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Link layer driver architecture for unified radio power management in wireless sensor networks
Author(s) -
Kevin Klues,
Guoliang Xing,
Chenyang Lu
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
acm transactions on embedded computing systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.435
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1558-3465
pISSN - 1539-9087
DOI - 10.1145/1721695.1721707
Subject(s) - computer science , power management , wireless sensor network , computer network , overhead (engineering) , link layer , wireless , embedded system , distributed computing , power (physics) , telecommunications , operating system , network packet , physics , quantum mechanics
Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) represent a new generation of networked embedded systems that must achieve long lifetimes on scarce amounts of energy. Since radio communication accounts for the primary source of power drain in these networks, a large number of different radio power management protocols have been proposed. However, the lack of operating system support for flexibly integrating them with a diverse set of applications and network platforms has made them difficult to use. This article focuses on providing link layer support toward realizing a unified power management architecture (UPMA) for WSNs. In contrast to existing monolithic approaches, we provide (i) a set of standard interfaces that separate link layer power management protocols from common MAC level functionality, (ii) an architectural framework that allows applications to easily swap out different power-management protocols depending on its needs, and (iii) a mechanism for coordinating multiple applications with different power management requirements. We have implemented our approach on both the Mica2 and Telosb radio drivers in TinyOS-2.0, the second generation of the de facto standard operating system for WSNs. Microbenchmark results show that our approach can coordinate the power-management requirements of multiple applications in a platform independent fashion while incurring negligible overhead.

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