finalise finale
[phd-thesis.git] / top / finale.tex
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9 \chapter{Finale}%
10 \label{chp:finale}
11 \begin{chapterabstract}
12 \noindent This chapter wraps up the monograph by means of:
13 \begin{itemize}
14 \item a conclusion;
15 \item an outlook on future work;
16 \item an overview of the related work;
17 \item and a history of the \gls{MTASK} system.
18 \end{itemize}
19 \end{chapterabstract}
20
21 \section{Finale}
22 Traditionally, \gls{IOT} have been programmed using layered architectures.
23 Every layer has its own software and hardware characteristics, resulting in semantic friction.
24 \Gls{TOP} is a declarative programming paradigm designed for specifying multi-tiered interactive systems.
25 However, it is not straightforward to run \gls{TOP} systems on resource-constrained devices such as edge devices.
26
27 The \gls{MTASK} system bridges this gap by providing a \gls{TOP} programming language for edge devices.
28 It is a full-fledged \gls{TOP} language hosted in a tiny functional programming language containing basic tasks, task combinators, support for sensors and actuators, and interrupts.
29 It is integrated seamlessly in \gls{ITASK}, a \gls{TOP} system for interactive web applications.
30 Hence, all layers of an \gls{IOT} system can be programmed from a single declarative specification.
31 \Gls{ITASK} abstracts away from the gritty details of interactive web applications such as program distribution, web applications, data storage, and user management.
32 The engine of \gls{MTASK} abstracts away of all technicalities such as communication, abstractions for sensors and actuators, interrupts and (multi) task scheduling.
33
34 Devices are connected to the \gls{ITASK} system at run time using a single function that takes care of all the communication and error handling.
35 When connected to a device, tasks written in the \gls{MTASK} \gls{DSL} can be lifted to \gls{ITASK} tasks.
36 The tasks are specified and compiled at run time, i.e.\ \gls{CLEAN} can be used as a macro language for constructing \gls{MTASK} tasks, tailor making them for the work that needs to be done.
37 When lifted, other tasks in the system can interact with the task through the usual means.
38 Furthermore, \gls{ITASK} \glspl{SDS} can be \emph{lowered} to \gls{MTASK} tasks as well, allowing for bidirectional automatic data sharing between \gls{MTASK} tasks and the \gls{ITASK} system.
39 The \gls{MTASK} device is equipped with a domain-specific \gls{OS} that only needs to be programmed once after which the device can continuously receive new tasks.
40 \todo[inline]{Uitbreiden}
41
42 \section{Future work}
43 \todo[inline]{De grens tussen future en related work is soms vaag maar ik heb het zo goed als mogelijk proberen te scheiden. Mis ik hier nog iets?}
44 There are many ways of extending the research on the \gls{MTASK} system that also concerns \gls{TOP} for resource constrained devices in general.
45 Some obvious routes would be to add features, support more platforms,
46
47 \subsection{Security}
48 \Gls{IOT} has reached the news many times regarding security and it is a big concern \citep{alhirabi_security_2021}.
49 The fact that the devices are embedded in the fabric, are hard to reach and thus to update, and can only run limited cryptographic algorithms due to their constrained resources makes it difficult.
50 The security of \gls{MTASK} and the used protocols are deliberately overlooked at the moment
51 Though, because \gls{MTASK} is modular, for example, the communication channels are communication method agnostic, it should be fairly easy to apply standard security measures to them by replacing communication methods and applying standard authentication and encryption to the protocol.
52 \Citet{de_boer_secure_2020} did preliminary research on securing the communication channels, which proved to be possible without many changes in the protocol.
53 Nonetheless, this deserves much more attention.
54 The future and related work for the security of \gls{MTASK} and tierless systems is more thoroughly presented in \cref{ssec_t4t:security}.
