RODCNIMar 28

Service Discovery-Based Hybrid Network Middleware for Efficient Communication in Distributed Robotic Systems

arXiv:2508.009472.4
Predicted impact top 99% in RO · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

Addresses communication bottlenecks in distributed robotic systems for autonomous driving, offering concrete efficiency gains over existing middleware like CyberRT.

RIMAOS2C, a service discovery-based hybrid network middleware, improves large-data transmission efficiency by 36-40% and reduces callback latency variation by 42-906% in L4 autonomous vehicle deployments with two cross-chip subscribers.

Robotic middleware is fundamental to ensuring reliable communication among system components and is crucial for intelligent robotics, autonomous vehicles, and smart manufacturing. However, existing robotic middleware often struggles to meet the diverse communication demands, optimize data transmission efficiency, and maintain scheduling determinism between Orin computing units in large-scale L4 autonomous vehicle deployments. This paper presents RIMAOS2C, a service discovery-based hybrid network communication middleware designed to tackle these challenges. By leveraging multi-level service discovery multicast, RIMAOS2C supports a wide variety of communication modes, including multiple cross-chip Ethernet protocols and PCIe communication capabilities. Its core mechanism, the Message Bridge, optimizes data flow forwarding and employs shared memory for centralized message distribution, reducing message redundancy and minimizing transmission delay uncertainty. Tested on L4 vehicles and Jetson Orin domain controllers, RIMAOS2C leverages TCP-based ZeroMQ to overcome the large-message transmission bottleneck in native CyberRT. In scenarios with two cross-chip subscribers, it eliminates message redundancy and improves large-data transmission efficiency by 36 to 40 percent while reducing callback latency variation by 42 to 906 percent. This research advances the communication capabilities of robotic operating systems and proposes a novel approach to optimizing communication in distributed computing architectures for autonomous driving.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes