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Ramyaa & Malak

RT- WiFi : Real-Time High-Speed Communication Protocol for Wireless Cyber-Physical Control Applications. Ramyaa & Malak. Control System. Enhance the mobility. R educed the cost of maintenance and deployment. - Complicate the design - Increase development time & maintenance cost.

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Ramyaa & Malak

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  1. RT-WiFi: Real-Time High-Speed Communication Protocol forWireless Cyber-Physical Control Applications Ramyaa & Malak

  2. Control System • Enhance the mobility. • Reduced the cost of maintenance and deployment.

  3. - Complicate the design - Increase development time & maintenance cost

  4. RT-WiFi - Goals • Real-time Data Delivery and High Sampling Rate • Requires sampling rate >1KHz  IEEE802.11 physical layer. • Time deterministic  TDMA mechanism. • Flexible Data Link Layer Configuration • Design trade-offs: sampling rate, communication reliability, real-time data delivery, and co-existence with regular WiFi networks. • Transparent System Design • Reuse hardware & software available & run existing applications with minimum modifications.

  5. RT-WIFI Design and Implementation • Performance Evaluation • Case Study • Conclusion • Future Work

  6. Control System based on RT-WiFi

  7. RT-WiFi Design

  8. A. Timer • Global synchronization. • Achieves high sampling rate. • Deterministic timing behavior Node access the channel in its pre-assigned time slots. • Based on (Timing Synchronization Function) TSF.

  9. RT-WiFi Design

  10. B. Link Scheduler

  11. RT-WiFi

  12. C. Flexible Data Link Layer Design • Out-of-slot retry • Packet fails to be transmitted in one time slot, RT-WiFi node can retransmit. • Requirement of retransmit depends on the application. • Packet size and data rate • If the transmission time of the packet is larger than the time slot size then RT-WiFi cannot successfully transmit the packet. • IEEE 802.11  Uses multiple transmission rates that utilize different modulation and coding scheme. • Higher transmission rate  higher throughput  less resilient to noise. • Flexible data link layer design  Selection of the date rate that best fits the current channel condition and the desired time slot size. • Performing Carrier Sense • Absence of WiFi RT-WiFinode does not perform carrier sense. • Presence of WiFiPossibility that the two types of traffic could collide. • Solution: RT-WiFi nodes perform clear • channel assessment (CCA) at the start of the transmission. • Computational resource • Higher sampling rate  reduce the time slot size. • Task Execution in the shorter time interval  more computational resource. • Synchronization accuracy • The minimum slot size is influenced by the synchronization accuracy  the size of time slot has to be larger than the guard Interval. • Solution : reduce the guard interval size by utilizing more accurate clock. • Shortening Inter-frame Spacing • Interval defined between the transmission of two consecutive Wi-Fi packets. • Higher priority for RT-WiFishorter IFS. • In-slot retry

  13. D. Association Process • RT-WiFinode has no information about TDMA schedule before it joins the network. • It works like a regular Wi-Fi node and follows same authentication and association process. • RT-WiFi node waits for the next beacon frame. • Operates according to the TDMA schedule. • Schedule information is attached to the beacon frame in the vendor specific field. • Thus, a regular Wi-Fi station can easily associate with a RT-WiFi AP without any modification.

  14. Platform Hardware Platform • Port to any IEEE 802.11 compatible hardware. • Atheros AR9285 Wi-Fi chip. • Ubuntu 12.04 as the operating system, which runs Linux kernel 3.2.0. Software Platform • Two software modules from compat-wireless driver, mac80211 and ath9k are incorporated with the TDMA design to build the MAC layer of RT-WiFi.

  15. RT-WIFI Design and Implementation • Performance Evaluation • Case Study • Conclusion • Future Work

  16. Performance Evaluation Testbed Setting • Performance comparison between RT-WiFi and regular Wi-Fi. • Interference free environment • office environment • Compare the MAC layer to MAC layer performance between RT-WiFiand regular Wi-Fi in two test scenarios. • UDP socket program is installed on each Device. • Sensor data with a fixed size payload are transmitted from each station to the AP. • AP transmits control data with the same packet size back to each station.

  17. Performance Evaluation Latency and packet loss ratio comparison in an interference-free environment • The data link layer transmission latency is calculated as the difference of a frame’s TSF timestamps between the receiver side and the sender side. • The packet loss ratio measures the percentage of packets lost by tracking the sequence number of each packet. • Standard deviation of the latency in RT-WiFi network is less than 5.3µs. • Regular Wi-Fi network has a higher average delay and a larger transmission variation.

  18. Performance Evaluation Latency comparison between Wi-Fi and RT-WiFi in an interference-free environment

  19. Performance Evaluation Latency and packet loss ratio comparison in an office environment • Deployed the testbed on the 5th floor of the building. • 10 Wi-Fi Aps • Latency of regular Wi-Fi network is increased because the office environment has more inference from existing Wi-Fi networks. • The maximum latency of RT-WiFiis increased up to 4.2ms. • Uncontrolled mobile devices in the office environment. • The packet loss ratio of RT-WiFi network increases to 10%. • Collision with background traffic. • Regular wifi - maximum delay – 100ms, standard deviation – 2800µs.

