Applicability and Tradeoffs of Information-Centric Networking for Efficient IoT
draft-lindgren-icnrg-efficientiot-00
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draft-lindgren-icnrg-efficientiot-00
ICN Research Group A. Lindgren
Internet-Draft F. Ben Abdesslem
Intended status: Experimental SICS
Expires: January 5, 2015 O. Schelen
Lulea University of Technology
A. Malik
Ericsson
B. Ahlgren
SICS
July 4, 2014
Applicability and Tradeoffs of Information-Centric Networking for
Efficient IoT
draft-lindgren-icnrg-efficientiot-00
Abstract
This document outlines the tradeoffs involved in utilizing
Information Centric Networking (ICN) for the Internet of Things (IoT)
scenarios. It describes the contexts and applications where the IoT
would benefit from ICN, and where a host-centric approach would be
better. The requirements imposed by the heterogeneous nature of IoT
networks are discussed (e.g., in terms of connectivity, power
availability, computational and storage capacity). Design choices
are then proposed for an IoT architecture to handle these
requirements, while providing efficiency and scalability. An
objective is to not require any IoT specific changes of the ICN
architecture per se, but we do indicate some potential modifications
of ICN that would improve efficiency and scalability for IoT and
other applications.
This document mainly serves as a problem statement and will not
present a conclusive architecture design. It can be used as a basis
for further discussion and to design architectures for the IoT.
Status of this Memo
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time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on January 5, 2015.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
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Table of Contents
1. Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Advantages of ICN Principles for IoT . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.1. Naming of Devices, Data and Services . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.2. Distributed Caching . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.3. Decoupling between Sender and Receiver . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Design Challenges of IoT over ICN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.1. Naming of Devices, Data and Services . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.2. Efficiency of Distributed Caching . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.3. Decoupling between Sender and Receiver . . . . . . . . . . 9
4. Proposed Design Choices for IoT over ICN . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.1. Existing Internet protocols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.2. Data naming, format and composition . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.3. Immutable atomic data units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.4. The importance of time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.5. Decoupling and roles of senders and receivers . . . . . . 12
4.6. Combination of PULL/PUSH model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.7. Capability advertisements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.8. Name-based routing vs name resolution + 1-step vs
2-step . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.9. What's naming and what's searching . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.10. Tagging/tracing of data, and partial data . . . . . . . . 15
5. Other Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5.1. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5.1.1. Retrieving trusted content from several caches . . . . 16
5.1.2. Enabling application-layer processing in untrusted
intermediaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
5.1.3. Energy efficiency of cryptographic mechanisms . . . . 17
6. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
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1. Motivation
Information Centric Networking (ICN) has been shown to efficiently
meet current usage demands of computer networks, where users consume
content from the network instead of communicating with specific
hosts. The applications and usage of the Internet of Things (IoT)
often imply information centric usage patterns, where users or
devices consume IoT generated content from the network instead of
communicating with specific hosts or devices.
However, while the IoT shares many characteristics with typical
information centric applications, it differs because of the high
heterogeneity of connected devices, including mainly sensors and
actuators, leading to different applications and usage. Because of
these differences, applying an ICN approach to design the
architecture of the IoT is often, but not always, beneficial.
Depending on the context, the IoT architecture should follow an ICN
approach, or a host-centric approach. In practice, the right
approach is a complex tradeoff that depends on the applications and
usage of the IoT network. This document describes some advantages
and inconveniences of using an ICN architecture for the IoT, and
helps finding the right tradeoff between an ICN and host-centric
approach, depending on the context.
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2. Advantages of ICN Principles for IoT
A key concept of ICN is the ability to name data independently from
the current location at which it is stored, which simplifies caching
and enables decoupling of sender and receiver. Using ICN concepts to
design an architecture for IoT networks potentially provides these
advantages compared to using traditional host-centric architecture.
This section highlights general benefits an ICN architecture could
provide to IoT networks in optimal contexts such as application's
type, usage pattern, or network scale. Benefiting from the
advantages described hereafter can only happen when taking into
account the right tradeoff depending on the context, which will be
discussed in the following section.
