CII Data and Software Interface Guidelines

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CII Data and Software Interface Guidelines Ben Bornstein NASA CII Team

General Background  Surveyed existing spacecraft data interfaces:     

MIL-STD-1553 RS-232, RS-422 Compact PCI SpaceWire CCSDS, CADU, ISS EXPRESS, TCP/UDP, and various other (packet) data formats

 Met with spacecraft providers to determine capability:     

Ball Air Force Space Test Program Lockheed Martin Orbital Surrey 2

General Background  Reviewed common interface practice:       

GSFC GIRD Decadal Survey Common Spacecraft Bus Study JWST SpaceWire ICD Glory APS, Cloud Camera, TIM ICDs ICESat2 ICD SIM Combiner Space Test Program – Standard Interface Vehicle

 Conducted frequent CII Data Guidelines peer reviews:    

CII Workshop I Josep Rosello, Wahida Ghasti, David Jemeux (ESA) Glenn Rakow (GSFC) Mike Marlow (Kirtland, AFB; DoD Space Test Program) 3

Data Interface Goals    

Low-power data transmission High data rate transmission with scalable capacity Lightweight protocol Leverage existing standards and practices as much as practical  Minimally intrusive to spacecraft provider and instrument designer

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Data Interface Assumptions  The instrument is autonomous, in particular the instrument includes:      

an onboard processor packet processing telemetry monitoring command and data handling stored command sequences (science) data storage, compression, and playback

 The spacecraft acts largely as a passive relay of instrument commands and engineering and science data  Autonomous instruments and passive relay spacecraft require far fewer changes to spacecraft flight software, ground software, and mission operating systems. 5

Data Interface Drivers  SpaceWire systems have achieved industry acceptance for LEO spacecraft.  SpaceWire achieves a low-power consumption, high data rate interface with a scalable capacity in the range of 2–400 Mbps.  CCSDS packet format is common practice across aerospace flight and ground data systems.  CII Data messages communicate standard information about spacecraft and instrument status, time, telemetry, and science data in a well-accepted fashion  CRCs for error detection, command acknowledgements to assist in fault detection, SAFE mode for contingency situations

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Summary of Guidelines

5.2

5.3

5.4 5.5

5.1.1 Goals 5.1.2 Assumptions 5.1.3 Drivers 5.1.4 Nomenclature 5.1.5 Conventions Applicable Documents 5.1.6 SpaceWire SpaceWire Clock and Data Rate 5.2.2 SpaceWire Time Codes 5.2.3 5.2.4 SpaceWire Redundancy (optional)  CII Messages, Packet Formats, and Protocol CII Messages 5.3.1 5.3.2 CII Basic Packet Format 5.3.3 Spacecraft Status Message 5.3.4 Instrument Command 5.3.5 Instrument Command Acknowledgement 5.3.6 Instrument Telemetry 5.3.7 Instrument Science Data Data Management Software

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Instrument Modes

Preferred path to OFF

OFF / SURVIVAL

SAFE

INITIALIZATION

OPERATION

Within the OPERATION mode, instruments may define additional sub-modes specific to their operation (e.g. STANDBY, DIAGNOSTIC, MEASUREMENT, etc.). 8

Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function

5.2.1.1 Data SpaceWire

5.2.1.2 Data SpaceWire

Guidelines

Rationale/Co mment

The instrument should process and receive all  commands and time  messages exclusively  using SpaceWire (ECSS‐E‐ ST‐50‐12C) 

Low Power, High Data  Rate

The instrument should send all telemetry and  science data exclusively  using SpaceWire (ECSS‐E‐ ST‐50‐12C) 

Low Power, High Data  Rate

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Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function

5.2.2.1 Data SpaceWire

Guidelines

Rationale/Co mment

The SpaceWire link  between the instrument  and spacecraft should be  clocked at 10 MHz in both  directions*.

Default 10  Mbps requires  no data rate  handshake;  offers margin

CII Workshop I Feedback Led to significantly increased data rate *

This provides a total data rate of 10 Mbps and, accounting for SpaceWire overhead, a useable data rate of 8 Mbps. 10

Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function

5.3.1.1 Data Protocol

Guidelines

Rationale/Co mment

Each CII message type  should flow only in the  single direction indicated  in Table 5‐1. 

Defined data  paths and  messages

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Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.3.2.1 Data Protocol

The structure of a complete  CII SpaceWire packet  should conform to that  depicted in Figure 5‐1. 

