Title: System Architecture of Networked Sensor Platforms
1System Architecture of Networked Sensor Platforms
2Introduction
Wireless sensor networks (WSN) consists of group
of sensor nodes to perform distributed sensing
task using wireless medium. Characteristics-
low-cost, low-power, lightweight - densely
deployed - prone to failures - two ways of
deployment randomly, pre-determined or
engineered Objectives- Monitor
activities- Gather and fuse information -
Communicate with global data processing unit
3Introduction
- Recent sensor networks research involves almost
all the layers and can be categorized into the
following three aspects Akyildiz2002,
Elson2002 - Energy Efficiency
- small devices, limited amount of energy,
essential to prolong system lifetime - Scalability
- deployment of thousands of sensor nodes,
low-cost - Locality
- smallest networks cannot depend on having global
states
4Why Sensor Platforms?
- Traditional mechanisms of exploring the network
(analysis and simulation) are not satisfied for
exploring such a large-scale, dynamic and
resource-constrained networks due to their
difficulties to modeling every aspect of the
system as a whole - For example, energy consumption model of the
hardware platforms, including sensing,
computation and communication, is not fully
considered and overly-simplified assumptions have
been made - Application-specific property of WSN makes the
existing research mechanisms even harder to
obtain meaningful results - Therefore, the demand to build a platform is
increasing e.g., Berkeleys motes and MANTIS
5Why Sensor Platforms?
- Compared to analysis and simulation techniques,
designing a system platform has the following
advantages - Provides genuine executive environment various
proposed algorithms can be exactly evaluated
good way to examine existing design principles
and discover new ones under different
configurations - More attention can be focused on the
application-layer - A real system platform can accelerate the pace of
research and development
6General WSN System Architecture
- Constructing a platform for WSN falls into the
area of embedded system development which usually
consists of developing environment, hardware and
software platforms. - Hardware Platform
- Consists of the following four components
- a) Processing Unit
- Associates with small storage unit (tens of kilo
bytes order) and - manages the procedures to collaborate with other
nodes to carry out the - assigned sensing task
- b) Transceiver Unit
- Connects the node to the network via various
possible transmission - medias such as infra, light, radio and so on
7General WSN System Architecture
- Hardware Platform
- c) Power Unit
- Supplies power to the system by small size
batteries which makes the - energy a scarce resource
- d) Sensing Units
- Usually composed of two subunits sensors and
analog-to-digital - Converters (ADCs). The analog signal produced by
the sensors are - converted to digital signals by the ADC, and fed
into the processing unit - e) Other Application Dependent Components
- Location finding system is needed to determine
the location of sensor - nodes with high accuracy mobilizer may be needed
to move sensor - nodes when it is required to carry out the task
8General WSN System Architecture
Figure 1 The components of a sensor node
Akyildiz2002
9General WSN System Architecture
- Software Platform
- Consists of the following four components
- a) Embedded Operating System (EOS)
- Manages the hardware capability efficiently as
well as supports - concurrency-intense operations. Apart from
traditional OS tasks such as - processor, memory and I/O management, it must be
real-time to rapidly - respond the hardware triggered events,
multi-threading to handle - concurrent flows
- b) Application Programming Interface (API)
- A series of functions provided by OS and other
system-level components - for assisting developers to build applications
upon itself
10General WSN System Architecture
- Software Platform
- c) Device Drivers
- A series of routines that determine how the upper
layer entities - communicate with the peripheral devices
- d) Hardware Abstract Layer (HAL)
- Intermediate layer between the hardware and the
OS. Provides uniform - interfaces to the upper layer while its
implementation is highly dependent - on the lower layer hardware. With the use of HAL,
the OS and - applications easily transplant from one hardware
platform to another
11General WSN System Architecture
Figure 2 The software platform for WSN
12General WSN System Architecture
- System Development Environment
- Provides various of tools for every stage of
software development over - the specific hardware platform
- a) Cross-Platform Development
- Generally, an embedded system unlike PC and does
not have the ability - of self-development. The final binary code run on
that system, termed as - target system, will be generated on the PC,
termed as host system, by - cross-platform compilers and linkers, and
download the resulted image - via the communication port onto the target system
13General WSN System Architecture
- System Development Environment
- Provides various of tools for every stage of
software development over - the specific hardware platform
- b) Debug Techniques
- Due to the difficulties introduced by
cross-platform development mode, - the debug techniques become critical for the
efficiency of software - production. For this reason, many chips on the
system provide the - on-chip debugger, such as JTAF, to reduce the
development time.