2.1. Naming of Devices, Data and Services
The heterogeneity of both network equipment deployed and services
offered by IoT networks leads to a large variety of data, services
and devices. While using a traditional host-centric architecture,
only devices or their network interfaces are named at the network
level, leaving to the application layer the task to name data and
services. In many common applications of IoT networks, data and
services are the main goal, and specific communication between two
devices is secondary. The network distributes content and provides a
service, instead of establishing a communication link between two
devices. In this context, data content and services can be provided
by several devices, or group of devices, hence naming data and
services is often more important than naming the devices.
2.2. Distributed Caching
While caching mechanisms are already used by other types of overlay
networks, IoT networks can potentially benefit even more from caching
systems, because of their resource constraints. Wireless bandwidth
and power supply can be limited for multiple devices sharing a
communication channel, and for small mobile devices powered by
batteries. In this case, avoiding unnecessary transmissions with IoT
devices to retrieve and distribute IoT data to multiple places is
important, and storing such content in the network can save wireless
bandwidth and battery power. Moreover, as for other types of
networks, applications for IoT networks requiring shorter delays can
benefit from local caches to reduce delays between content request
and delivery.
2.3. Decoupling between Sender and Receiver
IoT devices may be mobile and face intermittent network connectivity.
When specific data is requested, such data can often be delivered by
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ICN without any consistent direct connectivity between devices.
Apart from using structured caching systems as described previously,
information can also be spread by forwarding data opportunistically.
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3. Design Challenges of IoT over ICN
As outlined in Section 2, there are potential benefits from using ICN
to implement IoT communication architectures. However, in order to
obtain a scalable and efficient architecture there are some aspects
of ICN that must be specifically considered in making the right
design choices for IoT. In fact, using an ICN approach may not be
beneficial in all desired sub-functions and scenarios. This section
outlines some of the ICN specific challenges that must be considered
and describes some of the trade offs that will be involved. We will
address these challenges in our proposed design choices later in
Section 4.
3.1. Naming of Devices, Data and Services
Naming devices is a common element of both ICN and host-centric
approaches. However, naming devices in the IoT raises different
challenges that have to be addressed if an ICN approach is adopted.
As for data and services, naming them in the network layer is proper
to the ICN approach, and has to be designed carefully, depending on
the context.
o Naming of devices: Naming devices is often important when using an
ICN approach in an IoT network. The presence of actuators
requires clients to act specifically on a device, e.g. to switch
it off. Also, managing and monitoring the devices for
administration purposes requires devices to have a specific name
allowing to identify them uniquely. There are multiple ways to
achieve device naming, even in systems that are data centric by
nature. For example, in systems that are adressable or searchable
based on metadata or sensor content, the device identifier can be
included as a special kind of metadata or sensor reading.
o Size of data/service name: In information centric applications,
the size of the data is often larger than its name. For the IoT,
sensors and actuators are very common, and they can generate data
as small as a short integer containing a temperature value, or a
one-byte instruction to switch off an actuator. The name of the
content for each of these pieces of data has to uniquely identify
the content. For this reason, many existing naming schemes have
long names that are likely to be longer than the actual data
content for many types of IoT applications. Furthermore, naming
schemes that have self certifying properties (e.g., by creating
the name based on a hash of the content), suffer from the problem
that the object can only be requested when the object has been
created and the content is already known, thus requiring some form
of indexing service. While this is an acceptable overhead for
larger data objects, it is infeasible for use when the object size
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is on the order of a few bytes.
o Hash-based content name: Hash algorithms are commonly used to name
content in order to verify that the content is the one requested.
This is only possible in contexts where the requested object is
already existing, and where there is a directory service to look
up names. This approach is suitable for systems with large data
objects where it is important to verify the content.
o Metadata-based content name: Relying on metadata allows to
generate a name for an object before it is created. However this
mechanism requires metadata matching semantics.
o Naming of services: Similarly to naming of devices or data,
services can be referred to with a unique identifier, provided by
a specific device or by someone assigned by a central authority as
the service provider. It can however also be a service provided
by anyone meeting some certain metadata conditions. Example of
services include content retrieval, that takes a content name/
description as input and returns the value of that content, and
actuation, that takes an actuation command as input and possibly
returns a status code afterwards.