55
56 \subsection{Advanced edge devices techniques}
57 Edge devices may produce a lot of data and it is not always effective to send this data to the server for processing.
58 Leaving the produced data and computations on the edge device is called \emph{edge computing} \citep{shi_edge_2016}.
59 The \gls{MTASK} exhibits many properties of edge computing because it is possible to run entire workflows on the device.
60 However, it would be interesting to see how far this can be extended.
61 The \gls{MTASK} language is a high-level \gls{DSL} so it would be obvious to introduce abstractions for edge computations.
62 For example, add \gls{TOP} support for machine learning on the edge device using TinyML \citep{sanchez-iborra_tinyml-enabled_2020}.
63
64 Another recent advance in \gls{IOT} programming is battery-less or even battery-free computing.
65 Instead of equipping the edge device with a battery, a capacitor is used in conjunction with some energy harvesting systems such as a solar panel.
66 With the use of intermittent computing, resuming the computation after a, possibly unexpected, power loss, operation can still be achieved \citep{hester_batteries_2019}.
67 After a reset, the program state is resumed from a checkpoint that was stored in some non-volatile memory.
68 Many intermittent computing solutions rely on annotations from the programmer to divide the program into atomic blocks, sometimes called \emph{tasks} as well.
69 These blocks are marked as such because in the case of an reset of the system, the work must be done again.
70 Examples of such blocks are \gls{I2C} transmissions or calculations that rely on recent sensor data.
71 In \gls{MTASK}, all work expressed by tasks is already split up in atomic pieces of work.
72 Furthermore, creating checkpoints should be fairly straightforward as \gls{MTASK} tasks do not rely on any global state---all information required to execute a task is stored in the task tree.
73 It would be interesting to see what \gls{TOP} abstraction could be useful for intermittent computing and what solutions are required to make this work.
74
75 Mesh networks allow for communication not only to-and-fro the device and server but also between devices.
76 The \gls{ITASK} system already contains primitives for distributed operation.
77 For example, it is possible to run tasks or share data with \glspl{SDS} on a different machine.
78 It would be interesting to investigate how this networking technique can be utilised in \gls{MTASK}.
79
80 Finally, \glspl{FPGA} have been becoming cheaper and faster recently, allowing for purely functional code to be translated to \glspl{FPGA} code efficiently \citep{baaij_digital_2015}.
81 It would be interested to see how and whether (parts of) \gls{TOP} programs or the functionality of the \gls{MTASK} \gls{OS} could be translated to \gls{FPGA} specifications.
82
83 \subsection{Formal semantics}
84 Semantics allow reasoning about the language and programs in order do (symbolic) simulation, termination checking, task equivalence, or otherwise.
85 For \gls{ITASK} there have been two attempts to formally specify the language.
86 First \citet{koopman_executable_2011} defined a semantics used for property based testing based on a minimal version of \gls{ITASK}.
87 Then \citet{plasmeijer_task-oriented_2012} formalised \gls{ITASK} by providing an executable semantics for the language.
88 Both semantics are not suitable for formal reasoning due to the complexity.
89 Later, \citet{steenvoorden_tophat_2019} created \gls{TOPHAT}, a \gls{TOP} language with a complete formal specification with similar features to \gls{MTASK} \citep{steenvoorden_tophat_2019}.
90 \Citet{antonova_mtask_2022} compared parts of \gls{MTASK} to the semantics of \gls{TOPHAT} semantics and created a preliminary semantics for a subset of \gls{MTASK}.
91 Future research into extending the formal semantics of \gls{MTASK} is useful to give more guarantees on \gls{MTASK} programs.
92
93 \subsection{\texorpdfstring{\Glsxtrlong{TOP}}{Task-oriented programming}}
94 In order to keep the resource constraints low, the \gls{MTASK} language contains only a minimal set of simple task combinators.
95 From these simple combinators, complex collaboration patterns can be described.
96 The \gls{ITASK} language is designed exactly the opposite.
97 From just a few super combinators, all other combinators are derived.
98 However, this approach requires a very powerful host language in which task combinators can be defined in terms of the host language.
