Performance Evaluation of IEEE 1588 Protocol Using Raspberry Pi over WLAN

Author(s):  
Irfan Allahi ◽  
Bilal Khan ◽  
Aamir Sohail Nagra ◽  
Rabbia Idrees ◽  
Shahid Masud
Author(s):  
Diana Bezerra Correia Lima ◽  
Rubens Matheus Brasil da Silva Lima ◽  
Douglas de Farias Medeiros ◽  
Renata Imaculada Soares Pereira ◽  
Cleonilson Protasio de Souza ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (2.6) ◽  
pp. 231
Author(s):  
Teyi Yann Cedric Lawson ◽  
Senthilnathan T

Elliptic Curves when compared to other encryptions scheme such as RSA etc., provides an equivalent security, smaller key sizes, less power consumption, faster calculations, less bandwidth used and is more suitable for Internet of Things devices. In addition of encrypting the data, the devices in the network should also be able to authenticate themselves, which can be achieved with the implementation of “Non-Interactive Zero Knowledge protocol” (NIZKP). This protocol involves two parties: The prover and the Verifier. Prover party should prove to the Verifier that they have the knowledge of something, without revealing what is it. In this paper, a study of Schnorr protocol or ∑- protocol over Elliptic Curves is done and the protocol is implemented in Python using the Python Cryptography Toolkit PyCrypto which is a collection of cryptographic modules implementing various algorithms and protocols. Finally, the results were compared with Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellmann(ECDH) and present a performance evaluation of the protocols on the Raspberry Pi 3B model, a credit-card sized computer used for the development of IoT devices hence the perfect platforms to test the protocol.  


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 6415-6421

This paper proposed a programmable wireless router testbed designed using a microcontroller, Raspberry Pi. The proposed router provides a solution to the limitation of off-theshelf wireless router on its ability to be configured and embedded with new algorithms. The proposed router testbed is designed to have one Header Pi and three Forwarding Pis which act to inject label and forward packet respectively. The evaluation of results is validated with off-the-shelf router. From the setup, it is proven that Raspberry Pi is suitable to be used as a testbed for academic experiment as it has the ability to be reprogrammed. In addition, it has a compact design which eases for laboratories use. Based on the performance evaluation results, both proposed Raspberry Pi router testbed and off-the-shelf router are in line with each other despite the expected differences in terms of throughput, delay and jitter performance. This proves that the designed programmable Raspberry Pi router testbed can be utilized for small-scale hardware experiment purposes rather than software simulation.


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