Reliable Communication and Latency Bound Generation in Wireless Cyber-Physical Systems
2019
Low-power wireless communication has been widely used in cyber-physical systems that require time-critical data delivery. Achieving this goal is challenging because of link burstiness and interference. Based on significant empirical evidence of 21 days and over 3.6 M packet transmissions per link, we propose both routing and scheduling algorithms that produce latency bounds of the real-time periodic streams and accounts for both link bursts and interference. The solution is achieved through the definition of a new metric Bmax that characterizes links by their maximum burst length, and by choosing a novel least-burst-route that minimizes the sum of worst-case burst lengths over all links in the route. With extensive data-driven analysis, we show that our algorithms outperform existing solutions by achieving accurate latency bound with much less energy consumption. In addition, a testbed evaluation consisting of 48 nodes spread across a floor of a building shows that we obtain 100% reliable packet delivery within derived latency bounds. We also demonstrate how performance deteriorates and discuss its implications for wireless networks with insufficient high-quality links.
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