14Berkeley Motes Hill 2000
- Motes are tiny, self-contained, battery powered
computers with radio links, which enable them to
communicate and exchange data with one another,
and to self-organize into ad hoc networks - Motes form the building blocks of wireless sensor
networks - TinyOS TinyOS, component-based runtime
environment, is designed to provide support for
these motes which require concurrency intensive
operations while constrained by minimal hardware
resources
Figure 3 Berkeley Mote
15Berkeley Motes Hill 2000
- Hardware Platform
- Consists of
- micro-controller with internal flash program
memory - data SRAM
- data EEPROM
- a set of actuator and sensor devices, including
LEDs - a low-power transceiver
- an analog photo-sensor
- a digital temperature sensor
- a serial port
- a small coprocessor unit
16Berkeley Motes Hill 2000
Figure 4 The schematic for representative
network sensor platform
17Berkeley Motes Hill 2000
- Hardware Platform
- The processing unit
- MCU (ATMEL 90LS8535), an 8-bit architecture with
16-bit addresses - provides 32 8-bit general registers and runs at
4 MHz and 3.0 V - has 8 KB flash as the program memory and 512
Bytes of SRAM as the data memory - MCU is designed such that the processor cannot
write to instruction memory the prototype uses a
coprocessor to perform this function - the processor integrates a set of timers and
counters which can be configured to generate
interrupts at regular time intervals - three sleep modes idle (shuts off the
processor), power down (shuts off everything, but
the watchdog and asynchronous interrupt logic
necessary to wake up), power save (keep
asynchronous timer on)
18Berkeley Motes Hill 2000
- Hardware Platform
- The sensing units
- contains two sub-components photo sensor and
temperature sensor - photo sensor represents an analog input device
with simple control lines which eliminate power
drain through the photo resistor when not in use - temperature sensor (Analog Devices AD7418)
represents a large class of digital sensors which
have internal A/D converters and interface over a
standard chip-to-chip protocol (the synchronous
two-wire I2C protocol with software on the
micro-controller synthesizing the I2C master over
general I/O pins. There is no explicit arbiter
and bus negotiations are carried out by the
software on the micro-controller
19Berkeley Motes Hill 2000
- Hardware Platform
- The transceiver unit
- consist of an RF Monolithics 916.50 MHz
transceiver (TR1000), antenna, and a collection
of discrete components to configure the physical
layer characteristics such as signal strength and
sensitivity - operates in an ON-OFF key mode at speeds up to
19.2 Kbps - control signals configure the radio to operate in
either transmit, receive, or power-off mode - the radio contains no buffering, so each bit must
be serviced by the controller on time - the transmitted value is not latched by the
radio, so the jitter at the radio input is
propagated into the transmission signal
20Berkeley Motes Hill 2000
- Hardware Platform
- The transceiver unit is an Energizer CR2450
lithium battery rated at - 575 mAh
- The other auxiliary components include
- The coprocessor
- represents a synchronous bit-level device with
byte-level support - MCU (AT09LS2343, with 2KB instruction memory, 128
bytes of SRAM and EEPROM) that uses I/O pins
connected to an SPI controller where SPI is a
synchronous serial data link, providing high
speed full-duplex connections (up to 1 Mbit)
between peripherals - the sensor can be reprogrammed by transferring
data from the network into the coprocessors 256
KB EEPROM (24LC256) - can be used as a gateway to extra storage by the
main processor
21Berkeley Motes Hill 2000
- Hardware Platform
- The other auxiliary components include
- The serial port
- represents a synchronous bit-level device with
byte-level controller support - uses I/O pins that are connected to an internal
UART controller - in transmit mode, the UART takes a byte of data
and shifts it out serially at a specified
interval - in receive mode, it samples the input pin for a
transition and shifts in bits at a specified
interval from the edge - interrupts are triggered in the processor to
signal completion of the events
22Berkeley Motes Hill 2000, TinyOS
- Hardware Platform
- The other auxiliary components include
- Three LEDs
- represent outputs connected through general I/O
ports they may be used to display digital values
or status - Software Platform
- based on Tiny Micro-Threading Operating System
(TinyOS) which is designed for resource-constraine
d MEMS sensors - TinyOS adopts an event model so that high levels
of concurrency can be handled in a small amount
of space - A stack-based threaded approach would require
that stack space be reserved for each execution
context
23Berkeley Motes Hill 2000, TinyOS
- Software Platform
- A complete system configuration consists of a
tiny scheduler and a graph of components - A component has four interrelated parts a set of
- a set of command handlers
- a set of event handlers
- an encapsulated fixed-size frame
- Bundle of simple tasks
- tasks, commands and event handlers execute in the
context of the frame and operate on its state - each component declares the commands it uses and
the events it signals - these declarations are used to compose the
modular components in a per-application
configuration
24Berkeley Motes Hill 2000, TinyOS
- Software Platform
- the composition process creates layers of
components where higher-level components issue
commands to lower-level components and
