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Service Encapsulation in ICEBERG

Service Encapsulation in ICEBERG. Bhaskaran Raman ICEBERG, EECS, U.C.Berkeley Presentation at Ericsson, Sweden, June 2001. Service broker. Subscriber user. Service mgt. Value added service providers. Value added service providers. Value added service providers. Access network

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Service Encapsulation in ICEBERG

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  1. Service Encapsulation in ICEBERG Bhaskaran Raman ICEBERG, EECS, U.C.Berkeley Presentation at Ericsson, Sweden, June 2001

  2. Service broker Subscriber user Service mgt. Value added service providers Value added service providers Value added service providers Access network operator Core network operator Content providers Content providers Content providers The Case for Services "Service and content providers play an increasing role in the value chain. The dominant part of the revenues moves from the network operator to the content provider. It is expected that value-added data services and content provisioning will create the main growth." Access Networks Cellular systems Cordless (DECT) Bluetooth DECT data Wireless LAN Wireless local loop Satellite Cable DSL

  3. Devices Services ICEBERG’s Goal: Potentially Any Network Service (PANS) Cellular Phone Text to speech Email repository

  4. Extensibility is Important • New device: should be able to access existing services • New service: should accessible from existing devices • Any-to-any capability: • Unique to ICEBERG • Existing commercial products for service integration do not talk about this

  5. ICEBERG: A Middleware Approach • Middleware components: Naming service, APC, IAPs, Preference Registry • Naming service: provides device/service name independence • APC: device/service data type independence • IAPs: provide network independence • Preference Registry: for personalization of incoming communication (for a end user)

  6. Two kinds fo services • Communication services (personal mobility) • Service end-points (service mobility)

  7. Personal Mobility • Person is the communication end-point, not the device • Enabled through the preference registry (acts as a redirection agent) • Example services built: • Redirection • Filtering • Service handoff

  8. Preference Registry GUI

  9. Preference Registry GUI

  10. Devices GSM cellular phones Desktop phones (VAT) Using GSM audio Using PCM audio PSTN phones Services MediaManager (for access to email) MP3 Jukebox (from Ninja) Instant messaging (from Ninja) Voice-mail service Service Mobility: Devices and Services in ICEBERG

  11. PANS and Extensibility • All services accessible from all devices • All devices can communicate with one another • Extensibility: services and devices were added incrementally, not all at once

  12. Illustrating Extensibility im@cs.berkeley.edu Sanctio PCM-ULAW  Sun au  Text Instant Messaging Service 674 GSM  PCM-ULAW  Sun au  Text

  13. Jukebox Service Illustrating Extensibility jukebox@cs.berkeley.edu PCM-ULAW  PCM-UB  MP3 529 GSM  PCM-ULAW  PCM-UB  MP3

  14. Jukebox Service Illustrating Extensibility jukebox@cs.berkeley.edu 529 G.723  PCM-SW  PCM-UB  MP3 3012

  15. Tel. No:s Pager no:s Email-addrs IP-Addrs IAP IAP IAP IAP Adding a new device/service end-point • Add an IAP • Add entries to the Naming Service • Add operators (transformation agents) to the APC service

  16. Adding a service end-point: Example • Jukebox service • IAP: interface to the Ninja Jukebox service • 800 lines of Java code • Adding naming entries for the Jukebox service: trivial • Operators added: • MP3  PCM-UB (mpg123) • PCM-UB  PCM-ULAW (sox)

  17. Adding a device end-point: Example • PSTN phones • Interface through a H.323 gateway • Device specific part of IAP: 15,000 lines • ICEBERG specific part of IAP: 900 lines • Adding naming entries: simple • Operators added: • PCM-UB  PCM-SW (sox) • PCM-SW  G.723 (lbccodec) • G.723  PCM-SW (lbccodec)

  18. Adding new IAPs • Device specific part may be very complex • H.323 gateway, GSM cellular-phones • ICEBERG specific part is quite simple – a few days of coding • Importantly, once the IAP is implemented and deployed, it can be used for all services

  19. Adding new operators • Operator itself could be very complex • G.723 codec, GSM codec, Text-to-speech • But, once they have been implemented and deployed, they can be reused for multiple purposes • E.g., the MP3  PCM-UB operator

  20. Future Directions • Service composition in the Wide-Area • Examples: • Email to voice • Video-on-demand over PDA • Ad insertion in video stream • Others: storage, redirection… • Independent service providers deploy services: portal providers compose them • Issues: • Performance sensitive choice of service instances • Fault-tolerant maintenance of session when service instances fail

  21. Conclusions • ICEBERG: Middleware approach to enabling services • Extensible PANS through • Network independence (IAP) • Name independence (Distributed naming service) • Data type independence (APC) • Implementation of several device and service end-points in our testbed has shown the flexibility of our architecture • See the demo in the afternoon!

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