DocumentCode :
160020
Title :
A Software Defined Networking architecture for the Internet-of-Things
Author :
Zhijing Qin ; Denker, Grit ; Giannelli, Carlo ; Bellavista, Paolo ; Venkatasubramanian, N.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
5-9 May 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
9
Abstract :
The growing interest in the Internet of Things (IoT) has resulted in a number of wide-area deployments of IoT subnetworks, where multiple heterogeneous wireless communication solutions coexist: from multiple access technologies such as cellular, WiFi, ZigBee, and Bluetooth, to multi-hop ad-hoc and MANET routing protocols, they all must be effectively integrated to create a seamless communication platform. Managing these open, geographically distributed, and heterogeneous networking infrastructures, especially in dynamic environments, is a key technical challenge. In order to take full advantage of the many opportunities they provide, techniques to concurrently provision the different classes of IoT traffic across a common set of sensors and networking resources must be designed. In this paper, we will design a software-defined approach for the IoT environment to dynamically achieve differentiated quality levels to different IoT tasks in very heterogeneous wireless networking scenarios. For this, we extend the Multinetwork INformation Architecture (MINA), a reflective (self-observing and adapting via an embodied Observe-Analyze-Adapt loop) middleware with a layered IoT SDN controller. The developed IoT SDN controller originally i) incorporates and supports commands to differentiate flow scheduling over task-level, multi-hop, and heterogeneous ad-hoc paths and ii) exploits Network Calculus and Genetic Algorithms to optimize the usage of currently available IoT network opportunities. We have applied the extended MINA SDN prototype in the challenging IoT scenario of wide-scale integration of electric vehicles, electric charging sites, smart grid infrastructures, and a wide set of pilot users, as targeted by the Artemis Internet of Energy and Arrowhead projects. Preliminary simulation performance results indicate that our approach and the extended MINA system can support efficient exploitation of the IoT multinetwork capabilities.
Keywords :
Internet; Internet of Things; calculus of communicating systems; genetic algorithms; middleware; multi-access systems; scheduling; software radio; telecommunication control; telecommunication traffic; Arrowhead projects; Artemis Internet of energy projects; Bluetooth; Internet-of-Things; IoT SDN controller; IoT multinetwork capabilities; IoT subnetworks; IoT traffic; MANET routing protocols; MINA SDN prototype; MINA system; WiFi; ZigBee; cellular networks; electric charging sites; electric vehicles; flow scheduling; genetic algorithms; heterogeneous ad-hoc paths; heterogeneous wireless communication; heterogeneous wireless networking; multihop ad-hoc; multinetwork information architecture; multiple access technologies; network calculus; networking resources; observe-analyze-adapt loop middleware; pilot users; smart grid infrastructures; software defined networking architecture; wide-area deployments; Calculus; Cameras; Delays; Monitoring; Semantics; Streaming media; Vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Network Operations and Management Symposium (NOMS), 2014 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Krakow
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NOMS.2014.6838365
Filename :
6838365
Link To Document :
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