6TiSCH: "IPv6 over the TSCH mode of IEEE 802.15.4e". Background/Introduction: ------------------------
Low-power and Lossy Networks (LLNs) interconnect a possibly large number of resource-constrained nodes to form a wireless mesh network. The 6LoWPAN, ROLL and CoRE IETF Working Groups have defined protocols at various layers of the protocol stack, including an IPv6 adaptation layer, a routing protocol and a web transfer protocol. This protocol stack has been used with IEEE802.15.4 low-power radios. The Timeslotted Channel Hopping (TSCH) mode was introduced in 2012 as an amendment to the Medium Access Control (MAC) portion of the IEEE802.15.4 standard. TSCH is the emerging standard for industrial automation and process control LLNs, with a direct inheritance from WirelessHART and ISA100.11a. Defining IPv6 over TSCH, 6TiSCH is a key to enable the further adoption of IPv6 in industrial standards and the convergence of Operational Technology (OT) with Information Technology (IT). The nodes in a IEEE802.15.4 TSCH network communicate by following a Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) schedule. A timeslot in this schedule provides a unit of bandwidth that is allocated for communication between neighbor nodes. The allocation can be programmed such that the predictable transmission pattern matches the traffic. This avoids idle listening, and extends battery lifetime for constrained nodes. Channel-hopping improves reliability in the presence of narrow- band interference and multi-path fading. These techniques enable a new range of use cases for LLNs, including: - Control loops in a wireless process control network, in which high reliability and a fully deterministic behavior are required. - Service Provider networks transporting data from different independent clients, and for which an operator needs flow isolation and traffic shaping. - Networks comprising energy harvesting nodes, which require an extremely low and predictable average power consumption. IEEE802.15.4 only defines the link-layer mechanisms. It does not define how the network communication schedule is built and matched to the traffic requirements of the network. Description of Working Group: ----------------------------- The Working Group will focus on enabling IPv6 over the TSCH mode of the IEEE802.15.4 standard. The extent of the problem space for the WG is one or more LLNs, possibly federated through a common backbone link via one or more LLN Border Routers (LBRs). The WG will rely on, and if necessary extend, existing mechanisms for authenticating LBRs. Initially, the WG has limited its scope to distributed routing over a static schedule using the Routing Protocol for LLNs (RPL) on the resulting network. This new charter allows for the dynamic allocation of cells and their exchange between adjacent peers to accommodate the available bandwidth to the variations of throughput in IP traffic. The WG will continue working on securing the join process and making that fit within the constraints of high latency, low throughput and small frame sizes that characterize IEEE802.15.4 TSCH. Additionally, IEEE802.15.4 TSCH being a deterministic MAC, it is envisioned that 6TiSCH will benefit from the work of detnet WG to establish the so-called deterministic tracks. The group will define the objects and methods that needs to be configured, and provide the associated requirements to detnet. The WG will interface with other appropriate groups in the IETF Internet, Operations and Management, Routing and Security areas. Work Items: ----------- The group will: 1. Produce "6TiSCH architecture" to describe the design of 6TiSCH networks. This document will highlight the different architectural blocks and signaling flows, including the operation of the network in the presence of multiple LBRs. The existing document will be augmented to cover dynamic scheduling and application of the DetNet work. 2. Produce an Information Model containing the management requirements of a 6TiSCH node. This includes describing how an entity can manage the TSCH schedule on a 6TiSCH node, and query timeslot information from that node. MAC-layer interactions to negotiate Time Slots between peers will be proposed, to be eventually continued at IEEE. 3. Produce an "On-the-fly" (OTF) specification to enable a distributed dynamic scheduling of time slots, negotiated between adjacent peers, with the capability for 6TiSCH routers to appropriate chunks of the Time/frequency matrix without starving, or interfering with, other 6TiSCH nodes. This particular work will focus on IP traffic since the work on tracks is not yet advanced enough to specify their requirements for OTF operations. 4. Produce a specification for a secure 6TiSCH network bootstrap, adapted to the constraints of 6TiSCH nodes and leveraging existing art when possible. 5. Produce requirements to the detnet WG, detailing the 6TiSCH tracks and the data models to manipulate them from a central controller such as a PCE. The work will include a best practice configuration for RPL and OF0 operation over the static schedule. Based on that experience the group may produce a requirements draft for OF0 extensions, to be studied in ROLL. Non-milestone work items: ------------------------- The Working Group will develop 6TiSCH Test Description documents which will be updated as the technology evolves, and will be used for running interoperability events, under ETSI support (i.e., 6TiSCH ETSI Plugtests). Such documents will be helpful for implementers, providing details and clarifications, needed for running code, and implementing the 6TiSCH technology. Each document may address specific 6TiSCH features, in scope of the specific Plugtest's edition. _______________________________________________ 6tisch mailing list [email protected] https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/6tisch
