49 research outputs found

    Fog-supported delay-constrained energy-saving live migration of VMs over multiPath TCP/IP 5G connections

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    The incoming era of the fifth-generation fog computing-supported radio access networks (shortly, 5G FOGRANs) aims at exploiting computing/networking resource virtualization, in order to augment the limited resources of wireless devices through the seamless live migration of virtual machines (VMs) toward nearby fog data centers. For this purpose, the bandwidths of the multiple wireless network interface cards of the wireless devices may be aggregated under the control of the emerging MultiPathTCP (MPTCP) protocol. However, due to the fading and mobility-induced phenomena, the energy consumptions of the current state-of-the-art VM migration techniques may still offset their expected benefits. Motivated by these considerations, in this paper, we analytically characterize and implement in software and numerically test the optimal minimum-energy settable-complexity bandwidth manager (SCBM) for the live migration of VMs over 5G FOGRAN MPTCP connections. The key features of the proposed SCBM are that: 1) its implementation complexity is settable on-line on the basis of the target energy consumption versus implementation complexity tradeoff; 2) it minimizes the network energy consumed by the wireless device for sustaining the migration process under hard constraints on the tolerated migration times and downtimes; and 3) by leveraging a suitably designed adaptive mechanism, it is capable to quickly react to (possibly, unpredicted) fading and/or mobility-induced abrupt changes of the wireless environment without requiring forecasting. The actual effectiveness of the proposed SCBM is supported by extensive energy versus delay performance comparisons that cover: 1) a number of heterogeneous 3G/4G/WiFi FOGRAN scenarios; 2) synthetic and real-world workloads; and, 3) MPTCP and wireless connections

    FarSense: pushing the range limit of WiFi-based respiration sensing with CSI ratio of two antennas

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    International audienceThe past few years have witnessed the great potential of exploiting channel state information retrieved from commodity WiFi devices for respiration monitoring. However, existing approaches only work when the target is close to the WiFi transceivers and the performance degrades significantly when the target is far away. On the other hand, most home environments only have one WiFi access point and it may not be located in the same room as the target. This sensing range constraint greatly limits the application of the proposed approaches in real life. This paper presents FarSense-the first real-time system that can reliably monitor human respiration when the target is far away from the WiFi transceiver pair. FarSense works well even when one of the transceivers is located in another room, moving a big step towards real-life deployment. We propose two novel schemes to achieve this goal: (1) Instead of applying the raw CSI readings of individual antenna for sensing, we employ the ratio of CSI readings from two antennas, whose noise is mostly canceled out by the division operation to significantly increase the sensing range; (2) The division operation further enables us to utilize the phase information which is not usable with one single antenna for sensing. The orthogonal amplitude and phase are elaborately combined to address the "blind spots" issue and further increase the sensing range. Extensive experiments show that FarSense is able to accurately monitor human respiration even when the target is 8 meters away from the transceiver pair, increasing the sensing range by more than 100%. 1 We believe this is the first system to enable through-wall respiration sensing with commodity WiFi devices and the proposed method could also benefit other sensing applications

    Bandwidth management in live virtual machine migration

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    In this thesis I investigated the bandwidth management problem on live migration of virtual machine in different environment. First part of the thesis is dedicated to intra-data-center bandwidth optimization problem, while in the second part of the document I present the solution for wireless live migration in 5G and edge computing emerging technologies. Live virtual machine migration aims at enabling the dynamic balanced use of the networking/computing physical resources of virtualized data centers, so to lead to reduced energy consumption and improve data centers’ flexibility. However, the bandwidth consumption and latency of current state-of-the-art live VM migration techniques still reduce the experienced benefits to much less than their potential. Motivated by this consideration I analytically characterize and test the optimal bandwidth manager for intra-data-center live migration of VMs. The goal is to min- imize the migration-induced communication energy consumption under service level agreement (SLA)-induced hard constraints on the total migration time, downtime, slowdown of the migrating applications and overall available bandwidth

    Systems and Methods for Measuring and Improving End-User Application Performance on Mobile Devices

