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El. knyga: Digital Home Networking [Wiley Online]

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  • Formatas: 396 pages
  • Serija: ISTE
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Oct-2011
  • Leidėjas: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 111860282X
  • ISBN-13: 9781118602829
  • Wiley Online
  • Kaina: 213,57 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Formatas: 396 pages
  • Serija: ISTE
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Oct-2011
  • Leidėjas: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 111860282X
  • ISBN-13: 9781118602829
In an era of ubiquity, nomadism and ecological challenge, the maturity of wireless technologies, the readiness of broadband Internet access and the popularity of smart terminals should contribute to emancipating IT services in connection with the home and home-based resources. This book, in light of several years of applied research and technological surveys, aims at describing the digital home networking environment, its techniques, and the challenges around its service architecture.

Digital Home Networking aims to provide a broad introduction to state-of-the-art digital home standards and protocols, as well as an in-depth description of service architectures for entertainment and domotic services involving digital home resources. The book covers aspects such as networking, remote access, security, interoperability, scalability and Quality of Service. Notably, it describes the generic architecture, which was proposed and developed in the context of the EUREKA/Celtic research project "Feel@Home".
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(10)
Romain Carbou
1.1 Cultural context around a definition
1(2)
1.2 A brief history of home automation
3(4)
1.2.1 Stay naive and humble
3(2)
1.2.2 Terminology around domotics
5(1)
1.2.3 A bit of history
5(2)
1.3 Coming to a definition of the digital home
7(2)
1.3.1 What is in the digital home?
8(1)
1.3.2 What is not in the digital home?
8(1)
1.4 Plan of this book
9(1)
1.5 Bibliography
10(1)
Chapter 2 Actors in Digital Home Networking
11(6)
Romain Carbou
2.1 Scope
11(1)
2.2 Categories of actors
12(3)
2.2.1 Persons
12(1)
2.2.2 Other home actors
13(1)
2.2.3 Services and third parties
13(1)
2.2.4 Legal bodies and public services
14(1)
2.3 User roles
15(1)
2.4 Bibliography
16(1)
Chapter 3 Network Technologies
17(42)
Pablo Najera
Ana Nieto
3.1 Local connectivity and networks
17(13)
3.1.1 Background of LAN technologies
18(1)
3.1.2 Ethernet
19(2)
3.1.3 IEEE 802.1 1x
21(3)
3.1.4 Bluetooth
24(2)
3.1.5 IEEE 802.15.4
26(2)
3.1.6 Comparison of LAN technologies
28(2)
3.2 Connectivity to main networks
30(24)
3.2.1 Technologies providing Internet access - an overview
30(3)
3.2.2 xDSL
33(3)
3.2.3 FTTH
36(4)
3.2.4 3G
40(4)
3.2.5 WiMAX
44(3)
3.2.6 Long-term evolution
47(4)
3.2.7 Comparison of broadband technologies
51(3)
3.3 Bibliography
54(5)
Chapter 4 Standards
59(38)
Remi Bars
Jorge Gomez-Montalvo
Mohamed Mahdi
Cristina Alcaraz
Rodrigo Roman
4.1 Introduction
59(1)
4.2 Standards used in the home
59(23)
4.2.1 DLNA: Digital Living Network Alliance
59(3)
4.2.2 UPnP
62(8)
4.2.3 ZigBee
70(12)
4.3 Remote access to homes
82(10)
4.3.1 P2P and web service
83(1)
4.3.2 UPnP remote access
84(1)
4.3.3 HGI remote access
85(1)
4.3.4 TISPAN remote access (based on UPnP RA:1)
86(2)
4.3.5 TISPAN RA using UPnP proxy
88(4)
4.4 Bibliography
92(5)
Chapter 5 Personalization and Home Context
97(42)
Gema Maestro
Lin Sun
Daqing Zhang
Bin Guo
5.1 Introduction
97(1)
5.2 Personalization
98(14)
5.2.1 Personalization-related standards
99(8)
5.2.2 A personalization engine for extended digital homes
107(5)
5.3 Context management and sharing
112(17)
5.3.1 Tools for handling context semantics
113(8)
5.3.2 Context manager
121(8)
5.4 Protege - an ontology editor
129(7)
5.4.1 Description and usage
129(2)
5.4.2 Feel@Home personalization ontology
131(5)
5.5 Bibliography
136(3)
Chapter 6 Security
139(64)
Anas Abou El Kalam
Marc Lacoste
Mohamed Maachaoui
Francisco Moyano
Rodrigo Roman
6.1 Importance of security and privacy
139(4)
6.1.1 Security considerations in digital home scenarios
140(1)
6.1.2 Privacy considerations in digital home scenarios
141(1)
6.1.3 Trust considerations in digital home scenarios
142(1)
6.2 Security requirements of the extended digital home
143(6)
6.2.1 Approach
143(2)
6.2.2 Device requirements
145(1)
6.2.3 User requirements
146(1)
6.2.4 Information requirements
147(1)
6.2.5 Privacy requirements
147(2)
6.2.6 Toward service-oriented home network architectures
149(1)
6.3 A conceptual security architecture
149(7)
6.3.1 Introduction
