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IoT and Edge Computing for Architects

You're reading from   IoT and Edge Computing for Architects Implementing edge and IoT systems from sensors to clouds with communication systems, analytics, and security

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839214806
Length 632 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Perry Lea Perry Lea
Author Profile Icon Perry Lea
Perry Lea
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. IoT and Edge Computing Definition and Use Cases 2. IoT Architecture and Core IoT Modules FREE CHAPTER 3. Sensors, Endpoints, and Power Systems 4. Communications and Information Theory 5. Non-IP Based WPAN 6. IP-Based WPAN and WLAN 7. Long-Range Communication Systems and Protocols (WAN) 8. Edge Computing 9. Edge Routing and Networking 10. Edge to Cloud Protocols 11. Cloud and Fog Topologies 12. Data Analytics and Machine Learning in the Cloud and Edge 13. IoT and Edge Security 14. Consortiums and Communities 15. Other Books You May Enjoy
16. Index

Other protocols

There are many messaging protocols in use or proposed for IoT and M2M deployments. By far the most prevalent are MQTT and CoAP; the next sections explore a few alternatives for specific use cases.

STOMP

STOMP stands for Simple (or Streaming) Text Message-Oriented Middleware Protocol. It is a text-based protocol designed by Codehaus to operate with message-oriented middleware. A broker developed in one programming language can receive messages from a client written in another. The protocol has similarities to HTTP and operates over TCP. STOMP consists of a frame header and a frame body. The current specification is STOMP 1.2, dated October 22, 2012, and is available under a free license.

STOMP is optimized for human readability, fault-tolerant parsing, and self-described data. It is not efficient over networks and communication protocols when accounting for bits/message (that is not its intended design goal). Anything with limited connectivity...

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