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    In today's rapidly growing smartphone society, the time users are spending on their smartphones is continuing to grow and mobile applications are becoming the primary medium for providing services and content to users. With such fast paced growth in smart-phone usage, cellular carriers and internet service providers continuously upgrade their infrastructure to the latest technologies and expand their capacities to improve the performance and reliability of their network and to satisfy exploding user demand for mobile data. On the other side of the spectrum, content providers and e-commerce companies adopt the latest protocols and techniques to provide smooth and feature-rich user experiences on their applications. To ensure a good quality of experience, monitoring how applications perform on users' devices is necessary. Often, network and content providers lack such visibility into the end-user application performance. In this dissertation, we demonstrate that having visibility into the end-user perceived performance, through system design for efficient and coordinated active and passive measurements of end-user application and network performance, is crucial for detecting, diagnosing, and addressing performance problems on mobile devices. My dissertation consists of three projects to support this statement. First, to provide such continuous monitoring on smartphones with constrained resources that operate in such a highly dynamic mobile environment, we devise efficient, adaptive, and coordinated systems, as a platform, for active and passive measurements of end-user performance. Second, using this platform and other passive data collection techniques, we conduct an in-depth user trial of mobile multipath to understand how Multipath TCP (MPTCP) performs in practice. Our measurement study reveals several limitations of MPTCP. Based on the insights gained from our measurement study, we propose two different schemes to address the identified limitations of MPTCP. Last, we show how to provide visibility into the end- user application performance for internet providers and in particular home WiFi routers by passively monitoring users' traffic and utilizing per-app models mapping various network quality of service (QoS) metrics to the application performance.PHDComputer Science & EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146014/1/ashnik_1.pd

    WiFi Sensing at the Edge Towards Scalable On-Device Wireless Sensing Systems

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    WiFi sensing offers a powerful method for tracking physical activities using the radio-frequency signals already found throughout our homes and offices. This novel sensing modality offers continuous and non-intrusive activity tracking since sensing can be performed (i) without requiring wearable sensors, (ii) outside the line-of-sight, and even (iii) through the wall. Furthermore, WiFi has become a ubiquitous technology in our computers, our smartphones, and even in low-cost Internet of Things devices. In this work, we consider how the ubiquity of these low-cost WiFi devices offer an unparalleled opportunity for improving the scalability of wireless sensing systems. Thus far, WiFi sensing research assumes costly offline computing resources and hardware for training machine learning models and for performing model inference. To improve the scalability of WiFi sensing systems, this dissertation introduces techniques for improving machine learning at the edge by thoroughly surveying and evaluating signal preprocessing and edge machine learning techniques. Additionally, we introduce the use of federated learning for collaboratively training machine learning models with WiFi data only available on edge devices. We then consider privacy and security concerns of WiFi sensing by demonstrating possible adversarial surveillance attacks. To combat these attacks, we propose a method for leveraging spatially distributed antennas to prevent eavesdroppers from performing adversarial surveillance while still enabling and even improving the sensing capabilities of allowed WiFi sensing devices within our environments. The overall goal throughout this work is to demonstrate that WiFi sensing can become a ubiquitous and secure sensing option through the use of on-device computation on low-cost edge devices

    Real-Time Localization Using Software Defined Radio

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    Service providers make use of cost-effective wireless solutions to identify, localize, and possibly track users using their carried MDs to support added services, such as geo-advertisement, security, and management. Indoor and outdoor hotspot areas play a significant role for such services. However, GPS does not work in many of these areas. To solve this problem, service providers leverage available indoor radio technologies, such as WiFi, GSM, and LTE, to identify and localize users. We focus our research on passive services provided by third parties, which are responsible for (i) data acquisition and (ii) processing, and network-based services, where (i) and (ii) are done inside the serving network. For better understanding of parameters that affect indoor localization, we investigate several factors that affect indoor signal propagation for both Bluetooth and WiFi technologies. For GSM-based passive services, we developed first a data acquisition module: a GSM receiver that can overhear GSM uplink messages transmitted by MDs while being invisible. A set of optimizations were made for the receiver components to support wideband capturing of the GSM spectrum while operating in real-time. Processing the wide-spectrum of the GSM is possible using a proposed distributed processing approach over an IP network. Then, to overcome the lack of information about tracked devices’ radio settings, we developed two novel localization algorithms that rely on proximity-based solutions to estimate in real environments devices’ locations. Given the challenging indoor environment on radio signals, such as NLOS reception and multipath propagation, we developed an original algorithm to detect and remove contaminated radio signals before being fed to the localization algorithm. To improve the localization algorithm, we extended our work with a hybrid based approach that uses both WiFi and GSM interfaces to localize users. For network-based services, we used a software implementation of a LTE base station to develop our algorithms, which characterize the indoor environment before applying the localization algorithm. Experiments were conducted without any special hardware, any prior knowledge of the indoor layout or any offline calibration of the system