  20. Performance Evaluation Latency comparison between Wi-Fi and RT-WiFi in an office environment

  21. Performance Evaluation Flexible Channel Access Controller Testbed setting: Network A: – Regular WiFi network – 10 Mbps UDP traffic generator. Network B: – UDP program. configured Network-B by using four settings: • Regular WiFi • RT-WiFi baseline • RT-WiFi with co-existence enabled • RT-WiFi with co-existence enabled and one in-slot retransmission enabled

  22. Performance Evaluation • Mean delay of regular Wi-Fi is increased to 580µs. • Interference from Network-A. • The packet loss ratio of baseline RT-WiFi network is increased to 50.21% • Interference from Network-A. • RT-WiFinetwork in the co-existence mode, the packet loss ratio is decreased to 10.92%. • Enable the carrier sense mechanism • Totally not eliminated because of hidden terminal problem. • Packet loss ratio is further decreased to 4.96% when we enable the in-slot-retry. Flexible Channel Access Controller

  23. RT-WIFI Design • Implementation • Performance Evaluation • Case Study • Conclusion • Future Work

  24. Case study Mobile gait rehabilitation system • Smart shoes with embedded air pressure Sensors. • Multiple IMU motion Sensors a robotic device. • Host computer running control applications. Two types of wireless Links. • Transmit sensing signals from sensing devices to the control applications. • Controlling the robotic assistive device.

  25. Case study Integration of smart shoes with a RT-WiFi station • Mobile gait rehabilitation system periodically requests sensing signals from air pressure sensors for abnormal gait detection. • The real-time sensor data were first collected from an analog-input module NI 9221 on an NI 9116 and then sent through a UDP socket from an Ethernet port of the NI 9022. • The RT-WiFistation then forward the sensor data through the RT-WiFiwireless communication link to the RT-WiFi AP on which the controller was running.

  26. Case study Emulation of a Wireless Control System: • Numerous emulations based on the data traces collected from the smart shoes hardware. • Step 1: Data from the smart shoes to acquire the network dynamics (latency and packet loss ratio). • Step 2: Emulation to evaluate the performance of the wireless control system. • Probability to achieve small tracking errors is always higher for RT-WiFi than regular Wi-Fi.

  27. RT-WIFI Design • Implementation • Performance Evaluation • Case Study • Conclusion • Future Work

  28. Conclusion • RT-WiFisupports real-time high-speed wireless control systems. • High sampling rate. • Timing guarantee on packet delivery. • Configurable components: sampling rate, real-time performance, communication reliability. • It is compatibility to existing Wi-Fi networks.

  29. Future Work • Fault tolerance. • Dynamic resource management. • Energy-efficient power management. • Extend the network topology to mesh structure.

  30. Thank you

  31. Why TDMA NOT CSMA/CA ? • CSMA/CA helps to increase throughput, but not support real time traffic. • Wi-Fi packet with a hard deadline may be blocked for a nondeterministic time interval because of carrier sense OR delayed by the random backoffaccess. • TDMA access the channels according to a strict time schedule. One node can access a certain channel in a given time slot.

  32. Types of Link

  33. Packet size & data rate • IEEE802.11 allows to use multible transmission rates at phusicallayerRT-WiFi can deal with different modulation and coding schemes. • Higher transmission rate  provides higher throughput & less resilient to noise and easy prone to error. • Our flexible data link layer design allows the selection of the date rate that best fits the current channel condition and the desired time slot size.

  34. Computational resource • Increasing the sampling rate of the TDMA data link layerreduce the time slot size. • For executing tasks in a shorter time interval, more computational resource is required. • The maximum sampling rate supported by a RT-WiFi node is limited by its computation capability.

  35. Synchronization accuracy • The guard interval is reserved for the drift between two RT-WiFi devices. • The minimum slot size is influenced by the synchronization accuracy  because the size of time slot has to be larger than the guard interval. • We can reduce the guard interval size by utilizing more accurate clock or decreasing the synchronization interval.

  36. Reliability • RT-WiFi applies two retransmission mechanisms to improve the reliability of a communication link. • Used either independently or in combination. • Depends on the available computation resource and specific control applications  choose the mechanism.

  37. In-slot retry • If the sender does not receive an ACK immediately message from the receiver The retransmission is invoked • The retransmission time of an in-slot retry should not exceed the length of a time slot.

  38. Out-of-slot retry • If a packet fails to be transmitted in one time slot, RT-WiFi node can retransmit it on the next available link. • Notice that the retransmission heavily depends on the desired application behavior. • For example, on the next available link, if new control/sensor data is available, then it does not make sense to retransmit the old data.

  39. Co-existence with regular Wi-Fi network • Performing Carrier Sense: • RT-WiFi node does not perform carrier sense, because the manager will make sure that there is no temporal or spatial reuse in the operation environment on the channel specified in that time slot. • co-existence performance between RT-WiFi and regular Wi-Fi could be poor, because of the high possibility that the two types of traffic could collide with each other. • Solution: RT-WiFi nodes should perform clear channel assessment (CCA).

  40. Co-existence with regular Wi-Fi network • Shortening Inter-frame Spacing (IFS): • IFS: interval between the transmission of two consecutive Wi-Fi packets. • Wi-Fi nodes wait for a pre-defined IFS before start to transmit the next frame. • higher priority for the RT-WiFi node  a shorter IFS can be assigned for the RT-WiFi node.

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