400 research outputs found

    Connectivity sharing for wireless mesh networks

    Get PDF
    Tesi en modalitat de cotutela: Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya i Katholieke Universiteit LeuvenInternet access is still unavailable to one-third of the world population due to the lack of infrastructure, high cost, and the digital divide. Many access-limited communities opt for shared Internet access where they build common network infrastructures to mitigate the cost. Internet connectivity in such infrastructures is typically provided by several limited, sometimes non-dedicated, gateways. Client nodes, i.e., the end-user hosts, use one gateway and switch to another when the first fails. In this scheme, the gateway configuration is done manually on the end-user side. This form of Internet connectivity is widespread and has the advantage that no central control is required, but it is also unreliable and inefficient due to several factors, such as unbalanced traffic load across the gateways. There is no doubt that the network would benefit from a gateway selection mechanism that can provide good connectivity to the client node as well as balanced load distribution and a dynamic adaptation to the current network state. However, providing such a dynamic gateway selection is complicated: since the perceived performance of the gateways changes frequently and might depend on the location of the client node in the network, and optimal selection would require the continuous monitoring of the gateway performance by the client node. The cost of such network-wide performance monitoring is high in large-scale networks and can outweigh the benefits of the dynamic gateway selection. The thesis's goal is to design a low-cost, distributed mechanism that provides an efficient and dynamic gateway selection while considering the overall balanced gateway selection distribution. To this end, we have split the problem of gateway selection into different sub-problems. First, we focus on reducing the cost of gateway performance monitoring. We propose an approach to reduce the number of monitoring requests generated by each node and analyze its effect on the gateway selection. Then, we present a collaborative monitoring method that allows neighbor nodes to share the load of the gateway monitoring. We show that every node can carry out the necessary tasks: performance monitoring, collaboration with its neighbors, and fault tolerance measures, with little computation and communication overhead. Second, to improve the gateway selection, we focus on making a selection decision that fulfills the individual performance requirements of the client nodes as well as global load balancing requirements. The solutions developed by us for the different sub-problems are embedded into a general and extensible, layered framework for gateway selection that we have called the Sense-Share-Select framework. Experimental validation and comparison with existing methods show that our framework provides accurate collaborative performance monitoring, improves the QoE for the nodes, and distributes the client nodes over the gateways in a balanced manner. The simplicity and flexibility of the framework make it adaptable to other network domains such as IoT networks and other scenarios where resource monitoring and load balancing are required.El acceso a Internet aún no está disponible para un tercio de la población mundial debido a la falta de infraestructuras, el alto costo y la brecha digital. Muchas comunidades con acceso limitado optan por el acceso compartido a Internet donde construyen infraestructuras de red comunitaria para mitigar el costo. La conectividad a Internet en dichas infraestructuras suele estar a cargo de varias puerta de enlaces limitadas en recursos, y a veces no dedicadas. Los nodos de cliente, es decir, los hosts de usuario final, utilizan una puerta de enlace y cambian a otra cuando falla la primera. En este esquema, la configuración de la puerta de enlace se realiza manualmente en el lado del usuario final. Esta forma de conectividad a Internet está muy extendida y tiene la ventaja de que no se requiere un control central, pero tampoco es confiable y eficiente debido a varios factores, como una carga desequilibrada de tráfico a través de las puertas de enlace. No hay duda de que la red se beneficiaría de un mecanismo de selección de pasarela que pueda proporcionar una buena conectividad al nodo cliente, así como una distribución equilibrada de la carga y una adaptación dinámica al estado actual de la red. Sin embargo, proporcionar una selección de puerta de enlace tan dinámica es complicado: dado que el rendimiento percibido de las puertas de enlace cambia con frecuencia y podría depender de la ubicación del nodo cliente en la red, y la selección óptima requeriría la supervisión continua del rendimiento de la puerta de enlace por parte del nodo cliente. El costo de dicha supervisión del rendimiento en toda la red es muy alto en redes de gran escala y puede superar los beneficios de la selección de puerta de enlace dinámica. El objetivo de la tesis es diseñar un mecanismo distribuido de bajo costo que proporcione una selección de puerta de enlace dinámica y eficiente al tiempo que considera la distribución general de selección de puerta de enlace equilibrada. Con este fin, hemos dividido el problema de la selección de la puerta de enlace en diferentes subproblemas. Primero, nos enfocamos en reducir el coste del monitoreo del rendimiento de la puerta de enlace. Proponemos un enfoque para reducir la cantidad de solicitudes de monitoreo generadas por cada nodo y analizar su efecto en la selección de la puerta de enlace. Luego, presentamos un método de monitoreo colaborativo que permite a los nodos vecinos compartir la carga del monitoreo de la puerta de enlace. Demostramos que cada nodo puede realizar las tareas necesarias: monitoreo del rendimiento, colaboración con sus vecinos y medidas de tolerancia a fallas, con poca sobrecarga de cómputo y comunicación. En segundo lugar, para mejorar la selección de la puerta de enlace, nos centramos en tomar una decisión de selección que cumpla con los requisitos de rendimiento individuales de los nodos del cliente, así como con los requisitos de equilibrio de carga global. Las soluciones desarrolladas por nosotros para los diferentes subproblemas están integradas en un marco general y extensible en capas para la selección de puertas de enlace que hemos llamado el marco Sense-Share-Select. La validación experimental y la comparación con los métodos existentes muestran que nuestro marco proporciona un monitoreo de rendimiento colaborativo preciso, mejora la QoE para los nodos y distribuye los nodos del cliente a través de las puertas de enlace de manera equilibrada. La simplicidad y flexibilidad del marco lo hacen adaptable a otros dominios de red, como las redes de IoT y otros escenarios donde se requiere monitoreo de recursos y equilibrio de carga.Postprint (published version