    RADIO ANALYTICS FOR HUMAN ACTIVITY MONITORING AND INDOOR TRACKING

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    With the rapid development of the Internet of Things (IoT), wireless sensing has found wide applications from wellbeing monitoring, activity recognition, to indoor tracking. In this dissertation, we investigate the problem of wireless sensing for IoT applications using only ambient radio signals, e.g., WiFi, LTE, and 5G. In particular, our work mainly focuses on passive speed estimation, motion detection, sleep monitoring, and indoor tracking for wireless sensing. In this dissertation, we first study the problem of indoor speed estimation using WiFi channel state information (CSI). We develop the statistical electromagnetic (EM) wave theory for wireless sensing and establish a link between the autocorrelation function (ACF) of the physical layer CSI and the speed of a moving object. Based on the developed statistical EM wave theory for wireless sensing, we propose a universal low-complexity indoor speed estimation system leveraging CSI, which can work in both device-free and device-based situations. The proposed speed estimator differs from the other schemes requiring strong line-of-sight conditions between the source and observer in that it embraces the rich-scattering environment typical for indoors to facilitate highly accurate speed estimation. Moreover, as a calibration-free system, it saves the users' efforts from large-scale training and fine-tuning of system parameters. The proposed speed estimator can enable many IoT applications, e.g., gait monitoring, fall detection, and activity recognition. Then, we also study the problem of indoor motion detection using CSI. The statistical behaviors of the CSI dynamics when motion presents can be characterized by the developed statistical EM theory for wireless sensing. We formulate the motion detection problem as a hypothesis testing problem and also derive the relationship between the detection rate and false alarm rate for motion detection, which is independent of locations, environments and motion types. Thus, the proposed motion detection system can work in most indoor environments, without any scenario-tailored training efforts. Extensive experiments conducted in several facilities show that the proposed system can achieve better detection performance compared to the existing CSI-based motion detection systems while maintaining a much larger coverage and a much lower false alarm rate. This dissertation also focuses on sleep monitoring using CSI. First, we build a statistical model for maximizing the signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio of breathing signal, which accounts for all reflecting and scattering multipaths, allowing highly accurate and instantaneous breathing estimation with best-ever performance achieved on commodity devices. Our results demonstrate that the proposed breathing estimator yields a median absolute error of 0.47 bpm and a 95%-tile error of only 2.92 bpm for breathing estimation, and detects breathing robustly even when a person is 10m away from the WiFi link, or behind a wall. Then, we apply machine learning algorithms on the extracted features from the estimated breathing rates to classify different sleep stages, including wake, rapid eye movement (REM), and non-REM (NREM), which was previously only possible with dedicated hardware. Experimental results show that the proposed sleep monitoring system achieves sleep staging accuracy of 88%, outperforming advanced solutions using contact sensor or radar. The last work of this dissertation considers the problem of indoor tracking using CSI. First, we leverage a stationary and location-independent property of the time-reversal (TR) focusing effect of radio signals for highly accurate moving distance estimation, which plays a key role in the proposed indoor tracking system. Together with the direction estimation based on inertial measurement unit and location correction using the constraints from the floorplan, the proposed indoor tracking system is shown to be able to track a moving object with decimeter-level accuracy in different environments

    Pushing the Limits of Indoor Localization in Today’s Wi-Fi Networks

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    Wireless networks are ubiquitous nowadays and play an increasingly important role in our everyday lives. Many emerging applications including augmented reality, indoor navigation and human tracking, rely heavily on Wi-Fi, thus requiring an even more sophisticated network. One key component for the success of these applications is accurate localization. While we have GPS in the outdoor environment, indoor localization at a sub-meter granularity remains challenging due to a number of factors, including the presence of strong wireless multipath reflections indoors and the burden of deploying and maintaining any additional location service infrastructure. On the other hand, Wi-Fi technology has developed significantly in the last 15 years evolving from 802.11b/a/g to the latest 802.11n and 802.11ac standards. Single user multiple-input, multiple-output (SU-MIMO) technology has been adopted in 802.11n while multi-user MIMO is introduced in 802.11ac to increase throughput. In Wi-Fi’s development, one interesting trend is the increasing number of antennas attached to a single access point (AP). Another trend is the presence of frequency-agile radios and larger bandwidths in the latest 802.11n/ac standards. These opportunities can be leveraged to increase the accuracy of indoor wireless localization significantly in the two systems proposed in this thesis: ArrayTrack employs multi-antenna APs for angle-of-arrival (AoA) information to localize clients accurately indoors. It is the first indoor Wi-Fi localization system able to achieve below half meter median accuracy. Innovative multipath identification scheme is proposed to handle the challenging multipath issue in indoor environment. ArrayTrack is robust in term of signal to noise ratio, collision and device orientation. ArrayTrack does not require any offline training and the computational load is small, making it a great candidate for real-time location services. With six 8-antenna APs, ArrayTrack is able to achieve a median error of 23 cm indoors in the presence of strong multipath reflections in a typical office environment. ToneTrack is a fine-grained indoor localization system employing time difference of arrival scheme (TDoA). ToneTrack uses a novel channel combination algorithm to increase effective bandwidth without increasing the radio’s sampling rate, for higher resolution time of arrival (ToA) information. A new spectrum identification scheme is proposed to retrieve useful information from a ToA profile even when the overall profile is mostly inaccurate. The triangle inequality property is then applied to detect and discard the APs whose direct path is 100% blocked. With a combination of only three 20 MHz channels in the 2.4 GHz band, ToneTrack is able to achieve below one meter median error, outperforming the traditional super-resolution ToA schemes significantly
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