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Networks of Tiny Devices Embedded in the Physical World David Culler Computer Science Division U.C. Berkeley www.cs.berkeley.edu/~culler Intel Research Berkeley Technology Push • Complete network embedded systems going microscopic Processing Storage Power Sensing Actuation Communication I SDQ SD PLL baseband filters mixer LNA 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 2 Application Pull • Complete NW embedded systems going microscopic • Huge space of new applications Monitoring & Managing Spaces Disaster Management Habitat Monitoring Circulatory Net Condition-based maintenance Ubiquitous computing 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 3 Bridging the Technology-Application Gap • Power-aware, communication-centric node architecture • Tiny Operating System for Range of HighlyConstrained Application-specific environments • Network Architecture for vast, self-organized collections • Programming Environments for aggregate applications in a noisy world • Distributed Middleware Services (time, trigger, routing, allocation) • Techniques for Fine-grain distributed control • Demonstration Applications 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 4 Critical issues • Highly constrained devices – power, storage, bandwidth, energy, visibility – primitive I/O hierarchy • Observation and action inherently distributed – many small nodes coordinate and cooperate on overall task • The structure of the SYSTEM changes • Devices ARE the infrastructure – ad hoc, self-organized network of sensors • Highly dynamic – – – – – passive vigilance most of the time concurrency-intensive bursts highly correlated behavior variation in connectivity over time failure is common 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 5 A de facto platform for EmNets • Developed a series of wireless sensor devices • • • • • TinyOS concurrency framework Messaging Model Networking stacks (RF and Serial) Multihop routing Several Key components – sensing, logging, data filters, broadcast • Simulation tools • DARPA NEST OEP 5/13/2002 USC robomote TinyOS IPAM 6 Many Research Groups using it • UCB – – – – – – – • • • • • • NEST SensorWeb Blackout Glaser structures CBE BFD BRWC UCLA USC, ISI Rutgers winlab Intel Bosch Crossbow 5/13/2002 • • • • • • • • • • • • U Wash Rutgers UIUC NCSA U Virginia Ohio State UCSD Dartmouth MIT UT Austin, ASU, Iowa Accenture and many more TinyOS IPAM 7 The MICA architecture 51-Pin I/O Expansion Connector 8 Programming Digital I/O 8 Analog I/O Lines • Atmel ATMEGA103 – 4 Mhz 8-bit CPU – 128KB Instruction Memory – 4KB RAM DS2401 Unique ID Atmega103 Microcontroller – SPI interface – 1-4 uj/bit r/w Transmission Power Control • RFM TR1000 radio Hardware Accelerators TR 1000 Radio Transceiver – 50 kb/s – ASK – Focused hardware acceleration SPI Bus • 4 Mbit flash (AT45DB041B) Coprocessor 4Mbit External Flash Power Regulation MAX1678 (3V) • Network programming • Rich Expansion connector – i2c, SPI, GIO, 1-wire – Analog compare + interrupts • TinyOS tool chain • sub microsecond RF synchronization primitive 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 2xAA form factor 8 Rich Sensor board Mica PINS PHOTO Y Axis X Axis TEMP Tone Intr Mic Signal SOUNDER MICROPHONE Gain Adjustment MAGNETOMETER ACCELEROMETER ADC Signals (ADC1-ADC6) On/Off Control I2C Bus Interrupt Microphone Sounder Magnetometer 1.25 in Temperature Sensor 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM Light Sensor 2.25 in Accelerometer 9 More Sensors and Actuators • Motor-Servo board interfaces any combination of two motors, servos, and solenoids to a toy car platform • whisker board for obstacle detection • digital accelerometer (ADXL202) board for crude odometry • GPS Board • Weatherboard • light, temp, humidity, barometric pressure, occupancy (thermopile) 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 10 Getting Ready for Outdoors Acadia National Park Mt. Desert Island, ME Great Duck Island Nature Conservancy 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 11 A Operating System for Tiny Devices? • Traditional approaches – command processing loop (wait request, act, respond) – monolithic event processing – bring full thread/socket posix regime to platform • Alternative – provide framework for concurrency and modularity – never poll, never block – interleaving flows, events, energy management => allow appropriate abstractions to emerge 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 12 Tiny OS Concepts • Scheduler + Graph of Components init Commands, Event Handlers Frame (storage) Tasks (concurrency) Messaging Component – frame per component, shared stack, no heap • Very lean multithreading • Efficient Layering 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM internal thread Internal State TX_pack et_done (success RX_pack )et_done (buffer) • Constrained Storage Model init