99 It would be fruitful to investigate which workflows cannot be specified with the limited set of combinators available in \gls{MTASK}.
100 Furthermore, it is unclear whether all derived combinators from \gls{ITASK} can be expressed in terms of \gls{MTASK} combinators.
101 \Citet{van_der_aalst_workflow_2003} defines a benchmark set of workflow patterns.
102 It would be interesting to see which patterns can be implemented with \gls{MTASK}, and what additional combinators would be needed.
103 Moreover, editors are a crucial part of \gls{TOP}.
104 In \gls{MTASK}, sensors can be seen as read-only shared editors that are updated by the system.
105 It would be interesting to investigate how actual interactive editors would fit in \gls{MTASK}.
106 For example, many smartwatches contain touch sensitive screens that could be used to interact with the user in this way.
107
108 \Glspl{SDS} in \gls{ITASK} have a rich set of combinators to transform and combine the \glspl{SDS} into new \gls{SDS}.
109 In \gls{MTASK}, \glspl{SDS} are just typed global variables that may or may not proxy an \gls{ITASK} \gls{SDS}.
110 It would be interesting to port the \gls{SDS} combinators to \gls{MTASK} as well, allowing them to be transformed and combined also.
111
112 \subsection{Usability}
113 The promise of \glspl{DSL} has often been that a domain expert could program with little technical knowledge of the host programming language.
114 Some even propose that a \gls{DSL} is a \gls{UI} for domain experts to computation platforms \citep{management_association_evaluating_2014}.
115 In practise this is not always the case due to crippling syntax and convoluted error messages.
116 Recent approaches in interactive editors for programming language source code such as dynamic editors \citep{koopman_dynamic_2021} or typed tree editors such as Hazelnut \citep{omar_hazelnut_2017} could prove useful for supporting the \gls{DSL} programmer in using \gls{MTASK}.
117 If the editor produces correct \gls{MTASK} code by construction, much of the problems could be avoided.
118 In the same respect, as \gls{MTASK} is a tagless-final \gls{EDSL} and uses \gls{HOAS}, the error messages are complex and larded with host language features.
119 Much research has gone into simplifying these error messages by translating them to the \gls{DSL} domain, see for example \citep{serrano_type_2018}.
120 A future directions could be to apply the \gls{EDSL} error message techniques on \gls{MTASK} as well.
121
122 The serialisation and deserialisation of data types is automated both on the server and the \gls{MTASK} device using generic programming.
123 Using the structural information of the data type, the code responsible for the functionality is automatically generated.
124 Peripherals are not yet fully integrated in such a way.
125 When a peripheral is added, the programmer has to define the correct byte code, implement the instructions in the interpreter, add task tree nodes, and implement them in the rewrite system.
126 It would be interesting to investigate whether this can be automated or centralised in a way.
127
128 \subsection{Scheduling}
129 The scheduling in \gls{MTASK} works quite well but it is not real time.
130 There is a variant of \gls{FRP} called \gls{PFRP} that allows for real-time operation \citep{belwal_variable_2013}.
131 Furthermore, an alternative to reducing the energy consumption by going to sleep is stepping down the processor frequency.
132 So called \gls{DVFS} is a scheduling technique that slows down the processor in order to reach the goals as late as possible, reducing the power consumption.
133 \Citet{belwal_variable_2013} use \gls{PFRP} with \gls{DVFS} to reduce the energy consumption.
134 It would be interesting to investigate the possibilities for \gls{DVFS} in \gls{MTASK} and \gls{TOP} in general.
135
136 \section{Related work}
137 The novelties of the \gls{MTASK} system can be compared to existing systems in several categories.
138 It is a interpreted (\cref{sec:related_int}) \gls{TOP} (\cref{sec:related_top}) \gls{DSL} (\cref{sec:related_dsl}) that may seem similar at first glance to \gls{FRP} (\cref{sec:related_frp}), it is implemented in a functional language (\cref{sec:related_fp}) and due to the execution semantics, multitasking is automatically supported (\cref{sec:related_multi}).
