6
D. De et al.
Fig. 4 Integration multiple service framework in IoT
things (IoT) [43–46]. Recent advances in IoT have resulted in a paradigm shift from
a computer-aided society to a service-based intelligent organization.
An enormous amount of data needs to be managed to make the IoT-based system
work with end-to-end reliability. Cloud-based architectures provide the virtual infras-
tructure for utility-based computing that integrates monitoring devices, analytics
tools, visualization systems. IoT provides a reliable infrastructure for services that
require ubiquitous connectivity. Smart connectivity with the existing network archi-
tecture and context-based reliable service deployment is the fundamental design
challenge for IoT.
The term “Internet of Things” was first coined by Kelvin Ashton in 1999 [47].
In the past few years, the definition has included many applications like healthcare,
surveillance, utility, transport, education, etc. [48]. Figure 4 shows a representative
diagram of service integration in IoT.
Fueled by the radical evolution of the Internet and the prevalence of devices
equipped with wireless technology like Bluetooth, Radio Frequency Identification
(RFID), and Wi-Fi, the IoT has transformed the physical world into an intelligent,
logical framework with ubiquitous connectivity [49, 50].
Mobile IP-based sensor network builds up the sensing and actuating layer of the
infrastructure of IoT. Each sensor node can have an IPv6 address for the unique
identification of the device. These sensor nodes detect an event and measure the
physical and environmental parameters with high precision so that the IoT-based
system can make a correct decision.
3.1
Architecture of IoT
A typical IoT system consists of a layered architecture with the following sub-
systems, as shown in Fig. 5. The architecture consists of three sub-layers, viz., sensing
and perception layer, communication layer, and application layer.