lower-level components signal events to the
higher-level components - Frames
- fixed-size and statistically allocated which
allows us to know memory requirements of a
component at a compile time -- prevents overhead
associated with dynamic allocation - Commands
- non-blocking requests made to lower level
components - typically, a command will deposit request
parameters into its frame and conditionally post
a task for later execution
25Berkeley Motes Hill 2000, TinyOS
- Software Platform
- Commands
- can invoke lower commands, but it must not wait
for long - must provide feedback to its caller by returning
status indicating whether it was successful or
not - Event handlers
- Invoked to deal with hardware events, either
directly or indirectly - The lowest level components have handlers
connected directly to hardware interrupts which
may be external interrupts, timer events, or
counter events - An event handler can deposit information into its
frame, post tasks, signal higher level events or
call lower level commands
26Berkeley Motes Hill 2000, TinyOS
- Software Platform
- Event handlers
- in order to avoid cycles in the command/event
chain, commands cannot signal events - both signals and events are intended to perform a
small, fixed amount of work, which occurs within
the context of their components state - Tasks
- perform the primary work
- atomic entities with respect to other tasks, run
to completion and can be preempted by events - can call lower level commands, signal higher
level events, and schedule other tasks within a
component
27Berkeley Motes Hill 2000, TinyOS
- Software Platform
- Tasks
- run-to-completion semantics make it possible to
allocate a single stack that is assigned to the
currently executing task which is essential in
memory constrained systems - allows to simulate concurrency within each
component, since tasks execute asynchronously
with respect to the events - must never block or spin wait, otherwise, they
will prevent progress in other components - Task scheduler
- Utilizes a bounded size scheduling data structure
to schedule various tasks base on FIFO,
priority-based or deadline-based policy which is
dependent on the requirements of the application
28Berkeley Motes Hill 2000, TinyOS
Software Platform
Figure 5 The schematic for the architecture of
TinyOS
29MANTIS Abrach 2003
- MANTIS (MultimodAl system for NeTworks of In-situ
wireless Sensors) provides a new multi-threaded
embedded operating system integrated with a
general-purpose single-board hardware platform to
enable flexible and rapid prototyping of wireless
sensor networks - the key design goals of MANTIS are
- ease of use, i.e., a small learning curve that
encourages novice programmers to rapidly
prototype sensor applications - flexibility such that expert researchers can
continue to adapt and extend the
hardware/software system to suit the needs of
advanced research
30MANTIS Abrach 2003
- MANTIS OS is called MOS
- MOS selects its model as classical structure of
layered multi-threaded operating systems which
includes multi-threading, preemptive scheduling
with time slicing, I/O synchronization via mutual
exclusion, a standard network stack, and device
drivers - MOS choose a standard programming language that
the entire kernel and API are written in standard
C. This design choice not only almost eliminates
the learning curve, but also accrues many of the
other benefits of a standard programming
language, including cross-platform support and
reuse of a vast legacy code base. C also eases
development of cross-platform multimodal
prototyping environments on X86 PCs
31MANTIS Abrach 2003
- Hardware Platform
- MANTIS hardware nymphs design was inspired by
the Berkeley MICA an MICA2 Mote architecture - MANTIS Nymph is a single-board design,
incorporating the micro-controller, analog sensor
ports, RF communication, EEPROM, and serial ports
on one dual-layer 3.5 x 5.5 cm printed circuit
board - the Nymph is centered around the AMTEL
ATmega128(L) MCU, including interfaces for two
UARTs, an SPI bus, an I2C bus, and eight
analog-to-digital converter channels. It provides
additional 64KB EEPROM external to MCU in
addition to 4KB EEPROM included in MCU - the unit is powered either by batteries or an AC
adapter, and a set of three on-board LEDs are
included to aid in the debugging process. It is
designed to hold a 24mm diameter lithium ion coin
cell battery (CR2477), but any battery in the
range of 1.8V to 3.6V can be connected
32MANTIS Abrach 2003
- Hardware Platform
- in order to facilitate rapid prototyping in
research environment, the Nymph has solderless
plug connections for both analog and digital
sensors, which eliminates the external sensor
board for many applications - each connector provides lines for ground, power
and sensor signal, allowing basic sensors such as
photo sensors or complex devices such as infrared
an ultra sounds receivers to be connected easily - the Chipcon CC1000 radio was chosen to handle
wireless communication. It supports four carrier
frequency bands (315, 433, 868, and 915 MHz) and
allows for frequency hopping which is useful for
multi-channel communication. It is one of the
lowest power commercial radios and allows MOS to
optimize the radio to further reduce the power
consumption
33MANTIS Abrach 2003
- Hardware Platform
- for additional modules, the Nymph includes JTAG
interface which allows the user to easily
download code to the hardware. This addition
eliminates a need for separate programming board,
simplifying the process of reprogramming the
nodes while reducing the cost of overall system.
