7,350 research outputs found
Connecting the World of Embedded Mobiles: The RIOT Approach to Ubiquitous Networking for the Internet of Things
The Internet of Things (IoT) is rapidly evolving based on low-power compliant
protocol standards that extend the Internet into the embedded world. Pioneering
implementations have proven it is feasible to inter-network very constrained
devices, but had to rely on peculiar cross-layered designs and offer a
minimalistic set of features. In the long run, however, professional use and
massive deployment of IoT devices require full-featured, cleanly composed, and
flexible network stacks.
This paper introduces the networking architecture that turns RIOT into a
powerful IoT system, to enable low-power wireless scenarios. RIOT networking
offers (i) a modular architecture with generic interfaces for plugging in
drivers, protocols, or entire stacks, (ii) support for multiple heterogeneous
interfaces and stacks that can concurrently operate, and (iii) GNRC, its
cleanly layered, recursively composed default network stack. We contribute an
in-depth analysis of the communication performance and resource efficiency of
RIOT, both on a micro-benchmarking level as well as by comparing IoT
communication across different platforms. Our findings show that, though it is
based on significantly different design trade-offs, the networking subsystem of
RIOT achieves a performance equivalent to that of Contiki and TinyOS, the two
operating systems which pioneered IoT software platforms
IoT Sentinel: Automated Device-Type Identification for Security Enforcement in IoT
With the rapid growth of the Internet-of-Things (IoT), concerns about the
security of IoT devices have become prominent. Several vendors are producing
IP-connected devices for home and small office networks that often suffer from
flawed security designs and implementations. They also tend to lack mechanisms
for firmware updates or patches that can help eliminate security
vulnerabilities. Securing networks where the presence of such vulnerable
devices is given, requires a brownfield approach: applying necessary protection
measures within the network so that potentially vulnerable devices can coexist
without endangering the security of other devices in the same network. In this
paper, we present IOT SENTINEL, a system capable of automatically identifying
the types of devices being connected to an IoT network and enabling enforcement
of rules for constraining the communications of vulnerable devices so as to
minimize damage resulting from their compromise. We show that IOT SENTINEL is
effective in identifying device types and has minimal performance overhead
- …