4.8 Article

IoT Service Slicing and Task Offloading for Edge Computing

Journal

IEEE INTERNET OF THINGS JOURNAL
Volume 8, Issue 14, Pages 11526-11547

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JIOT.2021.3052498

Keywords

Internet of Things; Cloud computing; Task analysis; Network slicing; Computer architecture; Edge computing; 5G mobile communication; Internet of Things (IoT); multiaccess edge computing (MEC); network slicing; oneM2M standard; virtualization

Funding

  1. Institute of Information and Communications Technology Planning & Evaluation (IITP) - Korea Government (MSIT) [2020-0-00959]
  2. Institute for Information & Communication Technology Planning & Evaluation (IITP), Republic of Korea [2020-0-00959-002] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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As IoT technology advances, various industries benefit from its value-added services, however, the simple integration of advanced technologies may not fully utilize their advantages. Therefore, there is a need for an efficient integration mechanism. The new architectural framework virtualizes an IoT platform at the edge node to support specific IoT services, reducing latency and efficiently managing IoT services.
With the advancement of Internet-of-Things (IoT) technology, various domains, such as smart factories and smart cars have used this new technology to provide value-added services. In addition, technologies, such as multiaccess edge computing (MEC) and network slicing provide another opportunity for the IoT to support more advanced and real-time services that could not have been previously supported. However, the simple integration of such technologies into the IoT does not take the full advantage of MEC and network slicing or the reduction of latency and traffic prioritization, respectively. Therefore, there is a strong need for an efficient integration mechanism for IoT platforms to maximize the benefit of using such technologies. In this article, we introduce a novel architectural framework that enables the virtualization of an IoT platform with minimum functions to support specific IoT services and host the instance in an edge node, close to the end user. As the instance provides its service at the edge node, where the MEC node and network slice are located, the traffic for the end user does not need to traverse back to the cloud. This architecture guarantees not only low latency but also efficient management of IoT services at the edge node. To show the feasibility of the proposed architecture, we conducted an experimental evaluation by comparing the transmission time of both IoT services running on the central cloud and those using sliced IoT functions in the edge gateway. The results show that the proposed architecture provides twice as much transmission speed as that from the conventional cloud-based IoT platform.

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