DCSEOct 30, 2017

A Comprehensive Survey on Fog Computing: State-of-the-art and Research Challenges

arXiv:1710.11001v3903 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It provides a comprehensive review for researchers and practitioners in distributed computing, but it is incremental as it synthesizes existing knowledge without introducing novel methods.

This paper tackles the challenges of cloud computing, such as latency and service level agreements, by surveying fog computing as a complementary paradigm to enable processing at the network edge, but it does not present new experimental results or concrete numbers.

Cloud computing with its three key facets (i.e., IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS) and its inherent advantages (e.g., elasticity and scalability) still faces several challenges. The distance between the cloud and the end devices might be an issue for latency-sensitive applications such as disaster management and content delivery applications. Service Level Agreements (SLAs) may also impose processing at locations where the cloud provider does not have data centers. Fog computing is a novel paradigm to address such issues. It enables provisioning resources and services outside the cloud, at the edge of the network, closer to end devices or eventually, at locations stipulated by SLAs. Fog computing is not a substitute for cloud computing but a powerful complement. It enables processing at the edge while still offering the possibility to interact with the cloud. This article presents a comprehensive survey on fog computing. It critically reviews the state of the art in the light of a concise set of evaluation criteria. We cover both the architectures and the algorithms that make fog systems. Challenges and research directions are also introduced. In addition, the lessons learned are reviewed and the prospects are discussed in terms of the key role fog is likely to play in emerging technologies such as Tactile Internet.

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