    Security and Privacy for Green IoT-based Agriculture: Review, Blockchain solutions, and Challenges

    Get PDF
    open access articleThis paper presents research challenges on security and privacy issues in the field of green IoT-based agriculture. We start by describing a four-tier green IoT-based agriculture architecture and summarizing the existing surveys that deal with smart agriculture. Then, we provide a classification of threat models against green IoT-based agriculture into five categories, including, attacks against privacy, authentication, confidentiality, availability, and integrity properties. Moreover, we provide a taxonomy and a side-by-side comparison of the state-of-the-art methods toward secure and privacy-preserving technologies for IoT applications and how they will be adapted for green IoT-based agriculture. In addition, we analyze the privacy-oriented blockchain-based solutions as well as consensus algorithms for IoT applications and how they will be adapted for green IoT-based agriculture. Based on the current survey, we highlight open research challenges and discuss possible future research directions in the security and privacy of green IoT-based agriculture

    Internet of Things Strategic Research Roadmap

    Get PDF
    Internet of Things (IoT) is an integrated part of Future Internet including existing and evolving Internet and network developments and could be conceptually defined as a dynamic global network infrastructure with self configuring capabilities based on standard and interoperable communication protocols where physical and virtual “things” have identities, physical attributes, and virtual personalities, use intelligent interfaces, and are seamlessly integrated into the information network

    Current status of and future opportunities for digital agriculture in Australia

    Get PDF
    In Australia, digital agriculture is considered immature and its adoption ad hoc, despite a relatively advanced technology innovation sector. In this review, we focus on the technical, governance and social factors of digital adoption that have created a disconnect between technology development and the end user community (farmers and their advisors). Using examples that reflect both successes and barriers in Australian agriculture, we first explore the current enabling technologies and processes, and then we highlight some of the key socio-technical factors that explain why digital agriculture is immature and ad hoc. Pronounced issues include fragmentation of the innovation system (and digital tools), and a lack of enabling legislation and policy to support technology deployment. To overcome such issues and increase adoption, clear value propositions for change are necessary. These value propositions are influenced by the perceptions and aspirations of individuals, the delivery of digitally-enabled processes and the supporting legislative, policy and educational structures, better use/conversion of data generated through technology applications to knowledge for supporting decision making, and the suitability of the technology. Agronomists and early adopter farmers will play a significant role in closing the technology-end user gap, and will need support and training from technology service providers, government bodies and peer-networks. Ultimately, practice change will only be achieved through mutual understanding, ownership and trust. This will occur when farmers and their advisors are an integral part of the entire digital innovation system

    Wireless sensor systems for sense/decide/act/communicate.

