Automotive Grade Linux

Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) is an open source project hosted by The Linux Foundation that is building an open operating system and framework for automotive applications. AGL was launched in 2012 with founding members including Jaguar Land Rover, Nissan, Toyota, DENSO Corporation, Fujitsu, HARMAN, NVIDIA, Renesas, Samsung and Texas Instruments (TI). Today, AGL has 146 members.[1].

Automotive Grade Linux
DeveloperThe Linux Foundation
OS familyUnix-like
Working stateUnder development
Source modelOpen source
Initial releaseJanuary 2016 (2016-01) (Agile Albacore)
Latest releaseUCB 9.0 (Itchy Icefish) / April 2020 (2020-04)
Official websitewww.automotivelinux.org

History

On June 30, 2014, AGL announced their first release, which was based on Tizen and was primarily for demo applications.[2]

AGL expanded the first reference platform with the Unified Code Base (UCB) distribution.[3] The first UCB release, nicknamed Agile Albacore, was released in January 2016 and leverages software components from AGL, Tizen and GENIVI Alliance.

UCB 2.0, nicknamed Brilliant Blowfish, was made available in July 2016 and included new features like rear seat display, video playback, audio routing and application framework.[4]

UCB 3.0, or Charming Chinook[5] was released in January 2017 with Smart Device Link for Mobile Integration and a new Window Manager & SDK.

UCB 4.0 (Daring Dab) was announced in early 2017[6] and released in August; features include Secure Over-the-Air (OTA), SmartDeviceLink integration, and speech recognition APIs[7].

UCB 5.0 (Electric Eel) was released in January 2018. Improved features included wider and more robust hardware support, support for control from multiple surfaces, audio management and OTA updates.

UCB 6.0 (Funky Flounder) was made available on October 2018. Features include telematics systems, electronic instrument clusters.

UCB 7.0 (Grumpy Gumpy) was released in March 2019 featuring a speech recognition API .

UCB 8.0 (Happy Halibut) was released in August 2019 and decreased the footprint of AGLwhile increasing the modularity. It added Alexa integration as well as better Audio and CAN support.

UCB 9.0 (Itchy Icefish) was made available on April 2020[8]

On May 31, 2017, AGL announced that the 2018 Toyota Camry will be the first Toyota vehicle on the market with the AGL-based system in the United States.[9]

As of April 2020 Mercedes Benz, Subaru and Toyota produce vehicles which make use of the UCB for their vehicles.

Implementations

gollark: It has 68513 hours of power on time, 1986 power on/off cycles out of a rated 10000, and 4 "elements in grown defect list".
gollark: Ah, according to the data I got off it, my drive was manufactured in 2012. Which is something like threeish years after the server came into existence, as far as I know.
gollark: Also, there was some admittedly small-scale testing by some computer review company and SSDs could mostly go significantly beyond their endurance ratings and manage hundreds of terabytes written. But also did tend to fail suddenly and inexplicably instead of having a graceful failure.
gollark: Store the hashes of things, expect more computing power later.
gollark: I mean that most of these things (HDDs *and* SSDs) will either fail quickly or probably run for quite a while.

References

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