3.2. Efficiency of Distributed Caching
Distributed caching is a key opportunity with ICN. However, an IoT
framework must be carefully designed to reap the maximum benefits of
ICN caching. When content popularity is heterogeneous, some content
is often requested repeatedly. In that case, the network can benefit
from caching. Another case where caching would be beneficial is when
devices with low duty cycle are present in the network and when
access to the cloud infrastructure is limited.
However, using distributed caching mechanisms in the network is not
useful when each object is only requested at most once, as a cache
hit can only occur for the second request and later. It may also be
less useful and less scalable to have the caches distributed
throughout the network in cases when all content is frequently
requested. A better strategy in that case is to proactively send all
data to central or distributed repositories (i.e., a central cache),
possibly a cloud, from which all clients can retrieve the data,
assuming the clients have good connectivity. Another example is when
the name of the object has a different meaning depending on the
context. For example, when the last value for a sensor reading is
requested, the returned object will change every time the sensor
reading is updated. In this case, caching cannot be used, and naming
this as a service is more appropriate.
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3.3. Decoupling between Sender and Receiver
Decoupling the sender and receiver is useful mechanism offered by the
ICN approach, especially for content retrieval with duty cycling
devices or devices with intermittent connectivity. However, in order
to efficiently retrieve data it must be possible for requestors
(receivers) to easily deduce the name of the data to request, without
any direct contact with the responder (sender).
Nevertheless, this mechanism cannot be used when authentication is
needed for management and actuation, or, of course, when real-time
interaction between devices is necessary.
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4. Proposed Design Choices for IoT over ICN
This section describes some fundamental design choices and trade-offs
to allow for effective, efficient and scalable handling of IoT data
in an ICN network. An objective with these choices is to facilitate
that an ICN network can be used without requiring additions of IoT
application specific functionality in the ICN network. However, in
some cases we do invite for discussion on tentative additions of
functionality to ICN in order to make the overall IoT solution more
efficient and scalable.
4.1. Existing Internet protocols
IoT devices can have a role as content generators (e.g., sensors) in
where an ICN paradigm should be effective for data retrieval and
dissemination. However, IoT devices may also have roles as actuators
in which such devices shall be accessed for control purposes. The
use of an ICN network may be less natural when actuation and control
of specific devices is the key objective. To facilitate support of
IoT for both data generation and control/actuation, we assume that
there is a need for existing internet protocols, and the ICN routing
should therefore work in concert with existing Internet protocols.
4.2. Data naming, format and composition
The data served by ICN may be aggregated from smaller components.
Although IoT data components in many cases are small and simple, a
general challenge in defining ICN applications is to decide how to
compose (i.e. group) the data so that it can be effectively named and
requested. Requesting partial data inside a composition may become a
challenge. Indeed, if data is composed and sub components are
requested, which are not directly namable by the requestor, finding
such a subset will resemble a database query which may require
processing to resolve. The ICN network should not have to support
such complexity.
A design choice regarding IoT data is therefore to keep the ICN
network free from supporting any advanced queries and instead only
support directly addressable (i.e., named) data units. Any advanced
composition (hierarchical, graph-based, hyperlink, etc.) of IoT data,
and related searching for sub-components, would be handled in
servers/endpoints instead of inside the ICN network. The issue of
structure and searching is for further study. For effective ICN
interoperability, only the structure of the atomic addressable data
units must be agreed. There are several advantages of this design
choice. First, the size of the directly addressable units can be
kept fairly small to avoid that unwanted bulk data is pulled over
resource constrained networks or spread over various caches in the
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ICN network. This results in better resource utilization, better
localization of desired data, and ultimately better scalability.
There is however one tradeoff in that smaller data units results in a
larger overhead. Second, the computational requirement is kept low
in the ICN network, essentially limiting it to deciding whether there
is a cache hit or not. Third, few new requirements are put on ICN
data dissemination. Existing methods will be sufficient. Fourth,
this simplification means that a flat address space would be
sufficient, but for practical reasons a hierarchical address space
may be preferred. There is flexibility in the choice of exact
addressing scheme and it may depend on which existing ICN framework
that is used for IoT data.
4.3. Immutable atomic data units
The number of IoT devices as well as the amount of data produced by
these devices may potentially be very large, and the data may be
spread over very large ICN networks. The potential problem of cache
inconsistencies in an ICN network may therefore be large if we allow
for data to be mutable objects. To support scalability and
horizontal distribution it is essential to define data properties
that facilitate independency and consistency, while minimizing the
need for dynamic global synchronization.