    Full text link

    Modeling Wireless Sensor Networks for Monitoring in Biological Processes

    Get PDF

    Secure Integration of Wireless Sensor Networks into Applications

    Get PDF
    Wireless sensors are small devices that are able to gather, process and deliver information from a physical environment to an external system. By doing so, they open new applications in different domains, such as healthcare, traffc control, defense and agriculture. The integration of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) with Business Applications (BA) raises technical and security related challenges. Existing approaches target technical issues such as interoperability between WSN and BAs or heterogeneity of acquired sensor data. In this work, we start by performing an analysis of the risks that such an integration of WSNs with BAs may present using the NIST SP 800-30 recommendations. We then introduce and analyze an effcient security scheme that does not use complex operations and guarantees end-to-end confidentiality of sensor data. Finally, we provide an in silico proof-of-concept and validate it using a real WSN co-developed with Cisco Systems France

    Cognitive Hyperconnected Digital Transformation

    Get PDF
    Cognitive Hyperconnected Digital Transformation provides an overview of the current Internet of Things (IoT) landscape, ranging from research, innovation and development priorities to enabling technologies in a global context. It is intended as a standalone book in a series that covers the Internet of Things activities of the IERC-Internet of Things European Research Cluster, including both research and technological innovation, validation and deployment. The book builds on the ideas put forward by the European Research Cluster, the IoT European Platform Initiative (IoT-EPI) and the IoT European Large-Scale Pilots Programme, presenting global views and state-of-the-art results regarding the challenges facing IoT research, innovation, development and deployment in the next years. Hyperconnected environments integrating industrial/business/consumer IoT technologies and applications require new IoT open systems architectures integrated with network architecture (a knowledge-centric network for IoT), IoT system design and open, horizontal and interoperable platforms managing things that are digital, automated and connected and that function in real-time with remote access and control based on Internet-enabled tools. The IoT is bridging the physical world with the virtual world by combining augmented reality (AR), virtual reality (VR), machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) to support the physical-digital integrations in the Internet of mobile things based on sensors/actuators, communication, analytics technologies, cyber-physical systems, software, cognitive systems and IoT platforms with multiple functionalities. These IoT systems have the potential to understand, learn, predict, adapt and operate autonomously. They can change future behaviour, while the combination of extensive parallel processing power, advanced algorithms and data sets feed the cognitive algorithms that allow the IoT systems to develop new services and propose new solutions. IoT technologies are moving into the industrial space and enhancing traditional industrial platforms with solutions that break free of device-, operating system- and protocol-dependency. Secure edge computing solutions replace local networks, web services replace software, and devices with networked programmable logic controllers (NPLCs) based on Internet protocols replace devices that use proprietary protocols. Information captured by edge devices on the factory floor is secure and accessible from any location in real time, opening the communication gateway both vertically (connecting machines across the factory and enabling the instant availability of data to stakeholders within operational silos) and horizontally (with one framework for the entire supply chain, across departments, business units, global factory locations and other markets). End-to-end security and privacy solutions in IoT space require agile, context-aware and scalable components with mechanisms that are both fluid and adaptive. The convergence of IT (information technology) and OT (operational technology) makes security and privacy by default a new important element where security is addressed at the architecture level, across applications and domains, using multi-layered distributed security measures. Blockchain is transforming industry operating models by adding trust to untrusted environments, providing distributed security mechanisms and transparent access to the information in the chain. Digital technology platforms are evolving, with IoT platforms integrating complex information systems, customer experience, analytics and intelligence to enable new capabilities and business models for digital business

    Putting Internet-of-Things at the service of sustainable agriculture. Case study: Sysagria

    Get PDF
    Continuous growth of global population requires a better management of food resources: increasing productivity, maximizing crop yields, reducing losses (water, energy, chemicals), protecting the environment, preventing plant disease, minimizing the manpower. Since the mid-1980s when precision agriculture has its roots, the new concept could rely on advancement in electronics, agriculture research and emerging technologies. Syswin Solutions has been focused on Internet-of-Things, since it seems to be more adequate compared to drones or satellite imagery because it offers much more complete data from sensors placed directly in the cultivated environment. Thus, was born SysAgria, a system that provides comprehensive, real-time environmental information and development conditions at various phenological stages of crops, fruit trees, vines and vegetables, on the basis of which proactive treatment, planned fertilization, sowing and harvesting can be achieved. The system monitors the vital parameters of soil, air and light and identifies prototypes through a series of intelligent algorithms that analyze the data obtained and correlates them with a relevant history of the culture. Built using very low power consumption circuits, the system is energetically independent since it uses solar power and optimized algorithms for communication. Data is available anywhere in the cloud, thus the farmer can act immediately if parameters change. Syswin Solutions has five systems under test in real operating conditions, in different places around Romania, in greenhouse and in field, for monitoring cereals and vegetables. The paper presents the SysAgria system and some eloquent results of the monitoring. Soil sensors placed at different depths revealed possible water absorbtion problems. The automation of the ventilation in the greenhouse has been shown to be beneficial for plant development
    corecore