Demystifying Fog Computing: Characterizing Architectures, Applications and Abstractions

2017 IEEE 1st International Conference on Fog and Edge Computing (ICFEC)(2017)

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Abstract
Internet of Things (IoT) has accelerated the deployment of millions of sensors at the edge of the network, through Smart City infrastructure and lifestyle devices. Cloud computing platforms are often tasked with handling these large volumes and fast streams of data from the edge. Recently, Fog computing has emerged as a concept for low-latency and resource-rich processing of these observation streams, to complement Edge and Cloud computing. In this paper, we review various dimensions of system architecture, application characteristics and platform abstractions that are manifest in this Edge, Fog and Cloud eco-system. We highlight novel capabilities of the Edge and Fog layers, such as physical and application mobility, privacy sensitivity, and a nascent runtime environment. IoT application case studies based on first-hand experiences across diverse domains drive this categorization. We also highlight the gap between the potential and the reality of Fog computing, and identify challenges that need to be overcome for the solution to be sustainable. Taken together, our article can help platform and application developers bridge the gap that remains in making Fog computing viable.
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Key words
Internet of Things,smart city infrastructure,lifestyle devices,data streams,data handling,low-latency resource-rich processing,observation streams,edge computing,cloud computing,fog computing,system architecture,application characteristics,platform abstractions,edge layers,fog layers,IoT application
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