139 \Cref{sec_t4t:TiredvsTierless} contains an elaborate related work section regarding tierless systems in general.
140
141 \subsection{Interpretation}\label{sec:related_int}
142 There are a myriad of interpreted programming languages available for some of the bigger more powerful edge devices.
143 For example, for the popular ESP8266 chip there are ports of \gls{MICROPYTHON}, LUA, Basic, JavaScript and Lisp.
144 All of these languages, except the Lisp dialect uLisp (see \cref{sec:related_fp}), are imperative and do not support multiasking out of the box.
145 They lay pretty hefty constraints on the memory and as a result do not work on smaller microcontrollers.
146 Another interpretation solution for the tiniest devices is Firmata, a protocol for remotely controlling the microcontroller and using a server as the interpreter host \citep{steiner_firmata:_2009}.
147 \citet{grebe_haskino:_2016} wrapped this in a remote monad for integration with \gls{HASKELL} that allowed imperative code to be interpreted on the microprocessors.
148 Later this system was extended to support multithreading as well, stepping away from Firmata as the basis and using their own \gls{RTS} \citep{grebe_threading_2019}.
149 It differs from our approach because continuation points need to be defined by hand there is no automatic safe data communication.
150 \Citet{baccelli_reprogramming_2018} provide a single language \gls{IOT} system based on the RIOT \gls{OS} that allows runtime deployment of code snippets called containers.
151 Both client and server are written in JavaScript.
152 However, there is no integration between the client and the server other than that they are programmed from a single source.
153 Mat\`e is an example of an early tierless sensor network framework where devices are provided with a virtual machine using TinyOS for dynamic provisioning \citep{levis_mate_2002}.
154
155 \subsection{\texorpdfstring{\Glsxtrlongpl{DSL}}{DSLs} for microcontrollers}\label{sec:related_dsl}
156 Many \glspl{DSL} provide higher-level programming abstractions for microcontrollers, for example providing strong typing or memory safety.
157 Examples of this are Copilot \citep{hess_arduino-copilot_2020} and Ivory \citep{elliott_guilt_2015}, imperative \glspl{DSL} embedded in a functional language that compile to \ccpp{}.
158
159 \subsection{\texorpdfstring{\Glsxtrlong{FP}}{Functional programming}}\label{sec:related_fp}
160 \Citet{haenisch_case_2016} showed that there are major benefits to using functional languages for \gls{IOT} applications.
161 They showed that using function languages increased the security and maintainability of the applications.
162 Traditional implementations of general purpose functional languages have high memory requirements rendering them unusable for tiny computers.
163 There have been many efforts to create a general purpose functional language that does fit in small memory environments, albeit with some concessions.
164 For example, there has been a history of creating tiny Scheme implementations for specific microcontrollers.
165 It started with BIT \citep{dube_bit:_2000} that only required \qty{64}{\kibi\byte} of memory, followed by {PICBIT} \citep{feeley_picbit:_2003} and {PICOBIT} \citep{st-amour_picobit:_2009} that lowered the memory requirements even more.
166 \Citep{suchocki_microscheme:_2015} created Microscheme, a functional language targeting \gls{ARDUINO} compatible microcontrollers.
167 The {*BIT} languages all compile to assembly while Microscheme compiles to \gls{CPP}, heavily supported by \gls{CPP} lambdas available even on \gls{ARDUINO} AVR targets.
168 An interpreted Lisp implementation called uLisp also exists that runs on microcontrollers with as small as the \gls{ARDUINO} {UNO} \citep{johnson-davies_lisp_2020}.
169
170 \subsection{Multitasking}\label{sec:related_multi}
171 Applications for tiny computers are often parallel in nature.
172 Tasks like reading sensors, watching input devices, operating actuators and maintaining communication are often loosely dependent on each other and are preferably executed in parallel.
