4.6 Article

Towards an Effective Service Allocation in Fog Computing

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23177327

Keywords

IoT; IoMT; fog computing; service allocation; optimization; cloud computing

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This paper addresses the challenges of resource allocation and service allocation in the Internet of Things (IoT) and proposes priority-based and sort-based service allocation techniques. Experimental results show that these techniques can reduce data communication and minimize fog resource wastage while maintaining resource utilization.
The Internet of Things (IoT) generates a large volume of data whenever devices are interconnected and exchange data across a network. Consequently, a variety of services with diverse needs arises, including capacity requirements, data quality, and latency demands. These services operate on fog computing devices, which are limited in power and bandwidth compared to the cloud. The primary challenge lies in determining the optimal location for service implementation: in the fog, in the cloud, or in a hybrid setup. This paper introduces an efficient allocation technique that moves processing closer to the network's fog side. It explores the optimal allocation of devices and services while maintaining resource utilization within an IoT architecture. The paper also examines the significance of allocating services to devices and optimizing resource utilization in fog computing. In IoT scenarios, where a wide range of services and devices coexist, it becomes crucial to effectively assign services to devices. We propose priority-based service allocation (PSA) and sort-based service allocation (SSA) techniques, which are employed to determine the optimal order for the utilizing devices to perform different services. Experimental results demonstrate that our proposed technique reduces data communication over the network by 88%, which is achieved by allocating most services locally in the fog. We increased the distribution of services to fog devices by 96%, while simultaneously minimizing the wastage of fog resources.

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