A key design choice is therefore to mandate that IoT only uses
immutable atomic data units. This supports large scale distribution
by ensuring that there is no stale data in the ICN domain. A hit is
always a clean hit. A trade-off from this is that dynamic data must
be modeled as a stream of immutable data units, potentially consuming
more resources. However, this challenge can be resolved by smart
caching strategies where old data is dropped. A client that wants
the "latest" reading can according to our previously mentioned design
choice, in Section 4.2, not ask the ICN network such a high level
query, instead it must ask for the specific (version of) information.
There are several methods for finding the latest version, for example
through a high level request from a server/endpoint, or by using a
naming scheme where the name can be directly inferred, e.g., if an
IoT device has advertised that it produces data every whole second,
the named data can include absolute time and therefore data from the
current second can be requested (provided that clock synchronisation
is accurate enough, which is out of scope of this document). These
methods are based on the request/pull method. For real-time update
(most accurate info), there is also an option to use dissemination
based on the push model as described later in Section 4.6.
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4.4. The importance of time
In Section 4.3 we started to discuss the role of time in relation to
immutable data. We want to emphasize that time almost always is a
very important property of IoT data, and especially so for data that
change over time. When modeling dynamic IoT data with a stream of
immutable data, it is often the case that a certain IoT data object
is a sensor reading at a particular point in time, and the next
object in the stream is the next reading. Thus, dynamic data is in
this case dynamic over time, with well defined (immutable) values for
particular points in time.
We therefore argue that it is important to find a way to represent
these time-related streams of immutable data. It should be possible
to request data from a certain time, and to infer/find the name of
the latest, most current, data. As mentioned in Section 4.3, an IoT
device might advertise that it produces data at certain time
intervals. This information is also useful for the ICN network to be
able to handle requests for the corresponding data in the most
efficient manner.
It is for further study whether any extensions are needed to the ICN
paradigm, or if it can be supported with, e.g. clever use of
metadata, namespace, and search functionality. It may also depend on
the particular flavor of ICN. The naming scheme of CCN/NDN may here
provide an advantage.
We also note that time is also important for other applications, in
particular for live streaming video. Live video also produces a
time-related stream of immutable objects, and would in the same way
benefit from such support in the ICN service.
4.5. Decoupling and roles of senders and receivers
Since ICN networks essentially support a request/response model of
interaction, we denote the receivers of information as requestors,
and the senders of information as responders. The ICN network in
itself provides decoupling of requestors and responders, but it does
not (and should not) provide any transformation or aggregation of
data. The IoT dissemination architecture should therefore allow for
any number of intermediate processing nodes. An intermediate node
will be an endpoint in the ICN network that can act as both requestor
and responder. Such a node may perform aggregation, filtering,
selection, etc. The instantiation of such nodes may for example form
a directed (acyclic) graph between ultimate responders (IoT devices)
and ultimate requestors (the final applications). It is for further
study how to define such an architecture.
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It is a design choice to keep the IoT dissemination and aggregation
functionality outside of the ICN domain. That architecture would be
an overlay that may have intricate structure, and put the ICN usage
in a new context, where content from ultimate requestors to ultimate
responders may go through many IoT processing nodes that collect,
process and re-publish data through an ICN for various purposes.
4.6. Combination of PULL/PUSH model
A critical decision regarding IoT data is whether to use a PULL
model, a PUSH model, or both. There are some intrinsic trade offs
between these models. The PULL model is for example resource
efficient when there is an abundant amount of IoT information,
potentially redundant from many devices, and the clients only
occasionally or partially are interested in the information. The
PUSH model is for example efficient when there is real-time
information and the clients are interested in all information from
specific devices all the time.
A design decision in the IoT domain is to support both PULL and PUSH.
