4,394 research outputs found
Information Centric Networking in the IoT: Experiments with NDN in the Wild
This paper explores the feasibility, advantages, and challenges of an
ICN-based approach in the Internet of Things. We report on the first NDN
experiments in a life-size IoT deployment, spread over tens of rooms on several
floors of a building. Based on the insights gained with these experiments, the
paper analyses the shortcomings of CCN applied to IoT. Several interoperable
CCN enhancements are then proposed and evaluated. We significantly decreased
control traffic (i.e., interest messages) and leverage data path and caching to
match IoT requirements in terms of energy and bandwidth constraints. Our
optimizations increase content availability in case of IoT nodes with
intermittent activity. This paper also provides the first experimental
comparison of CCN with the common IoT standards 6LoWPAN/RPL/UDP.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures and tables, ACM ICN-2014 conferenc
Big Data Caching for Networking: Moving from Cloud to Edge
In order to cope with the relentless data tsunami in wireless networks,
current approaches such as acquiring new spectrum, deploying more base stations
(BSs) and increasing nodes in mobile packet core networks are becoming
ineffective in terms of scalability, cost and flexibility. In this regard,
context-aware G networks with edge/cloud computing and exploitation of
\emph{big data} analytics can yield significant gains to mobile operators. In
this article, proactive content caching in G wireless networks is
investigated in which a big data-enabled architecture is proposed. In this
practical architecture, vast amount of data is harnessed for content popularity
estimation and strategic contents are cached at the BSs to achieve higher
users' satisfaction and backhaul offloading. To validate the proposed solution,
we consider a real-world case study where several hours of mobile data traffic
is collected from a major telecom operator in Turkey and a big data-enabled
analysis is carried out leveraging tools from machine learning. Based on the
available information and storage capacity, numerical studies show that several
gains are achieved both in terms of users' satisfaction and backhaul
offloading. For example, in the case of BSs with of content ratings
and Gbyte of storage size ( of total library size), proactive
caching yields of users' satisfaction and offloads of the
backhaul.Comment: accepted for publication in IEEE Communications Magazine, Special
Issue on Communications, Caching, and Computing for Content-Centric Mobile
Network
Big Data Meets Telcos: A Proactive Caching Perspective
Mobile cellular networks are becoming increasingly complex to manage while
classical deployment/optimization techniques and current solutions (i.e., cell
densification, acquiring more spectrum, etc.) are cost-ineffective and thus
seen as stopgaps. This calls for development of novel approaches that leverage
recent advances in storage/memory, context-awareness, edge/cloud computing, and
falls into framework of big data. However, the big data by itself is yet
another complex phenomena to handle and comes with its notorious 4V: velocity,
voracity, volume and variety. In this work, we address these issues in
optimization of 5G wireless networks via the notion of proactive caching at the
base stations. In particular, we investigate the gains of proactive caching in
terms of backhaul offloadings and request satisfactions, while tackling the
large-amount of available data for content popularity estimation. In order to
estimate the content popularity, we first collect users' mobile traffic data
from a Turkish telecom operator from several base stations in hours of time
interval. Then, an analysis is carried out locally on a big data platform and
the gains of proactive caching at the base stations are investigated via
numerical simulations. It turns out that several gains are possible depending
on the level of available information and storage size. For instance, with 10%
of content ratings and 15.4 Gbyte of storage size (87% of total catalog size),
proactive caching achieves 100% of request satisfaction and offloads 98% of the
backhaul when considering 16 base stations.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Scalable bloom-filter based content dissemination in community networks using information centric principles
Information-Centric Networking (ICN) is a new communication paradigm that shifts the focus from content location to content objects themselves. Users request the content by its name or some other form of identifier. Then, the network is responsible for locating the requested content and sending it to the users. Despite a large number of works on ICN in recent years, the problem of scalability of ICN systems has not been studied and addressed adequately. This is especially true when considering real-world deployments and the so-called alternative networks such as community networks. In this work, we explore the applicability of ICN principles in the challenging and unpredictable environments of community networks. In particular, we focus on stateless content dissemination based on Bloom filters (BFs). We highlight the scalability limitations of the classical single-stage BF based approach and argue that by enabling multiple BF stages would lead to performance enhancements. That is, a multi-stage BF based content dissemination mechanism could support large network topologies with heterogeneous traffic and diverse channel conditions. In addition to scalability improvements, this approach also is more secure with regard to Denial of Service attacks
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