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Accelerating Software Development for Large-Scale Real-Time Systems at Mitsubishi Electric’s Kamakura Works
Technology Category
- Analytics & Modeling - Virtual & Augmented Reality Software
- Wearables - Augmented Reality Glasses, Headsets & Controllers
Applicable Industries
- Automotive
- Cement
Applicable Functions
- Maintenance
- Product Research & Development
Use Cases
- Intelligent Packaging
- Mixed Reality
Services
- Software Design & Engineering Services
- Testing & Certification
The Challenge
Mitsubishi Electric, a leading manufacturer of electrical and electronic equipment, was facing challenges in its software development processes for large-scale real-time systems at its Kamakura Works production hub. The software engineering department was tasked with developing software solutions for complex systems such as satellites and ground control centers. However, these solutions were becoming larger and more complex, and the development lead time was getting shorter. The department was working to refine and systematize its processes for developing various types of software solutions. They were also preparing for a further increase in the speed and scale of future software development. The department aimed to cope with the growing sophistication and speed of software development by promoting automation, flexibly meet the demands of the most complex pipeline projects, and realize a secure on-premises environment that was not connected to the Internet.
The Customer
Mitsubishi Electric’s Kamakura
About The Customer
Mitsubishi Electric is a global leader in the manufacture of electrical and electronic equipment, including air-conditioning systems, home products, and automotive parts. Based in Tokyo, the company also builds large-scale real-time and embedded systems for public sector clients at its production hub, Kamakura Works, located in the Japanese prefecture of Kanagawa. Kamakura Works has been at the forefront of Japan’s development of space technology since the country first launched an ionized layer observatory satellite in 1976. In February 2020, the hub significantly expanded its capacity to develop satellites after building one of Japan’s largest satellite production facilities.
The Solution
In late 2018, Kamakura Works’ software engineering department began discussions with HPE Pointnext Services on how to best drive innovation. HPE Pointnext Services helped design a road map to achieve these objectives while understanding the software engineering department’s challenges and needs. The software engineering department chose Red Hat OpenShift Kubernetes Engine to build CI/CD pipelines. This Kubernetes distribution is an industry standard in container orchestration and has been commercialized for enterprise use. The software engineering department’s original CI/CD pipelines comprised OpenShift and OSS such as Jenkins for automation, GitLab for deliverables management, RedMine for task management, and Rocket.Chat for communication. The new setup allowed the department to arrange all the execution environments needed for the integration testing of application software and applications that needed to be tested by just deploying container images managed by OpenShift.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
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