173 Microcontrollers often do not benefit from an \gls{OS} due to memory and processing constraints.
174 Therefore, writing multitasking applications in an imperative language is possible but the tasks have to be interleaved by hand \citep{feijs_multi-tasking_2013}.
175 This results in hard to maintain, error prone and unscalable spaghetti code.
176
177 There are many solutions to overcome this problem in imperative languages.
178 If the host language is a functional language (e.g.\ the aforementioned scheme variants) multitasking can be achieved without this burden relatively easy using continuation style multiprocessing \citep{wand_continuation-based_1980}.
179 Writing in this style is complicated and converting an existing program in this continuation passing style results in relatively large programs.
180 Furthermore, there is no built-in thread-safe communication possible between the tasks.
181 A \gls{TOP} or \gls{FRP} based language benefits even more because the programmer is not required to explicitly define continuation points.
182
183 Regular preemptive multithreading is too memory intensive for smaller microcontrollers and therefore not suitable.
184 Manual interleaving of imperative code can be automated to certain extents.
185 Solutions often require an \gls{RTOS}, have a high memory requirement, do not support local variables, no thread-safe shared memory, no composition or no events as described in \cref{tbl:multithreadingcompare}.
186 The table compares the solutions in the relevant categories with \gls{MTASK}.
187
188 \begin{table}[ht]
189 \begin{threeparttable}
190 \caption{%
191 An overview of imperative multithreading solutions for tiny computers with their relevant characteristics.
192 The characteristics are: sequential execution, local variable support, parallel composition, deterministic execution, bounded execution and safe shared memory (adapted from \citet[p.\ 12]{santanna_safe_2013}).
193 }\label{tbl:multithreadingcompare}
194 % \begin{tabular}{lc>{\columncolor[gray]{0.95}}cc>{\columncolor[gray]{0.95}}cc>{\columncolor[gray]{0.95}}cc}
195 \begingroup
196 \setlength\tabcolsep{4.5pt}
197 \begin{tabular}{lccccccc}
198 \toprule
199 \multicolumn{2}{c}{Language} & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Complexity} & \multicolumn{3}{c}{Safety}\\
200 \midrule
201 Name & Year & SeqCmp & LocVar & ParCmp & DetEx & BndEx & SafeMem\\
202 \midrule
203 Preemptive & many & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{} & rt & \Circle{}\\
204 nesC & 2003 & \Circle{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{} & \CIRCLE{} & async & \Circle{}\\
205 OSM & 2005 & \Circle{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{}\\
206 Protothreads & 2006 & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{}\\
207 TinyThreads & 2006 & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{}\\
208 Sol & 2007 & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{}\\
209 FlowTask & 2011 & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{}\\
210 Ocram & 2013 & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \CIRCLE{} & \Circle{} & \Circle{}\\
211 C\'eu & 2013 & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{}\\
212 \gls{MTASK} & 2022 & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \CIRCLE{} & \LEFTcircle{}\tnote{1} & \LEFTcircle{}\tnote{2}\\
213 \bottomrule
214 \end{tabular}
215 \endgroup
216 \begin{tablenotes}
217 \item [1] Only for tasks, not for expressions.
218 \item [2] Using \glspl{SDS}.
219 \end{tablenotes}
220 \end{threeparttable}
221 \end{table}
222
223 \subsection{\texorpdfstring{\Glsxtrlong{FRP}}{Functional reactive programming}}\label{sec:related_frp}
224 The \gls{TOP} paradigm is often compared to \gls{FRP} and while they appear to be similar---they are both event driven---in fact they are very different.
225 \Gls{FRP} was introduced by \citet{elliott_functional_1997}.
226 The paradigm strives to make modelling systems safer, more efficient, composable.
227 The core concepts are behaviours and events.
228 A behaviour is a value that varies over time.
229 Events are happenings in the real world and can trigger behaviours.
230 Events and behaviours may be combined using combinators.
231 \Gls{TOP} allows for more complex collaboration patterns than \gls{FRP} \citep{wang_maintaining_2018}, and in consequence is unable to provide the strong guarantees on memory usage available in a restricted variant of \gls{FRP} such as arrowized \gls{FRP} \citep{nilsson_functional_2002}.