149(1)
6.3.2 Functional architecture
150(2)
6.3.3 Organic architecture
152(3)
6.3.4 Discussions
155(1)
6.4 Relevant security mechanisms
156(33)
6.4.1 Authentication
156(8)
6.4.2 Trust model
164(6)
6.4.3 Privacy and anonymity
170(12)
6.4.4 Usability
182(7)
6.5 Applying the security architecture
189(6)
6.5.1 IMS embodiment
189(2)
6.5.2 VPN embodiment
191(4)
6.6 Bibliography
195(8)
Chapter 7 Quality of Experience and Quality of Service
203(56)
Jorge Gomez-Montalvo
Ernesto Exposito
7.1 Introduction
203(1)
7.2 QoS concepts and standards
204(16)
7.2.1 Quality of experience
206(2)
7.2.2 QoS at the transport layer
208(4)
7.2.3 QoS at the network layer
212(2)
7.2.4 QoS at link layer
214(4)
7.2.5 UPnP AV architecture and UPnP QoS architecture
218(2)
7.3 IETF multimedia protocols
220(3)
7.3.1 Session protocols
220(2)
7.3.2 Multimedia streaming transport protocols
222(1)
7.3.3 QoS parameters for multimedia applications
223(1)
7.4 Semantic approach for QoS management in home networks
223(28)
7.4.1 MODA: a layered multimedia ontology-based framework for QoS
224(10)
7.4.2 Putting semantics and QoS for home networks together: MODA and UPnP QoS-a study case
234(17)
7.5 Conclusion
251(1)
7.6 Bibliography
252(7)
Chapter 8 Service Management
259(50)
Marta Bel Martin
Olivier Dugeon
Julien Fasson
Anas Abou El Kalam
Mohamed Maachaoui
Beatrice Paillassa
Francisco Javier Ramon Salguero
Warodom Werapun
8.1 Introduction
259(1)
8.2 Service management basis
260(2)
8.2.1 Service characteristics
260(1)
8.2.2 Architecture distribution
261(1)
8.3 Basic protocols
262(15)
8.3.1 HTTP
262(6)
8.3.2 SIP
268(9)
8.4 Network architecture and service management
277(28)
8.4.1 VPN
278(8)
8.4.2 IMS
286(7)
8.4.3 P2P networks
293(7)
8.4.4 SIP and P2P integration
300(5)
8.5 Conclusion
305(1)
8.6 Bibliography
306(3)
Chapter 9 The Feel@Home System
309(46)
Marta Bel Martin
Gema Maestro Molina
Mohamed Mahdi
Olivier Dugeon
9.1 The Feel@Home architecture
309(20)
9.1.1 Entity diagram
311(2)
9.1.2 Functional analysis
313(5)
9.1.3 Components diagram
318(3)
9.1.4 Nodes and interfaces
321(4)
9.1.5 Sequence diagrams
325(4)
9.1.6 Conclusions
329(1)
9.2 Local and remote content distribution through VPN
329(8)
9.2.1 Functional description
330(2)
9.2.2 Hardware devices
332(1)
9.2.3 Selected technologies and libraries
333(1)
9.2.4 Software components
333(1)
9.2.5 Security
334(1)
9.2.6 Personalization
335(2)
9.3 Local and remote content distribution through IMS
337(15)
9.3.1 Selected technologies and libraries
337(2)
9.3.2 Functional description
339(8)
9.3.3 Interoperators interconnection
347(1)
9.3.4 QoS support in IMS
348(1)
9.3.5 Security
349(1)
9.3.6 Software components
350(1)
9.3.7 Test bed
350(2)
9.4 Conclusion
352(1)
9.5 Bibliography
353(2)
Chapter 10 Home Interconnection through the Internet
355(30)
Olivier Dugeon
Mohamed Mahdi
10.1 Introduction
355(1)
10.2 Interoperability scenarios
356(14)
10.2.1 Definition and requirements
356(1)
10.2.2 VPN/IMS gateway architecture
357(2)
10.2.3 Common policy rules management
359(1)
10.2.4 IMS/VPN common APIs
360(3)
10.2.5 Architecture
363(1)
10.2.6 VPN to IMS scenario
364(1)
10.2.7 IMS to VPN scenario
365(4)
10.2.8 Deployment issues
369(1)
10.3 Internet-based content sharing between remote homes
370(14)
10.3.1 Synthesis of multimedia content sharing solutions
370(3)
10.3.2 Proxify UPnP A/V
373(9)
10.3.3 Implementation, security and performance
382(2)
10.4 Conclusion
384(1)
10.5 Bibliography
384(1)
Chapter 11 Conclusion
385(4)
Michel Diaz
11.1 Bibliography
388(1)
List of Authors 389(2)
Index 391
Romain Carbou has been a senior service architect in mobile services and European project coordinator at Orange Labs since 2005. He managed the CELTIC Research Project 'Feel@Home' from 2008 to 2010.

Michel Diaz is Director of Research at the French National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS), working at LAAS-CNRS in Toulouse. He has received the Silver Core of the IFIP, is Senior Member of the IEEE, member of the New York Academy of Sciences and is listed in the Who's Who in Science and Engineering.

Ernesto Exposito has been Assistant professor at the INSA of Toulouse and a researcher at the LAAS laboratory of the CNRS, France since 2006. His research interests include autonomic communication services aimed at satisfying the requirements of new generation multimedia applications in heterogeneous network environments.

Rodrigo Roman is a postdoctoral researcher working at the University of Malaga, Spain. At present, his research interests are mainly focused on the secure integration of sensor networks with other infrastructures, such as critical infrastructures and the Internet of Things.