4,830 research outputs found
Leveraging upon standards to build the Internet of things
Smart embedded objects will become an important part of what is called the Internet of Things. However, the integration of embedded devices into the Internet introduces several challenges, since many of the existing Internet technologies and protocols were not designed for this class of devices. In the past few years, there were many efforts to enable the extension of Internet technologies to constrained devices. Initially, this resulted in proprietary protocols and architectures. Later, the integration of constrained devices into the Internet was embraced by IETF, moving towards standardized IP-based protocols. Long time, most efforts were focusing on the networking layer. More recently, the IETF CoRE working group started working on an embedded counterpart of HTTP, allowing the integration of constrained devices into existing service networks. In this paper, we will briefly review the history of integrating constrained devices into the Internet, with a prime focus on the IETF standardization work in the ROLL and CoRE working groups. This is further complemented with some research results that illustrate how these novel technologies can be extended or used to tackle other problems.The research leading to these results has received funding from the
European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2
007-2013) under
grant agreement n°258885 (SPITFIRE project), from the iMinds ICON projects
GreenWeCan and O’CareCloudS, and a VLI
R PhD scholarship to Isam Ishaq
Mobile IP: state of the art report
Due to roaming, a mobile device may change its network attachment each time it moves to a new link. This might cause a disruption for the Internet data packets that have to reach the mobile node. Mobile IP is a protocol, developed by the Mobile IP Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) working group, that is able to inform the network about this change in network attachment such that the Internet data packets will be delivered in a seamless way to the new point of attachment. This document presents current developments and research activities in the Mobile IP area
P2P Based Architecture for Global Home Agent Dynamic Discovery in IP Mobility
Mobility in packet networks has become a critical issue in the last years. Mobile IP and the Network Mobility Basic Support Protocol are the IETF proposals to provide mobility. However, both of them introduce performance limitations, due to the presence of an entity (Home Agent) in the communication path. Those problems have been tried to be solved in different ways. A family of solutions has been proposed in order to mitigate those problems by allowing mobile devices to use several geographically distributed Home Agents (thus making shorter
the communication path). These techniques require a method to discover a close Home Agent, among those geographically distributed, to the mobile device. This paper proposes a peer-topeer based solution, called Peer-to-Peer Home Agent Network, in
order to discover a close Home Agent. The proposed solution is simple, fully global, dynamic and it can be developed in IPv4
and IPv6.No publicad
Design and Experimental Evaluation of a Route Optimisation Solution for NEMO
An important requirement for Internet protocol (IP)
networks to achieve the aim of ubiquitous connectivity is network
mobility (NEMO). With NEMO support we can provide Internet
access from mobile platforms, such as public transportation vehicles,
to normal nodes that do not need to implement any special
mobility protocol. The NEMO basic support protocol has been
proposed in the IETF as a first solution to this problem, but this
solution has severe performance limitations. This paper presents
MIRON: Mobile IPv6 route optimization for NEMO, an approach
to the problem of NEMO support that overcomes the limitations
of the basic solution by combining two different modes of operation:
a Proxy-MR and an address delegation with built-in routing
mechanisms. This paper describes the design and rationale of the
solution, with an experimental validation and performance evaluation
based on an implementation.Publicad
Performance Comparison of the RPL and LOADng Routing Protocols in a Home Automation Scenario
RPL, the routing protocol proposed by IETF for IPv6/6LoWPAN Low Power and
Lossy Networks has significant complexity. Another protocol called LOADng, a
lightweight variant of AODV, emerges as an alternative solution. In this paper,
we compare the performance of the two protocols in a Home Automation scenario
with heterogenous traffic patterns including a mix of multipoint-to-point and
point-to-multipoint routes in realistic dense non-uniform network topologies.
We use Contiki OS and Cooja simulator to evaluate the behavior of the
ContikiRPL implementation and a basic non-optimized implementation of LOADng.
Unlike previous studies, our results show that RPL provides shorter delays,
less control overhead, and requires less memory than LOADng. Nevertheless,
enhancing LOADng with more efficient flooding and a better route storage
algorithm may improve its performance
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