232
233 The way \gls{FRP}, and for that matter \gls{TOP}, systems are programmed stays close to the design when the domain matches suits the paradigm.
234 The \gls{IOT} domain seems to suit this style of programming very well in just the device layer but also for entire \gls{IOT} systems.
235
236 For example, Potato is an \gls{FRP} language for building entire \gls{IOT} systems using powerful devices such as the Raspberry Pi leveraging the Erlang \gls{VM} \citep{troyer_building_2018}.
237 It requires client devices to be able to run the Erlang \gls{VM} which makes it unsuitable for low memory environments.
238
239 The emfrp language compiles a \gls{FRP} specification for a microcontroller to \gls{C} code \citep{sawada_emfrp:_2016}.
240 The \gls{IO} part, the bodies of some functions, still need to be implemented.
241 These \gls{IO} functions can then be used as signals and combined as in any \gls{FRP} language.
242 Due to the compilation to \gls{C} it is possible to run emfrp programs on tiny computers.
243 However, the tasks are not interpreted and there is no communication with a server.
244
245 Other examples are CFRP \citep{suzuki_cfrp_2017}, XFRP \citep{10.1145/3281366.3281370}, Juniper \citep{helbling_juniper:_2016}, Hailstorm \citep{sarkar_hailstorm_2020}, Haski \citep{valliappan_towards_2020}, arduino-copilot \citep{hess_arduino-copilot_2020}.
246
247 \subsection{\texorpdfstring{\Glsxtrlong{TOP}}{Task-oriented programming}}\label{sec:related_top}
248 \Gls{TOP} as a paradigm with has been proven to be effective for implementing distributed, multi-user applications in many domains.
249 Examples are conference management \citep{plasmeijer_conference_2006}, coastal protection \citep{lijnse_capturing_2011}, incident coordination \citep{lijnse_incidone:_2012}, crisis management \citep{jansen_towards_2010} and telemedicine \citep{van_der_heijden_managing_2011}.
250 In general, \gls{TOP} results in a higher maintainability, a high separation of concerns and more effective handling of interruptions of workflow.
251 \Gls{IOT} applications contain a distributed and multi-user component, but the software on the device is mostly follows multiple loosely dependent workflows.
252 The only other \gls{TOP} language for embedded systems is $\mu$Tasks \citep{piers_task-oriented_2016}.
253 It is a non-distributed \gls{TOP} \gls{EDSL} hosted in \gls{HASKELL} designed for embedded systems such as payment terminals.
254 They showed that applications tend to be able to cope well with interruptions and be more maintainable.
255 However, the hardware requirements for running the standard \gls{HASKELL} system are high.
256
257 \section{History of \texorpdfstring{\gls{MTASK}}{mTask}}
258 The development of \gls{MTASK} or its predecessors has been going on for almost seven years now though it really set off during my master's thesis.
259 This section provides an exhaustive overview of the work on \gls{MTASK} and its predecessors.
260
261 \subsection{Generating \texorpdfstring{\ccpp{}}{\ccpp{}} code}
262 A first throw at a class-based shallowly \gls{EDSL} for microcontrollers was made by \citet{plasmeijer_shallow_2016}.
263 The language was called \gls{ARDSL} and offered a type safe interface to \gls{ARDUINO} \gls{CPP} dialect.
264 A \gls{CPP} code generation backend was available together with an \gls{ITASK} simulation backend.
265 There was no support for tasks nor even functions.
266 Some time later in the 2015 \gls{CEFP} summer school, an extended version was created that allowed the creation of imperative tasks, local \glspl{SDS} and the usage of functions \citep{koopman_type-safe_2019}.
267 The name then changed from \gls{ARDSL} to \gls{MTASK}.
268
269 \subsection{Integration with \texorpdfstring{\gls{ITASK}}{iTask}}
270 \Citet{lubbers_task_2017} extended this in his Master's Thesis by adding integration with \gls{ITASK} and a bytecode compiler to the language.
