Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
11 Distributed Middleware for Container Transport: Lessons Learned (Klaas Thoelen, Sam Michiels, Wouter Joosen) 7th MiNEMA Workshop August 21, 2008 - Lappeenranta, Finland
2
2 Context Authorized Economic Operator Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) can help to automate the supply chain Heterogenic, dynamic and mobile WSNs need middleware support
3
3 Overview Context 1. Scope 2. Middleware Architecture 3. Prototype implementation 4. Discussion a. EPC Network b. 6LoWPAN 5. Conclusion
4
4 Scope 1 company divided over multiple sites: harbor dock, airport terminal, warehouse, … Each site deploys a WSN Different sites - different WSNs Central database: used for transport and resource planning
5
5 Challenges 1.End-to-end interoperability 2.External data exchange 3.Heterogeneity of data and messaging formats 4.Intermittent network connection of sensor nodes 5.Inter-network mobility of sensor nodes
6
6 Overview Context 1. Scope 2. Middleware Architecture 3. Prototype 4. Discussion a. EPC Network b. 6LoWPAN 5. Conclusion
7
7 Distributed Middleware Distributed: multi-tiered Middleware: vertical set of service layers
8
8
9
9 Challenge 1: End-to-end interoperability
10
10 Challenge 2: External data exchange
11
11 Challenge 3: Heterogeneity of data and messaging formats
12
12 Challenge 4: Intermittent network connection of sensor nodes
13
13 Challenge 5: Inter-network mobility of sensor nodes
14
14
15
15 Overview Context 1. Scope 2. Middleware Architecture 3. Prototype 4. Discussion a. EPC Network b. 6LoWPAN 5. Conclusion
16
16 Prototype
17
17 Overview Context 1. Scope 2. Middleware Architecture 3. Prototype 4. Discussion a. EPC Network b. 6LoWPAN 5. Conclusion
18
18 Discussion More realistic: server & database per site
19
19 EPC Network Architectural framework for an integrated supply chain using RFID technology EPC = Electronic Product Code –Unique identifier of an object –Stored in RFID tags –a key to retrieve information about this object
20
20 EPC Network Based on figure in ‘Enhancing Information Flow in a Retail Supply Chain Using RFID and the EPC Network: A Proof- of-Concept Approach’ by S.F. Wamba and H. Boeck in JTAER Vol.3 Issue 1
21
21 EPC Network Based on figure in ‘Enhancing Information Flow in a Retail Supply Chain Using RFID and the EPC Network: A Proof- of-Concept Approach’ by S.F. Wamba and H. Boeck in JTAER Vol.3 Issue 1
22
22 EPC Network Object Name System standard still in progress: –retrieval of information at all forwarders involved –instance level data
23
23 Overview Context 1. Scope 2. Middleware Architecture 3. Prototype 4. Discussion a. EPC Network b. 6LoWPAN 5. Conclusion
24
24 Discussion What about direct querying an individual sensor node? –Either leverage on ONS –Or exploit the possibilities provided by IPv6 IPv6: –Larger address space (128 bits instead of 32 bits) –Better support for mobility –But considered too memory- and bandwidth intensive for WSNs!!!
25
25 6LoWPAN Extends IPv6 to Low power Wireless Personal Area Networks By providing:- Header compression - Fragmentation
26
26 6LoWPAN End-node reachability without proxy gateway
27
27 Overview Context 1. Scope 2. Middleware Architecture 3. Prototype 4. Discussion a. EPC Network b. 6LoWPAN 5. Conclusion
28
28 Conclusion End-to-end middleware supporting monitoring of transport containers: –Still far from trivial: heterogeneity (WSN, gateways, backend), resource-constraints of sensor nodes –Feasible: using state-of-the-art software components, through initiatives like EPC Network and 6LoWPAN and new generation of sensor nodes
29
29 Questions? Thank you!
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.