Rationale/Co mment CCSDS Header for packet  control; CRC  for reliability

CII Workshop I Feedback Uncovered packet specification issue 12

Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.3.3.1 Data

The instrument should Time and  receive and process CII  Ephemeris Spacecraft Status Messages  containing the current  spacecraft time and  position. 

Rationale/Co mment Time via  CCSDS  Secondary  Header and  SpaceWire  time codes

5.3.3.3 Data

The spacecraft should send  High  Time and  status messages at one  resolution  Ephemeris second intervals. position  information

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Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.3.4.1 Data Command

5.3.4.3 Data Command

Rationale/Co mment

The instrument should receive and process CII  Command Messages from  the spacecraft. 

Spacecraft can  SAFE instrument

The instrument should receive and process no  more than 10 spacecraft or  ground commands per  second. 

Based on survey of  instrument  clock rates

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Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.3.4.4 Data Command

*

With the exception of the  Enter SAFE Mode command  message, the instrument  should process all CII  Command Messages in the  order received*. 

Rationale/Co mment Deterministic  commanding;  Instrument  SAFE is highest  priority

Implies instrument should support some command buffering capability. 15

Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.3.4.8 Data Command

Rationale/Co mment

Instruments providers  should define and furnish  spacecraft providers with a  complete Command  Dictionary.

Command Id

Best practice; Facilitates  spacecraft  operations

Command Message

0x0000 No Operation (no-op) 0x0011 Start Sending Telemetry 0x00FF Stop Sending (Telemetry or Science) Data 0x5AFE Enter

SAFE

mode

0x00FF–0xFFFF Instrument specific commands

CII Workshop I Feedback Led to Data Flow‐Control

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Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.3.5.1 Data Command

The instrument should reply to every command  received with a CII  Command  Acknowledgment Message. 

Rationale/Co mment Best practice;  Reliable  commanding  and fault  detection

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Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.3.6.1 Data Telemetry

5.3.6.8 Data Telemetry

Rationale/Co mment

The instrument should transmit engineering,  health, and accountability  (EHA) telemetry data at a  rate of up to 10 Hz. 

Based on survey of  instrument  clock rates

Instruments providers  should define and furnish  spacecraft providers with a  complete Telemetry  Dictionary.

Facilitates  instrument monitoring of  critical values  by spacecraft  provider 18

Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.3.7.1 Data Science

Rationale/Co mment

The instrument should limit  Based on data  its maximum number of  rate analysis science data packets to  match the SpaceWire data  rate specified in Section  5.2.2.

10 Mbps total              8. 00 Mbps usable (in each direction) – 7% packet overhead   0.60 Mbps – 10 Hz telemetry           0.02 Mbps Useable Science Data Rate: 7.38 Mbps 19

Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

Rationale/Co mment

5.4.1.1 Data The instrument should be  Management responsible for its own  – 5.4.1.3 science data onboard storage, compression, and  playback capabilities 5.4.1.4 Data Management

Instrument  buffering  reduces  spacecraft  burden,  Science data playback  maximizes should be coordinated with  rideshare  the spacecraft operations  opportunities team. 

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Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

5.5.1.1 Software Instrument control flight  software should be  developed according to NASA Class C software  development  requirements. 

Rationale/Co mment CII Level 1  Guidelines:  Class C  Instrument; see NASA NPR  7150.2A for  details 

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Key LEO Guidelines ID

Function Guidelines

Rationale/Co mment

5.5.2.1 Software Instrument control flight  software should be  updatable on orbit through  ground command.

Best practice;  Facilitates  updates and  workarounds

5.5.2.2 Software Individual memory  addresses of instrument  control software should be  updatable on orbit through  ground command. 

Best practice;  Facilitates  updates and  workarounds

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GEO Considerations  CII Data and Software Interface Guidelines are expected to remain largely invariant for both LEO and GEO spacecraft.  To GEO Spacecraft Providers: How well is SpaceWire supported both now and in the future?

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CII Workshop 1 Feedback  The following changes were made to the CII Data Interface Guidelines based upon the feedback received from the CII Workshop I:  Maximum data rate was increased from 1.5 Mbps to 10 Mbps  Instrument data flow-control commands were defined to assist in fault detection, isolation, and recovery (FDIR) scenarios  A CII data packet specification issue was addressed  Minor inconsistencies in terminology and other errata have been addressed  Rationale/Comments were added for all CII Guidelines considered to be “Key”

 We hear you and appreciate your input  Please keep it coming 24

Reference Protocol (Backup)

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5.3.2.1 CII Packet Format

   *

CII builds upon several SpaceWire and packet data standards. 256 byte packet size by Northrup Grumman / JWST recommendation. CRC provides reliable data transport for instruments that may require it; adds verification to commanding.

