4.6 Article

Towards Interoperability of Entity-Based and Event-Based IoT Platforms: The Case of NGSI and EPCIS Standards

Journal

IEEE ACCESS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages 49868-49880

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3069194

Keywords

Standards; Interoperability; Logic gates; Data models; Mediation; Business; Vocabulary; Agri-food; EPCIS; interoperability; IoT; NGSI; mediation gateway; tracking and tracing

Funding

  1. IoF2020 Project through the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program [731884]
  2. Energy Cloud Technology Development Project through the Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT)
  3. National Research Foundation of Korea [NRF-2016K1A3A7A0395205414]

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With the advancement of IoT devices, the amount and type of data captured have increased, but there is still a lack of interoperability among the standards used. Two major standards, EPCIS and NGSI, have emerged, but they differ not only in data encoding but also in representing IoT data. Interoperability is essential for system integration.
With the advancement of IoT devices and thanks to the unprecedented visibility and transparency they provide, diverse IoT-based applications are being developed. With the proliferation of IoT, both the amount and type of data items captured have increased dramatically. The data generated by IoT devices reside in different organizations and systems, and a major barrier to utilizing the data is the lack of interoperability among the standards used to capture the data. To reduce this barrier, two major standards have emerged: the Global Standards One (GS1) Electronic Product Code Information Service (EPCIS) and the FIWARE Next Generation Services Interface (NGSI). However, the two standards differ not only in the data encoding but also in the underlying philosophy of representing IoT data; namely, EPCIS is event-based, and NGSI is entity-based. Interoperability between FIWARE and EPCIS is essential for system integration. This paper presents OLIOT Mediation Gateway, now one of the incubated generic enablers offered by the FIWARE Foundation, that realizes the required interoperability between NGSI and EPCIS systems. It also demonstrates the applicability and feasibility of the Gateway by applying it to a real-life case study of integrating transparency systems used in a meat supply chain.

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