Open-source Linux OS for prototyping to production

A scalable Linux tool launched by Peridio is an open-source OS designed to migrate designs from protoype to production.

Periodio Avocado OS

Justin Schneck, co-founder and chief product officer of Peridio, explained that embedded developers’ either have to choose a packaged Linux distribution which can work immediately but which is difficult to scale and secure in volume production, or build their own security-hardened, scalable one to implement with the Yocto Project.

It is designed to help developers manage the “dramatically compressed” development and release timescales imposed by edge AI applications to release new models in production designs on demand to incorporate the latest cybersecurity protection.


The OS features immutable and deterministic runtines, fault tolerance, modular updates, simplified secure boot implementation, full disk encryption, boot modes for manufactruing, recovery and test and live NFS-mounted extensions to reflect code changes instantly on target hardware without rebuilds or flashing cycles.


At Microelectronics UK, the company showed an edge AI application built on the Avocado OS, running on a Qualcomm Dragonwing QCM6490 chipset. It showed the same application compiled to the Avocado OS running on an  Nvidia Jetson Orin AI processor module and demonstrated how it can be used to migrate Linux-based applications from one hardware target to another.

The Avocado OS is also ready for use in production-grade hardware such as the Advantech ICAM-540, an AI camera based on the Nvidia Jetson Orin module, added the company.

UK government to invest in semiconductor supply chain

Caroline Hayes

Caroline Hayes

Caroline Hayes is the editor of Electronics Weekly. She has been covering the electronics industry for over 30 years, edited UK and pan-European titles and contributed to UK and international online and print publications. Although specialising in the semiconductor market, she also has a keen interest in education, careers and start-up opportunities in the broader electronics industry.

Comments

No comments

  1. The title seems to be strongly misleading. Most of the tools and repositories seem to have none or a proprietary License!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*