GOES‐R CRC is the standard CRC8, ATM (HEC): x8 + x2 + x + 1, with an initial value of all bits set to 1.  

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5.3.2.11 CII CCSDS Headers (1/3)

CCSDS Primary Header Packet Identification Packet Sequence Control Packet Version Number

Type

3 bits

1 bit

Secondary Header Flag 1 bit 2 bytes

ApID

Sequence Flags

Sequence Count

Packet Length

11 bits

2 bits

14 bits

16 bits 2 bytes

2 bytes

CCSDS Secondary Header CCSDS Unsegmented Time Code (CUC) Field P-Field T-Field Default Extended Coarse Time Fine Time 1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

CII utilizes standardized CCSDS header format for information common to all packetized telemetry (e.g. type, length, counters, and time). 27

5.3.2.11 CII CCSDS Headers (2/3) Primary Header

CCSDS Packet Data Secondary Header (Time)

6 bytes

9 bytes

Data 0–236 bytes (TBR)

CCSDS Primary Header Packet Identification Packet Sequence Control Packet Version Number

Type

3 bits

1 bit

Secondary Header Flag 1 bit 2 bytes Field

Packet Version Number Packet Type Secondary Header Flag

ApID

Sequence Flags

Sequence Count

Packet Length

11 bits

2 bits

14 bits

16 bits 2 bytes

2 bytes Length (bits) 3 1 1

Application Process Identifier Sequence Flags Sequence Count

11 2 14

Packet Length

16

Value

Comments

0b001 CII Packet Version 1 0b CII SpaceWire-CCSDS packet 0b1 Indicates the CII-CCSDS secondary header is present 0–2048 Reserved for instrument use 0b11 Indicates packet is unsegmented 0–16383 Specifies the packet sequence count. The packet count begins at zero and resumes at zero after 16384 packets have been sent. 0–236 Specifies the length of the packet data field in bytes. 28

5.3.2.11 CII CCSDS Headers (3/3) Primary Header

CCSDS Packet Data Secondary Header (Time)

6 bytes

9 bytes

Data 0–236 bytes (TBR)

CCSDS Secondary Header CCSDS Unsegmented Time Code (CUC) Field P-Field T-Field Default Extended Coarse Time Fine Time 1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

1 byte

 Contains elapsed time (ET) in coarse (seconds) and fine (subsecond) units since the default CCSDS epoch of January 1, 1958  Example: 

From 1/1/58 to 2/7/11 is 1,675,728,000s

 Coarse: 0x63 0xE1 0x94 0x80



125ms clock tick is 224 ÷ 8 = 2,097,152 sub-s 

Fine:

0x02 0x00 0x00

 SpaceWire 6-bit time code embedded in the CUC Extended time P-Field1 1Defined in the SpaceWire

– CCSDS Unsegmented Code Transfer Protocol (proposed) 

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5.3.3 CII Spacecraft Status Message

 Spacecraft time is contained in CCSDS Secondary Header  80 bytes of data:  4-element, double-precision, non-dimensional quaternion  3-element, double-precision, position vector (X)  3-element, double-precision, inertial velocity vector (V)

 Follows STP–SIV ephemeris message format 30

5.3.4 CII Instrument Command

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5.3.5 CII Command Acknowledgement

• Instrument Mode field: – First two bits denote the instrument major mode: INITIALIZATION (0b00), OPERATION (0b01), or SAFE (0b10) – Remaining bits may be used at the instrument’s discretion

• Command Source, Command ID, and CCSDS Primary Header Sequence Count  fields are echoed from the command packet being acknowledged 32

5.3.6 CII Instrument Telemetry

• Instrument Mode field: – First two bits denote the instrument major mode: INITIALIZATION (0b00), OPERATION (0b01), or SAFE (0b10) – Remaining bits may be used at the instrument’s discretion • 58 telemetry values per packet / telemetry bank • To facilitate spacecraft monitoring, each instrument telemetry value should be  encoded as either: – a standard two’s complement 32‐bit signed integer, – a 32‐bit unsigned integer, or – a IEEE‐754 floating‐point values 33

5.3.7 CII Instrument Science Data

• All science data is opaque to the spacecraft. • The instrument should be responsible for its own: – science data compression, – onboard storage, and – playback

• Data playback should be coordinated with the spacecraft  operations team. 34