As added benefit, the JTAG port allows the user
to single-step through code on the MCU and also
supports the remote shell - the Nymph uses one of the UARTs to supply a
serial port (RS232) for connection to a PC while
the second one is used as an interface to the
optional GPS unit - MAX3221 RS232 serial chip is used and may be set
in three different power saving modes
power-down, receive only and shut down
34MANTIS Abrach 2003
Figure 6 MANTIS Nymph
35MANTIS Abrach 2003
- Software Platform
- MANTIS OS (MOS) adheres to classical layered
multi-threaded design - top application and API layers show a simple C
API which promotes the ease of use,
cross-platform portability, and reuse of a large
installed code base - in lower layers of MOS, it adapts the classical
OS structures to achieve small memory footprint - System APIs
- MANTIS provides comprehensive System APIs for I/O
and system interaction - the choice of C language API simplifies
cross-platform support and the development of a
multimodal prototyping environment
36MANTIS Abrach 2003
- Software Platform
- System APIs
- since MANTIS System API is preserved across both
physical sensor nodes as well as virtual sensor
nodes running on X86 platforms, the same C code
developed for MANTIS sensor Nymphs with AMTEL MCU
can be compiled to run on X86 PCs with little or
no alteration - Kernel and Scheduler
- design of MOS kernel resembles classical
UNIX-style schedulers - The services provided are subset of POSIX
threads, most notably priority-based thread
scheduling with round-robin semantics within a
priority level - binary (mutex) and counting semaphores are also
supported - the goal of the kernel design is to implement
these familiar services in an efficient manner
for resource-constrained environment of a sensor
node
37MANTIS Abrach 2003
- Software Platform
- Network Stack
- focused on efficient use of limited memory,
flexibility, and convenience - implemented as one or more user-level threads
- different layers can be implemented in different
threads, or all layers in the stack can be
implemented in one thread - the tradeoff is between performance and
flexibility - designed to minimize memory buffer allocation
through layers - the data body for a packet is common through all
layers within a thread - the headers for a packet is variably-sized and
are pre-pended to the single data body - designed in a modular manner with standard APIs
between each layers, thereby allowing developers
easily modify or replace layer modules
38MANTIS Abrach 2003
- Software Platform
- Device Drivers
- Adopts the traditional logical/physical
partitioning with respect to device driver design
for the hardware - The application developer need not to interact
with the hardware to accomplish a given task
39MANTIS Abrach 2003
Figure 7 MANTIS OS Architecture
40MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- application developers need to be able to
prototype and test applications prior to
distribution and physical deployment in the field - during deployment, in-situ sensor nodes need to
be capable of being both dynamically reprogrammed
and remotely debugged - in order to facilitates these issues, MANTIS
identifies and implements three key advanced
features for expert users of general-purpose
sensor systems - multimodal prototyping environment
- dynamic reprogramming
- remote shell and commander server
41MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- Multimodal Prototyping Environment
- Provides a framework for prototyping diverse
applications across heterogeneous platforms - A key requirement of sensor systems is the need
to provide a prototyping environment to test
sensor networking applications prior to
deployment - Postponing testing of an application until after
its deployment across a distributed sensor
network can incur severe consequences - MANTIS prototyping environment extends beyond
simulation to provide larger framework for
development of network management and
visualization applications as virtual nodes
within a MANTIS network - MANTIS has property of enabling an application
developer to test execution of the same C code on
both virtual sensor nodes and later on in-situ
physical sensor nodes
42MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- Multimodal Prototyping Environment
- Seamlessly integrates virtual environment with
the real deployment network such that both
virtual and physical nodes can co-exit and
communicate with each other in the prototyping
environment - Permits a virtual node to leverage other APIs
outside of the MANTIS API, e.g., a virtual node
with the MANTIS API could be realized as a UNIX
