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[Author] Yasunori OWADA(4hit)

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  • NerveNet: A Regional Platform Network for Context-Aware Services with Sensors and Actuators Open Access

    Masugi INOUE  Masaaki OHNISHI  Chao PENG  Ruidong LI  Yasunori OWADA  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E94-B No:3
      Page(s):
    618-629

    Wireless access networks of the future could provide a variety of context-aware services with the use of sensor information in order to solve regional social problems and improve the quality of residents' lives as a part of the regional infrastructure. NerveNet is a conceptual regional wireless access platform in which multiple service providers provide their own services with shared use of the network and sensors, enabling a range of context-aware services. The platform acts like a human nervous system. Densely located, interconnected access points with databases and data processing units will provide mobility to terminals without a location server and enable secure sensor data transport on a highly reliable, managed mesh network. This paper introduces the motivations, concept, architecture, system configuration, and preliminary performance results of NerveNet.

  • Field-Trial Experiments of an IoT-Based Fiber Networks Control and Management-Plane Early Disaster Recovery via Narrow-Band and Lossy Links System (FRENLL)

    Sugang XU  Goshi SATO  Masaki SHIRAIWA  Katsuhiro TEMMA  Yasunori OWADA  Noboru YOSHIKANE  Takehiro TSURITANI  Toshiaki KURI  Yoshinari AWAJI  Naruto YONEMOTO  Naoya WADA  

     
    PAPER

      Pubricized:
    2020/05/14
      Vol:
    E103-B No:11
      Page(s):
    1214-1225

    Large-scale disasters can lead to a severe damage or destruction of optical transport networks including the data-plane (D-plane) and control and management-plane (C/M-plane). In addition to D-plane recovery, quick recovery of the C/M-plane network in modern software-defined networking (SDN)-based fiber optical networks is essential not only for emergency control of surviving optical network resources, but also for quick collection of information related to network damage/survivability to enable the optimal recovery plan to be decided as early as possible. With the advent of the Internet of Things (IoT) technologies, low energy consumption, and low-cost IoT devices have been more common. Corresponding long-distance networking technologies such as low-power wide-area (LPWA) and LPWA-based mesh (LPWA-mesh) networks promise wide coverage sensing and environment data collection capabilities. We are motivated to take an infrastructure-less IoT approach to provide long-distance, low-power and inexpensive wireless connectivity and create an emergency C/M-plane network for early disaster recovery. In this paper, we investigate the feasibility of fiber networks C/M-plane recovery using an IoT-based extremely narrow-band, and lossy links system (FRENLL). For the first time, we demonstrate a field-trial experiment of a long-latency/loss tolerable SDN C/M-plane that can take advantage of widely available IoT resources and easy-to-create wireless mesh networks to enable the timely recovery of the C/M-plane after disaster.

  • Looping in OLSRv2 in Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks, Loop Suppression and Loop Correction

    Lee SPEAKMAN  Yasunori OWADA  Kenichi MASE  

     
    PAPER-Network

      Vol:
    E92-B No:4
      Page(s):
    1210-1221

    Transient routing loops have been observed to form in Mobile Ad-hoc Networks running the OLSRv2 proactive link-state routing protocol. The packets falling into loops impact the surrounding network thus degrading throughput even though only a small proportion of the traffic may enter these loops and only for a short time. This becomes significantly more evident when Link Layer Notification is used to catch broken links, inadvertently leading to an increase in the number of loops. Two methods of Loop Detection are introduced and are used to trigger either Loop Suppression by selectively and preemptively discarding the looping packets that are unlikely to reach their destination, or Loop Correction by the notification of the routing protocol to cut the link over which the packet is looping. The newly introduced Loop Suppression and Loop Correction techniques used with Link Layer Notification are shown to significantly increase network performance over plain OLSRv2 and OLSRv2 with Link Layer Notification.

  • NerveNet Architecture and Its Pilot Test in Shirahama for Resilient Social Infrastructure Open Access

    Masugi INOUE  Yasunori OWADA  

     
    INVITED PAPER-Network

      Pubricized:
    2017/03/22
      Vol:
    E100-B No:9
      Page(s):
    1526-1537

    From past experience of the large-scale cutoff of existing networks as a result of the East Japan Great Earthquake and tsunamis, and from previous research on stabilizing ad hoc networks that lack control mechanisms, we have strengthened the resilience of NerveNet. NerveNet was originally designed and developed as an access network for providing context-aware services with the use of sensors and actuators. Thus, at present, it has the capability to enable resilient information sharing and communications in a region even if access to the Internet is impossible in emergency situations. NerveNet is composed of single or multiple base stations interconnected by a variety of Ethernet-based wired or wireless transmission systems. A network is formed using line, star, tree, or mesh topology. Network and data management works in each base station in a distributed manner, resulting in the resilience of this system. In collaboration with the town of Shirahama in Wakayama prefecture in Japan, we have been conducting a pilot test with the NerveNet testbed. The test includes nine base stations interconnected by 5.6-GHz Wi-Fi and Fixed Wireless Access (FWA), providing tourists and residents with Internet access. In the future, we expect that not only NerveNet but also other novel technologies will contribute to solving social problems and enriching people's lives.