929 research outputs found

    Hybrid Workload Enabled and Secure Healthcare Monitoring Sensing Framework in Distributed Fog-Cloud Network

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    The Internet of Medical Things (IoMT) workflow applications have been rapidly growing in practice. These internet-based applications can run on the distributed healthcare sensing system, which combines mobile computing, edge computing and cloud computing. Offloading and scheduling are the required methods in the distributed network. However, a security issue exists and it is hard to run different types of tasks (e.g., security, delay-sensitive, and delay-tolerant tasks) of IoMT applications on heterogeneous computing nodes. This work proposes a new healthcare architecture for workflow applications based on heterogeneous computing nodes layers: an application layer, management layer, and resource layer. The goal is to minimize the makespan of all applications. Based on these layers, the work proposes a secure offloading-efficient task scheduling (SEOS) algorithm framework, which includes the deadline division method, task sequencing rules, homomorphic security scheme, initial scheduling, and the variable neighbourhood searching method. The performance evaluation results show that the proposed plans outperform all existing baseline approaches for healthcare applications in terms of makespan

    Resource allocation in mobile edge cloud computing for data-intensive applications

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    Rapid advancement in the mobile telecommunications industry has motivated the development of mobile applications in a wide range of social and scientific domains. However, mobile computing (MC) platforms still have several constraints, such as limited computation resources, short battery life and high sensitivity to network capabilities. In order to overcome the limitations of mobile computing and benefit from the huge advancement in mobile telecommunications and the rapid revolution of distributed resources, mobile-aware computing models, such as mobile cloud computing (MCC) and mobile edge computing (MEC) have been proposed. The main problem is to decide on an application execution plan while satisfying quality of service (QoS) requirements and the current status of system networking and device energy. However, the role of application data in offloading optimisation has not been studied thoroughly, particularly with respect to how data size and distribution impact application offloading. This problem can be referred to as data-intensive mobile application offloading optimisation. To address this problem, this thesis presents novel optimisation frameworks, techniques and algorithms for mobile application resource allocation in mobile-aware computing environments. These frameworks and techniques are proposed to provide optimised solutions to schedule data intensive mobile applications. Experimental results show the ability of the proposed tools in optimising the scheduling and the execution of data intensive applications on various computing environments to meet application QoS requirements. Furthermore, the results clearly stated the significant contribution of the data size parameter on scheduling the execution of mobile applications. In addition, the thesis provides an analytical investigation of mobile-aware computing environments for a certain mobile application type. The investigation provides performance analysis to help users decide on target computation resources based on application structure, input data, and mobile network status

    Dynamic application partitioning and task-scheduling secure schemes for biosensor healthcare workload in mobile edge cloud

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    Currently, the use of biosensor-enabled mobile healthcare workflow applications in mobile edge-cloud-enabled systems is increasing progressively. These applications are heavyweight and divided between a thin client mobile device and a thick server edge cloud for execution. Application partitioning is a mechanism in which applications are divided based on resource and energy parameters. However, existing application-partitioning schemes widely ignore security aspects for healthcare applications. This study devises a dynamic application-partitioning workload task-scheduling-secure (DAPWTS) algorithm framework that consists of different schemes, such as min-cut algorithm, searching node, energy-enabled scheduling, failure scheduling, and security schemes. The goal is to minimize the energy consumption of nodes and divide the application between local nodes and edge nodes by applying the secure min-cut algorithm. Furthermore, the study devises the secure-min-cut algorithm, which aims to migrate data between nodes in a secure form during application partitioning in the system. After partitioning the applications, the node-search algorithm searches optimally to run applications under their deadlines. The energy and failure schemes maintain the energy consumption of the nodes and the failure of the system. Simulation results show that DAPWTS outperforms existing baseline approaches by 30% in terms of energy consumption, deadline, and failure of applications in the system.publishedVersio

    Deep Meta Q-Learning based Multi-Task Offloading in Edge-Cloud Systems

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    Resource-Constrained Edge Devices Can Not Efficiently Handle the Explosive Growth of Mobile Data and the Increasing Computational Demand of Modern-Day User Applications. Task Offloading Allows the Migration of Complex Tasks from User Devices to the Remote Edge-Cloud Servers Thereby Reducing their Computational Burden and Energy Consumption While Also Improving the Efficiency of Task Processing. However, Obtaining the Optimal Offloading Strategy in a Multi-Task Offloading Decision-Making Process is an NP-Hard Problem. Existing Deep Learning Techniques with Slow Learning Rates and Weak Adaptability Are Not Suitable for Dynamic Multi-User Scenarios. in This Article, We Propose a Novel Deep Meta-Reinforcement Learning-Based Approach to the Multi-Task Offloading Problem using a Combination of First-Order Meta-Learning and Deep Q-Learning Methods. We Establish the Meta-Generalization Bounds for the Proposed Algorithm and Demonstrate that It Can Reduce the Time and Energy Consumption of IoT Applications by Up to 15%. through Rigorous Simulations, We Show that Our Method Achieves Near-Optimal Offloading Solutions While Also Being Able to Adapt to Dynamic Edge-Cloud Environments

    Computation Offloading and Scheduling in Edge-Fog Cloud Computing

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    Resource allocation and task scheduling in the Cloud environment faces many challenges, such as time delay, energy consumption, and security. Also, executing computation tasks of mobile applications on mobile devices (MDs) requires a lot of resources, so they can offload to the Cloud. But Cloud is far from MDs and has challenges as high delay and power consumption. Edge computing with processing near the Internet of Things (IoT) devices have been able to reduce the delay to some extent, but the problem is distancing itself from the Cloud. The fog computing (FC), with the placement of sensors and Cloud, increase the speed and reduce the energy consumption. Thus, FC is suitable for IoT applications. In this article, we review the resource allocation and task scheduling methods in Cloud, Edge and Fog environments, such as traditional, heuristic, and meta-heuristics. We also categorize the researches related to task offloading in Mobile Cloud Computing (MCC), Mobile Edge Computing (MEC), and Mobile Fog Computing (MFC). Our categorization criteria include the issue, proposed strategy, objectives, framework, and test environment.
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