10,446 research outputs found
A Taxonomy for Management and Optimization of Multiple Resources in Edge Computing
Edge computing is promoted to meet increasing performance needs of
data-driven services using computational and storage resources close to the end
devices, at the edge of the current network. To achieve higher performance in
this new paradigm one has to consider how to combine the efficiency of resource
usage at all three layers of architecture: end devices, edge devices, and the
cloud. While cloud capacity is elastically extendable, end devices and edge
devices are to various degrees resource-constrained. Hence, an efficient
resource management is essential to make edge computing a reality. In this
work, we first present terminology and architectures to characterize current
works within the field of edge computing. Then, we review a wide range of
recent articles and categorize relevant aspects in terms of 4 perspectives:
resource type, resource management objective, resource location, and resource
use. This taxonomy and the ensuing analysis is used to identify some gaps in
the existing research. Among several research gaps, we found that research is
less prevalent on data, storage, and energy as a resource, and less extensive
towards the estimation, discovery and sharing objectives. As for resource
types, the most well-studied resources are computation and communication
resources. Our analysis shows that resource management at the edge requires a
deeper understanding of how methods applied at different levels and geared
towards different resource types interact. Specifically, the impact of mobility
and collaboration schemes requiring incentives are expected to be different in
edge architectures compared to the classic cloud solutions. Finally, we find
that fewer works are dedicated to the study of non-functional properties or to
quantifying the footprint of resource management techniques, including
edge-specific means of migrating data and services.Comment: Accepted in the Special Issue Mobile Edge Computing of the Wireless
Communications and Mobile Computing journa
Managing Service-Heterogeneity using Osmotic Computing
Computational resource provisioning that is closer to a user is becoming
increasingly important, with a rise in the number of devices making continuous
service requests and with the significant recent take up of latency-sensitive
applications, such as streaming and real-time data processing. Fog computing
provides a solution to such types of applications by bridging the gap between
the user and public/private cloud infrastructure via the inclusion of a "fog"
layer. Such approach is capable of reducing the overall processing latency, but
the issues of redundancy, cost-effectiveness in utilizing such computing
infrastructure and handling services on the basis of a difference in their
characteristics remain. This difference in characteristics of services because
of variations in the requirement of computational resources and processes is
termed as service heterogeneity. A potential solution to these issues is the
use of Osmotic Computing -- a recently introduced paradigm that allows division
of services on the basis of their resource usage, based on parameters such as
energy, load, processing time on a data center vs. a network edge resource.
Service provisioning can then be divided across different layers of a
computational infrastructure, from edge devices, in-transit nodes, and a data
center, and supported through an Osmotic software layer. In this paper, a
fitness-based Osmosis algorithm is proposed to provide support for osmotic
computing by making more effective use of existing Fog server resources. The
proposed approach is capable of efficiently distributing and allocating
services by following the principle of osmosis. The results are presented using
numerical simulations demonstrating gains in terms of lower allocation time and
a higher probability of services being handled with high resource utilization.Comment: 7 pages, 4 Figures, International Conference on Communication,
Management and Information Technology (ICCMIT 2017), At Warsaw, Poland, 3-5
April 2017, http://www.iccmit.net/ (Best Paper Award
Fog Computing: A Taxonomy, Survey and Future Directions
In recent years, the number of Internet of Things (IoT) devices/sensors has
increased to a great extent. To support the computational demand of real-time
latency-sensitive applications of largely geo-distributed IoT devices/sensors,
a new computing paradigm named "Fog computing" has been introduced. Generally,
Fog computing resides closer to the IoT devices/sensors and extends the
Cloud-based computing, storage and networking facilities. In this chapter, we
comprehensively analyse the challenges in Fogs acting as an intermediate layer
between IoT devices/ sensors and Cloud datacentres and review the current
developments in this field. We present a taxonomy of Fog computing according to
the identified challenges and its key features.We also map the existing works
to the taxonomy in order to identify current research gaps in the area of Fog
computing. Moreover, based on the observations, we propose future directions
for research
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