The base model should be PULL, meaning that requestors must always
start by sending a request. If the request is for some specific
data, it can be resolved by returning the data (if it exists). The
pull model can be supported efficiently and scalably by an ICN
network. A request can however also include triggers, which means
that data will be returned (pushed) when triggers are fulfilled,
which may be immediately, or in the future at one or several
occasions. This can be used to select alarm conditions, to request
continuous or periodic push, etc. The trigger conditions can be set
by the requestor, or be pre-defined by the responder. The former is
more flexible but may have performance/scalability issues. The
latter is more scalable since there will be a predefined and finite
number of trigger conditions. Our recommended choice, at least for
the initial phase, is to go for a simple and scalable solution and
therefore adopt the model where available trigger conditions are
defined and advertised by the responder. The ICN would be apt for
supporting such capability advertisements, given that they are fairly
static.
We recommend to have a discussion on whether an ICN network can or
should provide an option to effectively support a push model of data.
Such support can make real-time IoT data dissemination more efficient
and scalable as previously mentioned in Section 4.3. However, since
we assume that the ICN works with existing IP protocols, such
functionality can be provided without ICN, by using traditional
unicast or multicast communication. We finally note that an ICN
supported push service model would make the ICN network more like a
publish/subscribe system.
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4.7. Capability advertisements
Capability advertisements and discovery can be used by requestors to
discover which responders to connect to. In a deployment with large
numbers of responders, the functionality of automatic advertisement
and discovery becomes a critical factor to support scaling.
Responders should advertise their methods (inputs, outputs,
parameters, triggers, etc) and provide relevant metadata. Such
capability advertisements should be conservative with resources,
which suggests that new advertisements should be posted with
reasonably low frequency. This implies that an ICN network can be
used for providing capability advertisements. The advertisements
should be provided as a stream of immutable objects, or alternatively
the system should be tolerant to stale caches. Should there be a
need real-time awareness of dynamic changes, a push model of
capability advertisements could be used as earlier described in
Section 4.6.
4.8. Name-based routing vs name resolution + 1-step vs 2-step
As described in Section 4.2, the IoT framework should be defined so
that new functionality in the ICN is not needed. For data that is
frequently generated and regenerated, it makes sense to keep simple
structures and provide directly inferable naming/addressing of data
objects, so that requestors can directly address the data. For more
complex data, such as pre-processed, aggregated and structured data a
two-step resolution model is recommended. The IoT devices can
provide a higher level resolution based on for example queries and
searching, resulting in a number of concrete directly addressable ICN
objects. This is similar to what web servers do when they return
URLs that requestors can use, but in this case it is named content
that is returned.
Consequently, the IoT framework should have no requirement that the
ICN network itself should support 2-step addressing (although such
2-step methods may exist in some ICNs)
4.9. What's naming and what's searching
As described in Section 4.2, the IoT framework should be defined so
that no new functionality is required in the ICN for searching data
or subcomponents of data. The ICN network supports just naming of
atomic data objects, while any searching is provided by the IoT
framework, which in itself may be constituted by a highly distributed
set of nodes that provide processing, analysis and aggregation of IoT
data.
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4.10. Tagging/tracing of data, and partial data
IoT data may be tagged with metadata to tell where it originates
from. Tagging is made at the level above the ICN network and may for
example be a list of strings. It can be added/changed by the
originating node (or a node that assigns the originating ID), and
added/changed/deleted by any node that processes the data. The tag
can in some cases be used to trace data back to origins. For the ICN
network, the metadata units are just black-box data that is to be
conveyed, and therefore are not to modify the tags. However, in some
cases it makes no sense to transmit any metadata. For efficiency
reasons the ICN network should have support for optional delivery of
metadata. This is to be conservative with scarce resources, for
example when a wireless node requests data which is cached in the ICN
network, it would be beneficial if the requestor could tell that it
is desirable to not receive any metadata. There should be a
discussion whether there should be just one, or more than one, piece
of optional information in ICN content to be future proof.
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5. Other Issues
5.1. Security Considerations
The ICN paradigm is content-centric as opposed to state-of-the-art
host-centric internet. Besides aspects like naming, content
retrieval and caching this also has security implications. ICN
advocates the model of trust in content rather than trust in network
hosts. This brings in the concept of Object Security which is
contrary to session-based security mechanisms such as TLS/DTLS
prevalent in the current host-centric internet.
