TL;DR
This paper presents {}SDN, a lightweight SDN framework optimized for low-power IEEE 802.15.4 networks, reducing control overhead and enabling QoS, thereby improving performance and scalability in IoT environments.
Contribution
It introduces {}SDN, a novel lightweight SDN architecture with protocol interoperability and optimized control overhead for low-power IoT networks.
Findings
{}SDN reduces control overhead to practical levels.
{}SDN achieves comparable performance to RPL-based networks.
{}SDN improves QoS by reducing delay and jitter.
Abstract
Software Defined Networking (SDN) offers a flexible and scalable architecture that abstracts decision making away from individual devices and provides a programmable network platform. However, implementing a centralized SDN architecture within the constraints of a low-power wireless network faces considerable challenges. Not only is controller traffic subject to jitter due to unreliable links and network contention, but the overhead generated by SDN can severely affect the performance of other traffic. This paper addresses the challenge of bringing high-overhead SDN architecture to IEEE 802.15.4 networks. We explore how traditional SDN needs to evolve in order to overcome the constraints of low-power wireless networks, and discuss protocol and architectural optimizations necessary to reduce SDN control overhead - the main barrier to successful implementation. We argue that…
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