Research Article
Reuse of pervasive system architectures
@ARTICLE{10.4108/ue.1.3.e3, author={Dennis J.A.Bijwaard and Berend Jan van der Zwaag and Nirvana Meratnia and Hylke W. van Dijk and Henk Eertink and Paul J.M. Havinga}, title={Reuse of pervasive system architectures}, journal={EAI Endorsed Transactions on Ubiquitous Environments}, volume={1}, number={3}, publisher={ICST}, journal_a={UE}, year={2014}, month={11}, keywords={pervasive computing; middleware; wireless sensor networks.}, doi={10.4108/ue.1.3.e3} }
- Dennis J.A.Bijwaard
Berend Jan van der Zwaag
Nirvana Meratnia
Hylke W. van Dijk
Henk Eertink
Paul J.M. Havinga
Year: 2014
Reuse of pervasive system architectures
UE
ICST
DOI: 10.4108/ue.1.3.e3
Abstract
Developers are often confronted with incompatible systems and lack a proper system abstraction that allows easy integration of various hardware and software components. To try solve these shortcomings, building blocks are identified at different levels of detail in today’s pervasive/communication systems and used in a conceptual reasoning framework allowing easy comparison and combination. The generality of the conceptual framework is validated by decomposing a selection of pervasive systems into models of these building blocks and integrating these models to create improved ones. Additionally, the required properties of pervasive systems on scalability, efficiency, degree of pervasiveness, and maintainability are analysed for a number of application areas. The pervasive systems are compared on these properties. Observations are made, and weak points in the analysed pervasive systems are identified. Furthermore, we provide a set of recommendations as a guideline towards flexible architectures that make pervasive systems usable in a variety of applications.
Copyright © 2014 Dennis J.A. Bijwaard et al., licensed to ICST. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unlimited use, distribution and reproduction in any medium so long as the original work is properly cited.