost was also vastly underestimated: Originally, NASA thought the cost for development of the Shuttle software would be $20,000,000 but the agency ended up spending $200,000,000 just in the original development and $324 million by 1991.7 In 1992, NASA estimated that $100,000,000 a year was being spent on maintaining the onboard software [my report]. 8 Note that the onboard software was only a small part of the overall software that needed to be developed. There was four times as much ground support software used in construction, testing, simulation, and configuration control.

NASA had learned from Apollo and the earlier spacecraft just how important software development was in spacecraft projects and that quality had to be a goal from the beginning. Software could not just be declared complete in order to meet schedules, requiring users to work around errors3, although this goal was not completely realized as witnessed by the number of software-related waivers and user notes 9 during Shuttle operations. By STS-7 in June 1983, over 200 pages of such exceptions and their descriptions existed.33 Some were never fixed, but the majority were addressed after the Challenger accident in January 1986 when flights were temporarily suspended.

Many difficult challenges had to be overcome in creating and maintaining the Shuttle software, including continuing hardware and memory limitations, continually evolving software requirements, project communication and management, software quality, and computer hardware reliability. How NASA and its contractors met those challenges is described later. But first, to understand their solutions, it is necessary to have some basic information about the Shuttle software architecture.
Onboard Software Architecture

There are basically three computer systems on board the Shuttle: a computer that controls the Space Shuttle Main Engines (SSME), the primary avionics computer, and a computer that backs up the primary computer.

The Main Engine Control (MEC) software, built by Rocketdyne and managed by Marshall Space Flight Center, was a “first” in space technology. The Shuttles three main liquid-propellant engines were the most complex and “hottest” rockets ever built.3 The Shuttle engines can adjust flow levels, can sense how close to exploding they are, and can respond in such a way as to maintain maximum performance at all times. This design would have been impossible without the use of a digital computer to control the engines. But it also provided huge challenges to the software designers.

After studying the problem, Rocketdyne and Marshall decided to use a distributed approach. By placing controllers at the engines themselves, complex interfaces between the engine and vehicle could be avoided. Also the high data rates needed for active control were best handled by a dedicated computer. In addition, they decided to use a digital computer controller rather than an analog controller because software would allow for more flexibility. As the control concepts for the engines evolved over time, digital systems could be developed faster, and failure detection would be simpler.10

The MEC software operated as a real-time system with a fixed cyclic execution cycle. The requirement to control a rapidly changing engine environment led to the need for a high-frequency cycle. Each major cycle started and ended with a self test. It then executed engine control tasks, read sensor readings, performed engine limit monitoring tasks, provided outputs, then read another round of input sensor data, checked internal voltage, and finally performed a second self test. Some free time was built into the cycle to avoid overruns into the next cycle. Direct memory access of engine component data by the primary avionics software was allowed to ensure that the main engine controller did not waste time handling data requests. NASA managers adopted a strict software engineering approach to developing and maintaining the MEC software as they did for all the Shuttle software.

The second main onboard computer, the Primary Avionics Software System (PASS), provided functions used in every phase of a mission except for docking, which was a manual operation provided by the crew.7 PASS is also sometimes referred to as the on-board data processing system (DPS). The two main parts of the software are (1) an operating system and code that provided essential services for the computer (called the FCOS or Flight Computer Operating System) and (2) the application software that ran the Shuttle. The application software provided guidance navigation, and flight control; vehicle systems management (including payload interfaces); and vehicle checkout.

Because of memory limitations, the PASS was divided into major functions, called OPS (Operational Sequences) reflecting the mission phases (preflight, ascent, on-orbit, and descent). The OPS were divided into modes. Transition between major modes was automatic, but transition between OPS was normally initiated by the crew and required that the OPS be loaded from the magnetic tape-based MMU (Mass Memory Unit). Common data used by more than one OPS was kept in the computer memory continuously and was not overlaid.11

Within each OPS, there were special functions (SPECs) and display functions (DISPs), which were supplemental functions available to the crew in addition to the functions being performed by the current OPS. Because SPECs and DISPs had lower priority than the regular OPS functions, they were kept on tape and rolled into memory when requested if a large OPS was in memory.

Originally the FCOS was to be a 40-millisecond time-slice operating system, but a decision was made early to convert it into a priority-driven system. If the processes in a time-slice system get bogged down by excessive input/output operations, they tend to slow down the total process operation. In contrast, priority systems degrade gracefully when overloaded. The actual FCOS created had some features of both types, with cycles similar to Skylab, but which could be interrupted for higher-priority tasks.

The PASS needed to be reconfigured from flight to flight. A large amount of flight-specific data was validated and installed into the flight software using automated processes to create a flight load. The flight load was tested and used in post-release simulations.12 About 10 days before flight, a small number of low-risk updates were allowed (after retesting). In addition, an automated process was executed on the day of launch to update a small set of environmental factors (e.g., winds) to adapt the software to the conditions for that particular day.

A third computer, the Backup Flight System (BFS), was used to backup the PASS for a few critical functions during ascent and reentry and for maintaining vehicle control in orbit. This software was synchronized with the primary software so it could monitor the PASS. The BFS used a time-slice operating system,13 which led to challenges in synchronizing the PASS and BFS and ultimately led to a delay of the first launch, described later in Section 3.3. If the primary computers failed, the mission commander could push a button to engage the backup software. One of the features of this system was that the mission commander had to make a decision very quickly about switching to the BFS—the BFS could only remain in a “ready” stage for a short time after failure of the PASS. It was not possible to switch back from BFS to PASS later. In addition, the BFS had to “stop listening” whenever it thought the PASS might be compromising the data being fetched so that it would not also be polluted.

Originally the BFS was intended to be used only during pre-operations testing but was extended to STS-4 and later for the life of the Shuttle. It was never actually engaged in flight.

Support for developing the PASS software (including testing and crew training) was provided in a set of ground facilities. The Software Production Facility (SPF) provided a simulation test bed that simulated the flight computer bus interface devices, provided dynamic access and control of the flight computer memory, and supported digital simulation of the hardware and software environments.14 SPF requirements were defined early by NASA and all new capabilities required NASA approval. IBM maintained this facility while Rocketdyne was responsible for the MEC testing

After development of the software for a mission was completed, testing and simulation continued at the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL), which was designed to test the actual Shuttle hardware and flight software in a simulated flight environment and with a full cockpit for human-in-the-loop testing and integration testing with other flight and ground systems. SAIL was used to verify that the flight software loads were compatible with hardware interfaces, the flight software performed as designed, and the flight software was compatible with mission requirements. Major contractors involved in the SAIL included Rockwell-Downey, Lockheed Martin, and Draper Labs.

This architecture was designed to overcome some of the limitations and challenges for real-time software at the time, as discussed in the next subsections.


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