271 \Gls{SDS} in \gls{MTASK} could be accessed on the \gls{ITASK} server.
272 In this way, entire \gls{IOT} systems could be programmed from a single source.
273 However, this version used a simplified version of \gls{MTASK} without functions.
274 This was later improved upon by creating a simplified interface where \glspl{SDS} from \gls{ITASK} could be used in \gls{MTASK} and the other way around \citep{lubbers_task_2018}.
275 It was shown by \citet{amazonas_cabral_de_andrade_developing_2018} that it was possible to build real-life \gls{IOT} systems with this integration.
276 Moreover, a course on the \gls{MTASK} simulator was provided at the 2018 \gls{CEFP}\slash\gls{3COWS} winter school in Ko\v{s}ice, Slovakia \citep{koopman_simulation_2018}.
277
278 \subsection{Transition to \texorpdfstring{\glsxtrlong{TOP}}{Task-oriented programming}}
279 The \gls{MTASK} language as it is now was introduced in 2018 \citep{koopman_task-based_2018}.
280 This paper updated the language to support functions, simple tasks, and \glspl{SDS} but still compiled to \gls{ARDUINO} \gls{CPP} code.
281 Later the byte code compiler and \gls{ITASK} integration was added to the language \citep{lubbers_interpreting_2019}.
282 Moreover, it was shown that it is very intuitive to write microcontroller applications in a \gls{TOP} language \citep{lubbers_multitasking_2019}.
283 One reason for this is that a lot of design patterns that are difficult using standard means are for free in \gls{TOP} (e.g.\ multithreading).
284 In 2019, the \gls{CEFP}\slash\gls{3COWS} summer school in Budapest, Hungary hosted a course on developing \gls{IOT} applications with \gls{MTASK} as well \citep{lubbers_writing_2019}.
285
286 \subsection{\texorpdfstring{\Glsxtrlong{TOP}}{Task-oriented programming}}
287 In 2022, the SusTrainable summer school in Rijeka, Croatia hosted a course on developing greener \gls{IOT} applications using \gls{MTASK} as well \citep{lubbers_green_2022}.
288 Several students worked on extending \gls{MTASK} with many useful features:
289 \Citet{van_der_veen_mutable_2020} did preliminary work on a green computing analysis, built a simulator, and explored the possibilities for adding bounded datatypes; \citet{de_boer_secure_2020} investigated the possibilities for secure communication channels; \citeauthor{crooijmans_reducing_2021} \citeyearpar{crooijmans_reducing_2021,crooijmans_reducing_2022} added abstractions for low-power operation to \gls{MTASK} such as hardware interrupts and power efficient scheduling; and \citet{antonova_mtask_2022} defined a preliminary formal semantics for a subset of \gls{MTASK}.
290 In 2023, the SusTrainable summer school in Coimbra, Portugal will host a course on \gls{MTASK} as well.
291
292 \subsection{\texorpdfstring{\gls{MTASK}}{mTask} in practise}
293 Funded by the Radboud-Glasgow Collaboration Fund, collaborative work was executed with Phil Trinder, Jeremy Singer, and Adrian Ravi Kishore Ramsingh.
294 An existing smart campus application was developed using \gls{MTASK} and quantitatively and qualitatively compared to the original application that was developed using a traditional \gls{IOT} stack \citep{lubbers_tiered_2020}.
295 This research was later extended to include a four-way comparison: \gls{PYTHON}, \gls{MICROPYTHON}, \gls{ITASK}, and \gls{MTASK} \citep{lubbers_could_2022}.
296 Currently, power efficiency behaviour of traditional versus \gls{TOP} \gls{IOT} stacks is being compared as well adding a \gls{FREERTOS}, and an elixer/potato implementation to the mix as well.
297
298 \input{subfilepostamble}
299 \end{document}