Power(mode) TX_packet(buf) – – – – msg_rec(type, data) msg_sen d_done) • Component: Events send_msg (addr, type, data) Commands power(mode) – constrained two-level scheduling model: threads + events 13 application Application = Graph of Components Route map router sensor appln packet Radio byte bit Radio Packet byte Active Messages RFM 5/13/2002 Serial Packet UART Temp photo SW HW ADC clocks TinyOS IPAM Example: ad hoc, multi-hop routing of photo sensor readings 3450 B code 226 B data Graph of cooperating state machines on shared stack 14 TOS Execution Model • commands request action – ack/nack at every boundary – call cmd or post task message-event driven • events notify occurrence • Tasks provide logical concurrency event-driven packet-pump packet HW intrpt at lowest level may signal events call cmds post tasks active message 5/13/2002 crc Radio byte encode/decode event-driven bit-pump bit – preempted by events • Migration of HW/SW boundary Radio Packet event-driven byte-pump byte – – – – data processing application comp TinyOS IPAM RFM 15 Dynamics of Events and Threads bit event filtered at byte layer bit event => end of byte => end of packet => end of msg send thread posted to start send next message radio takes clock events to detect recv 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 16 Maintaining Scheduling Agility • Need logical concurrency at many levels of the graph • While meeting hard timing constraints – sample the radio in every bit window Retain event-driven structure throughout application Tasks extend processing outside event window All operations are non-blocking lock-free scheduling queue 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 17 Demonstration applications • 29 Palms • Cory Hall network – ½ million packets over 3 weeks • • • • • • • Surge network and environment display 800 node ad hoc network CBE Glaser Shakes Granlibakken retreat watcher Robomote Group response => continued application focus • more real and long lived • more dynamics • extract architecture and create framework 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 18 Example TinyOS study • UAV drops 10 nodes along road, – hot-water pipe insulation for package • • • • • • • • Nodes self-configure into linear network Synchronize (to 1/32 s) Calibrate magnetometers Each detects passing vehicle Share filtered sensor data with 5 neighbors Each calculates estimated direction & velocity Share results As plane passes by, – joins network – upload as much of missing dataset as possible from each node when in range • 7.5 KB of code! • While servicing the radio in SW every 50 us! 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 19 Structural performance due to multi-directional ground motions (Glaser & CalTech) . Mote Layout 1 3 1 54 6` 1 8 1 1 1 5 29 Mote infrastructure Comparison of Results Wiring for traditional structural instrumentation + truckload of equipment 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 20 Energy Monitoring/Mgmt System • • • • 50 nodes on 4th floor 5 level ad hoc net 30 sec sampling 250K samples to database over 6 weeks 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 21 Energy Monitoring Network Arch 20-ton chiller sensor net GW control net GW GW 802-11 PC modbus PC MYSQL telegraph scada term UCB power monitor net 5/13/2002 Browser TinyOS IPAM 22 Meeting Social Network 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 23 Wealth of Research Challenges • Large numbers of highly constrained (energy & capability), connected devices service • New family of issues across all the layers network system architecture technology 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 24 prog / data model – operating in aggregate application algorithm / theory – imperfect operation and reliability mgmt / diag / debug – able to be casually deployed in infrastructure (existing or in design) Node Communication Architecture Classic Protocol Direct Device Processor Control Application Controller Application Controller Narrow, refined Chip-to-Chip Interface RF Transceiver Protocol Processor RF Transceiver Hybrid Accelerator Application Controller Serialization Accelerator Memory I/O BUS Raw RF Interface Timing Accelerator Hardware Accelerators RF Transceiver 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 25 Novel Protocol Examples • Low-power Listening • Really Tight Application-level Time Synchronization • Localization • Wake-up • MACs • Self-organization 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 26 Low-Power Listening • Costs about as much to listen as to xmit, even when nothing is received • Must turn radio off when there is nothing to hear. • Time-slotting and rendezvous cost BW and Latency • Can turn radio on/of in <1 bit Small sub-msg recv sampling Trade small, infrequent tx cost for freq. Rx savings Low Power Listening Preamble Transmission Start Symbol Transmission MAC Delay Transmitting individual bits Bit Modulations Radio Samples Slow, Periodic