Fog Computing for Sustainable Smart Cities: A Survey
Charith Perera, Yongrui Qin, Julio C. Estrella, Stephan, Reiff-Marganiec, Athanasios V. Vasilakos

TL;DR
This survey reviews Fog computing's role in enhancing sustainable smart cities by addressing data processing challenges at the network edge, comparing existing research, and identifying future research directions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of Fog computing approaches, key characteristics, use cases, and open challenges for smart city applications.
Findings
Identified ten key characteristics of Fog computing.
Compared over 30 research efforts in Fog computing.
Highlighted open challenges for future research.
Abstract
The Internet of Things (IoT) aims to connect billions of smart objects to the Internet, which can bring a promising future to smart cities. These objects are expected to generate large amounts of data and send the data to the cloud for further processing, specially for knowledge discovery, in order that appropriate actions can be taken. However, in reality sensing all possible data items captured by a smart object and then sending the complete captured data to the cloud is less useful. Further, such an approach would also lead to resource wastage (e.g. network, storage, etc.). The Fog (Edge) computing paradigm has been proposed to counterpart the weakness by pushing processes of knowledge discovery using data analytics to the edges. However, edge devices have limited computational capabilities. Due to inherited strengths and weaknesses, neither Cloud computing nor Fog computing paradigm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIoT and Edge/Fog Computing · Context-Aware Activity Recognition Systems · Smart Cities and Technologies
