Title :
MANNA: a management architecture for wireless sensor networks
Author :
Ruiz, Linnyer Beatrys ; Nogueira, Jose Marcos ; Loureiro, Antonio A F
Author_Institution :
Fed. Univ. of Minas Gerais, Brazil
fDate :
2/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are becoming an increasingly important technology that will be used in a variety of applications such as environmental monitoring, infrastructure management, public safety, medical, home and office security, transportation, and military. WSNs will also play a key role in pervasive computing where computing devices and people are connected to the Internet. Until now, WSNs and their applications have been developed without considering a management solution. This is a critical problem since networks comprising tens of thousands of nodes are expected to be used in some of the applications above. This article proposes the MANNA management architecture for WSNs. In particular, it presents the functional, information, and physical management architectures that take into account specific characteristics of this type of network. Some of them are restrict physical resources such as energy and computing power, frequent reconfiguration and adaptation, and faults caused by nodes unavailable. The MANNA architecture considers three management dimensions: functional areas, management levels, and WSN functionalities. These dimensions are specified to the management of a WSN and are the basis for a list of management functions. The article also proposes WSN models to guide the management activities and the use of correlation in the WSN management. This is a first step into a largely unexplored research area.
Keywords :
Internet; radio access networks; sensors; telecommunication network management; Internet; MANNA; MANNA management architecture; WSN agents; WSN management; computing devices; environmental monitoring; home application; infrastructure management; management architecture; management information base; medical application; military application; network nodes; office security; physical management architectures; public safety; transportation; wireless sensor networks; Biomedical monitoring; Computer architecture; Computer network management; Domestic safety; Environmental management; Military computing; Pervasive computing; Technology management; Transportation; Wireless sensor networks;
Journal_Title :
Communications Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MCOM.2003.1179560