Sampling Reception 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAMStart Symbol Search Receiving individual bits Synchronization Start Symbol Detection 27 Exposing Time Synchronization Up • Many applications require correlated data sampling • Distributed time sync accuracy bounded by ½ the variance in RTT. • Successful radio transmission requires sub-bit synchronization Provide accurate timestamping with msg delivery Jitter < 0.1us (propagation) + 0.25 us (edge capture accuracy) + 0.625 us (clock synch) 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 28 Localization • Many applications need to derive physical placement from observations – Spatial sampling, proximity, context-awareness • Radio is another sensor • Sample baseband to estimate distance – Need a lot of statistical data – Calibration and multipleobservations are key Error Error Noise Noise • Acoustic time-of-flight alternative – Requires good time synchronization 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 29 Probability Statistical Approach Y 5/13/2002 Node A X Distance TinyOS IPAM Node B 30 Integrated Architecture • Chip Area ~5 mm2 – – – – AVR core with protocol Accelerators 16 Kbytes on-chip ram ADC 800-1GHz FSK transceiver, -90dBm receive sens’y .5 mm2 4 mm2 .5 mm2 • Expected sleep current = 1 uW – lifetime on a single AA = 400+ years • Expected active (processing current) – Processor @ 4 Mhz < 1 mW – Radio: 1mW power consumption, 100Kbps – ADC: 20 pJ/sample 10 Ksamps/second = .2 uW. 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 31 Networking • Hands-on Experience with Large Networks of Tiny Network sensors intense constraints, freedom of abstraction • Re-explore entire range of networking issues – – – – – – – – encoding, framing, error handling media access control, transmission rate control discovery, multihop routing broadcast, multicast, aggregation active network capsule (reprogramming) localization, time synchronization security, network-wide protection density independent wake-up and proximity est. • Fundamentally new aspects in each 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 32 The Nodes are the Infrastucture • Simple Epidemic Algorithm Schema if (new mcast) then take local action retransmit modified request • Examples: Network wakeup, command propagation – Build spanning tree » record parent • Naturally adapts to available connectivity • Minimal state and protocol overhead => surprising complexity in this simple mechanism 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 33 Network Discovery: Radio Cells 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 34 Network Discovery 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 35 Controlled Empirical Study • Experimental Setup – – – – – – – 13x13 grid of nodes separation 2ft flat open surface Identical length antennas, pointing vertically upwards. Fresh batteries on all nodes Identical orientation of all nodes The region was clean of external noise sources. • Range of signal strength settings • Log many runs 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 36 Example “epidemic” tree formation 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 37 Final Tree 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 38 Power Laws ? 1000 100 100 Links Count 1000 10 10 1 1 1 10 100 1 10 100 Cluster Size Cluster Size (1 + # children) • Most nodes have very small degree (ave = .92) • Some have degree = 15% of the population • Few large clusters account for most of the edges 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 39 Open Territory => Many Children • Example: Level 1 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 40 Open Territory => Many Children • Example: Level 2 – variation in distance 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 41 Open Territory => Many Children • Example: Level 3 – long links 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 42 Understanding Connectivity • 16 transmit power settings • For each transmit power setting, each node transmits 20 packets. • Receivers log successfully received packets. • Nodes transmit one after the other in a token-ring fashion • No collisions. • Define “range”: radius where 75% of enclosed nodes receive 75% of packets • Often good nodes at a distance probability of reception from center node vs xmit strength 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 43 Importance of Asymmetric Links • Asymmetric Link: – >65% successful reception in one direction – <25% successful reception in the other direction • 10%-25% of links are asymmetric • Many long links are asymmetric – in large field it is likely that someone far away can hear you – what does this mean for protocol design? 