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WIDER 3 WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response Anders Bäck Muhammad Ali Beyhan Kochali Xin Bai David Tlahuetl WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response.

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Presentation on theme: "WIDER 3 WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response Anders Bäck Muhammad Ali Beyhan Kochali Xin Bai David Tlahuetl WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response."— Presentation transcript:

1 WIDER 3 WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response Anders Bäck Muhammad Ali Beyhan Kochali Xin Bai David Tlahuetl WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

2 Agenda 1. Project Background & Goals 2. System Architecture 3. Wireless Research 4. System Enhancements 5. Future Work & Conclusions 6. Video WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

3 315,000 people perished in 2004 366 natural disasters in 2004 In 6 years, 0.5 million  5.5 million *Source: International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response Disaster Statistics

4 Mission statement To improve the existing communication systems for relief organizations in disaster areas WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

5 Stakeholders Ericsson Response KTH Relief Organizations – United Nations – Red Cross and Red Crescent WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

6 Isolated Networks WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

7 Basic System Structure WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

8 Primary Goals Investigation of new wireless technologies – Improved coverage, reliability and robustness Adding GSM connectivity Internet connectivity – Caching server, firewall, NAT WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

9 Secondary Goals Improve the Quality of Service Implementation of advanced encryption, authentication technologies, and facilitation of management – PEAP – Central Database WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

10 System Architecture WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

11 Services Enhancements Operating System – SuSE Linux Professional 9.0 – SuSE Linux Entreprise Server 9.0 RADIUS Voice over IP (VoIP) WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

12 RADIUS Authentication Protocol – PEAP Protected Extensible Authentication Protocol Authentication model ---- User/Password WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

13 Voice Over IP (VoIP) Bi-directional Voice connection with PSTN Voice Conferencing – Sip Express Media Server (SEMS) – Integrated with SIP server WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

14 Wireless Part Point-to-Multipoint links WIDER3 solution Proposed Solution WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

15 Point-to-Multipoint links WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

16 WIDER3 wireless solution Access Points in the camps Point-to-Multipoint Open WiFi access near the central unit WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

17 Proposed wireless solution WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

18 New System Services Caching Server NAT & Firewall GSM Connectivity Central Database Management System WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

19 Caching Server Concept WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

20 Caching Server Operation WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

21 Caching Server Features Improvement of the response time for Internet objects Optimization of the satellite’s bandwidth usage Authentication for Internet access Bandwidth management Black list implementation Protection to the internal hosts by proxying the traffic WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

22 Caching Server Parameters Hit ratio from 30 to 60% Byte hit ratio from 20 to 50 % Number of users – The less users, the lower efficiency Type of traffic – Cacheable/Non cacheable – Traffic Likelihood Cache size – The bigger cache, the higher hit ratios WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

23 NAT WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

24 Firewall WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

25 GSM Connectivity WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response SIP server – AXD 320 – Fully functional AXD 320 – MSC – MSC not configured. Outside project scope.

26 Central Database with LDAP WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response Facilitation of user administration Services using Central Database for authentication – RADIUS (Network access) – Caching server (Internet access) – Instant Messaging server – FTP server Database searchable with MS Outlook

27 System Management SerWeb WebMin Adminstrator and User Front-end WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

28 Conclusions Goals Achieved All primary goals were fully achieved – Extensive Wireless technology report – GSM connectivity – Caching server, Firewall & NAT First secondary goals was fully achieved – PEAP, Central Database, Front-end Secondary secondary goal partially achieved – L3-switch QoS configuration WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

29 Future Work Implementation of new wireless technology – WiMax – Meshed Network Extensive system testing LDAP authentication for SIP server MMS/SMS WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

30 Lessons Learned WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response Enterprise level system integration Hi-end device and services configuration Project management & Efficient team work Communication skills

31 Project Video WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response

32 Questions & Comments Thank you !! WiFi in Disaster and Emergency Response http://csd.ssvl.kth.se/~csd2005-team9/


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