Object Security is based on the idea of securing information objects
unlike session-based security mechanisms which secure the
communication channel between a pair of nodes. This reinforces an
inherent characteristic of ICN networks i.e. to decouple senders and
receivers. In the context of IoT, the Object Security model has
several concrete advantages. As discussed earlier in Section 2.1, in
many IoT applications data and services are the main goal and
specific communication between two devices is secondary. Therefore
it makes more sense to secure IoT objects instead of securing the
session between communicating endpoints.
It is important that while security mechanisms complement the ICN
architecture in a coherent fashion, they do so without laying down
any strict requirements or constraints. Therefore, the decision of
what security mechanisms are employed should be handled at a layer
above ICN, in this case within the IoT framework. This facilitates
flexibility and allows IoT applications more freedom to decide what
security mechanism suits them best (session-based security, object
security or a hybrid). Though the idea of Object Security is very
much inline with the ICN concept, there can still be some use cases
where Object Security does not add much e.g. a Pub/Sub interaction
where a client is expected to interact more or less with the same
server node (a session-based security protocol should suffice here)
or use cases where application layer headers should also be secured
(which can be achieved by TLS/DTLS). We, therefore, effectively
imply that there is no need to modify typical ICN standards to
accommodate Object Security.
The following sub-sections discuss some advantages of using Object
Security in IoT applications.
5.1.1. Retrieving trusted content from several caches
When functioning in an ICN network, an IoT client is expected to rely
on the network to deliver the requested content in an optimal fashion
without concerning itself with where the content actually lies. This
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could potentially mean that each individual object within a stream of
immutable objects is retrieved from a different source. Having a
trust relationship with each of these different sources is not
realistic. This gives rise to the need of retrieving trusted content
from untrusted nodes/caches in an ICN network. Object security is
ideal in such use cases because it relieves an IoT client application
from the hassle of having to establish trust with each node that can
potentially cache an IoT object. This also means that a requesting
client can make use of more caches in the network, hence resulting in
better throughput and latency.
5.1.2. Enabling application-layer processing in untrusted
intermediaries
Object Security ensures that objects in application-layer payload are
secure e.g. XML, JSON objects. However, the application-layer
header is unencrypted and available for processing. Securing content
at the object level means greater granularity. This facilitates
application-layer processing in untrusted intermediary nodes (e.g.
proxies and caches) without compromising security. An example use
case is untrusted caching nodes that should have the ability to cache
individual encrypted objects without being able to see what is there
in those objects. In this case there is a need for the caching nodes
to identify the object URI which can be done by looking into the
application-layer header. But the object is still encrypted and
unknown to the caching nodes.
5.1.3. Energy efficiency of cryptographic mechanisms
Session-based security protocols rely on the exchange of several
messages before a secure session is established between a pair of
nodes. Use of such protocols in constrained IoT devices can have
serious consequences in terms of power efficiency because in most
cases transmission and reception of messages is more costly than the
cryptographic operations. This is especially true for wireless
devices. The problem is amplified even further when the constrained
device is interacting with a number of caching nodes because the
device will have to setup a secure session with each caching node.
The Object Security model eliminates this problem because the content
is readily available in a secure state in the network. IoT devices
producing data can secure it w.r.t. all the intended consumers and
start transmitting it right away.
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6. Informative References
[vahdat_00]
Vahdat, A. and D. Becker, "Epidemic Routing for Partially
Connected Ad Hoc Networks", Duke University Technical
Report CS-200006, April 2000.
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Authors' Addresses
Anders F. Lindgren
SICS Swedish ICT
Box 1263
Kista SE-164 29
SE
Phone: +46707177269
Email: andersl@sics.se
URI: http://www.sics.se/~andersl
Fehmi Ben Abdesslem
SICS Swedish ICT
Box 1263
Kista SE-164 29
SE
Phone: +46705470642
Email: fehmi@sics.se
URI: http://www.sics.se/~fehmi
Olov Schelen
Lulea University of Technology
Lulea SE-971 87
SE
Phone:
Email: olov.schelen@ltu.se
URI:
Adeel Mohammad Malik
Ericsson
Kista SE-164 80
SE
Phone: +46725074492
Email: adeel.mohammad.malik@ericsson.com
URI:
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Bengt Ahlgren
SICS Swedish ICT
Box 1263
Kista SE-164 29
SE
Phone: +46703141562
Email: bengta@sics.se
URI: http://www.sics.se/people/bengt-ahlgren
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