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 44 Collisions are primary factor • Nodes out of range may have overlapping cells – hidden terminal effect • Collisions => these nodes hear neither ‘parent’ – become stragglers • As the tree propagates – folds back on itself – rebounds from the edge – picking up these stragglers. • Seen in many experiments • Mathematically complex because behavior is not independent beyond singe cell 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 45 Stragglers • significant fraction of links point ‘backwards’ 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 46 Minimal lessons learned • Don’t think about wireless networks as bunch of circles of radius r – connectivity is a probability distribution – falls off with distance, but not as simple fading law – shape varies with time and context • With large, dense arrays the low-probability events are common • Must strike a balance in exploiting structure and adapting to observed behavior • Want simple local rules that have predictable, robust global behavior 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 47 More typical routing for sensor nets • Current applications dominated by data acquisition – route from many nodes to nearest gateway – aggregate from many nodes – routing determined by simple local rules • Nodes listen to data transfers from neighbors – – – – – carries hop-count info monitors link goodness of potential ‘parents’ dynamically selects best node is lesser hop count includes hysterisis and continuous rediscovery gateways emit null data with 0-hop • Much to understand about how such algorithms manage major change 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 48 Self-propagating Programs? Network Programming Rate 100% Percent Programmed • TinyOS components support class of applns. • Tiny virtual machine adds layer of interpretation for specific coordination • Primitives for sensing and communication • Small capsules (24 bytes) • Propagate themselves through network 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 0 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 240 Tim e (seconds) 49 Multihop Bandwidth Management • Should self-organize into fair, dynamic multihop net • Hidden nodes between each pair of “levels” – CSMA is not enough • P[msg-to-base] drops with each hop – Investment in packet increases with distance – need to optimize for low-power fairness! • RTS/CTS costly (power & BW) Local rate control to approx. fairness Priority to forwarding, adjust own data rate Additive increase, multiplicative decrease Listen for retransmission as ack 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 50 Example: Multihop Adaptive Transmission Control Max rate: 4 samples/sec - rate = 4p Channel BW ~20 p/s 1 8 - cannot expect more than 1/3 thru parent Monitor number of children (n) 1 5 1 4 1 6 1 7 B a(n) ~ 1/n b=½ p’ = p + a(n) on success (echo) p’ = p * b node 14 15 16 17 18 5/13/2002 mean 0.36 0.56 0.55 0.55 0.39 p/s (COV) (64%) (14%) (11%) (12%) (11%) without rate control, success drops ~½ per hop TinyOS IPAM 51 Key Experience • Really good at building tinyOS subsystems – non-blocking, split-phase event structures • Internalized the “state of constant change” paradigm – ex: maintain routing tree by constantly rebuilding it – soft state that is always suspect – simple one-way protocols • Operating in the aggregate • Simple mechanisms to accomplish large goals – MAC, ATC • Out of the box on networking abstractions – Low-power listen, wake-up, statistical sampling, weighted aggregation • Understanding of large scale dynamics 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 52 Feeding experience back into simulation 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 53 Rich set of additional challenges • Efficient and robust security primitives • Density independent wake-up, aggregation – sensor => can use radio in ‘analog’ mode • Resilient aggregators • Programming support for systems of generalized state machines • Programming the unstructured aggregate – SPMD, Data Parallel, Query Processing, Tuples • Understanding how an extreme system is behaving and what is its envelope – adversarial simulation • Self-configuring, self-correcting systems 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 54 The “Law of Miniaturization” Innovation Log R Personal Computer Workstation Server Integration Minicomputer Mainframe 99 Time • Each major generation is increasingly smaller, more deeply interactive, arrives when previous is at its strength • Vast majority of computing will be small, embedded, devices connected to the physical world – actually the case today, but... – not connected to us, the web, or each other – this will change 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 55 Where to go for more? • http://www.tinyos.net/tos/ • Jason Hill, Robert Szewczyk, Alec Woo, Seth Hollar, David Culler, Kristofer Pister. System architecture directions for network sensors. ASPLOS 2000. • David E. Culler, Jason Hill, Philip Buonadonna, Robert Szewczyk, and Alec Woo. A Network-Centric Approach to Embedded Software for Tiny Devices. EMSOFT 2001. 5/13/2002 TinyOS IPAM 56