X windows application that communicates with
other rendering or database APIs to build
visualization and network management applications
43MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- Multimodal Prototyping Environment
Figure 8 Multimodal prototyping integrates both
virtual and physical sensor nodes across
heterogeneous X86 and AMTEL sensor platforms
44MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- Dynamic Reprogramming
- Sensor nodes should be remotely reconfigurable
over a wireless multi-hop network after being
deployed in the field. Since sensor nodes may be
deployed in inaccessible areas and may scale to
thousands of nodes, this simplifies management of
the sensor network - MOS achieves dynamic reprogramming in several
granularities re-flashing the entire OS
reprogramming of a single thread and changing of
variables within a thread - Another useful feature would be the ability to
remotely debug a running thread. MOS provides a
remote shell that enables a user to login and
inspect the sensor nodes memory - MOS includes two programming modes (simpler and
more advanced) in order to overcome the
difficulty of reprogramming the network
45MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- Dynamic Reprogramming
- The simpler programming mode is similar to that
used in many other systems and involves a direct
communication with a specific MANTIS node - On a Nymph, this would be accomplished via a
serial port the user simply connects the node to
a PC and opens the MANTIS shell - Upon reset, MOS enters a boot loader that checks
for communication from the shell. At this point,
the node will accept a new code image, which is
downloaded from the PC over the direct
communication line - From the shell, the user has the ability to
inspect and modify the nodes memory directly as
well as spawn threads and retrieve debugging
information including thread status, stack fill,
and other statistics from OS - The boot loader transfers control to the MOS
kernel on command from the shell, or at a startup
if the shell is not present
46MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- Dynamic Reprogramming
- The more advanced programming mode is used when a
node is already deployed, and does not require
direct access to the node - The spectrum of dynamic reprogramming of in-situ
sensor networks ranges from fine grained
reprogramming to complete reprogramming - MOS has a provision for reprogramming any portion
of the node up to and including the OS itself
while the node is deployed in the field - This is accomplished through the MOS dynamic
reprogramming interface -
47MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- Remote Shell and Commander Server
- MOS includes the MANTIS Command Server (MCS)
which is implemented as an application thread - From any device in the network equipped with a
terminal, the user may invoke the command server
client (also referred to as the shell) and log in
to either a physical node (e.g., on a Nymph or
Mica board) or a virtual node running as a
process on a PC - MCS listens on a network port for commands and
replies with the results, in a manner similar to
RPC - The shell gains the ability to control a node
remotely through MCS
48MANTIS Abrach 2003
- System Development
- Remote Shell and Commander Server
- The user may alter the nodes configuration
settings, run or kill programs, display the
thread table and other OS data, inspect and
modify the nodes data memory, and call arbitrary
user-defined functions - The shell is powerful debugging tool since it
allows the user to examine and modify the state
of any node, without requiring physical access to
the node
49References
- Abrach 2003 H. Abrach, S. Bhatti, J. Carlson,
H. Dai, J. Rose, A. Sheth, B. Shucker, J, Deng
and R. Han, MANTIS System Support for MultimodAl
NeTworks of In-Situ Sensors, 2nd ACM
International Workshop on Wireless Sensor
Networks and Applications (WSNA 2003), September
2003. - Akyildiz 2002 I. F. Akyildiz, W. Su, Y.
Sankarasubramaniam, and E. Cayirci, A Survey on
Sensor Networks, IEEE Communications Magazine,
Vol. 40, No. 8, pp. 102-114, August 2002. - Elson 2002 J. Elson and K. Romer, Wireless
Sensor Networks A New Regime for Time
Synchronization, First Workshop on Hot Topics in
Networks (Hotnets-I), Princeton, USA, October
2002. - Hill 2000 J. Hill, R. Szewczyk, A. Woo, S.
Hollar, D. Culler, and K. Pister, System
Architecture Directions for Networked Sensors,
Architectural Support for Programming Languages
and Operating Systems (ASPLOS) 2000 - TinyOS TinyOS a component-based OS for the
networked sensor regime.