IIC Journal of Innovation 5th Edition | Page 76

A Practical Guide to Using the Industrial Internet Connectivity Framework than the overlapping one Misconception figure (Figure 1). in the different challenges than enterprise networks do. Most importantly, industrial systems combine complex, intimately interconnected software modules and devices. Interoperability between the various components is the most demanding requirement on the architecture. With crisp definitions of interoperability, the other requirements can be much better understood. The IIoT Connectivity stack shares layers 1-3 with the OSI model and defines levels 4 through 6 in terms of the interoperability provided. This may sound distressing, but in reality, the lack of overlap in the IIoT space actually makes an architect’s task much simpler. The real problem is not choosing between similar options; it is understanding the different options and overcoming biases. The Industrial Connectivity Stack The Internet has well-developed layered stack models, most notably the OSI “7-layer” model and the Internet “4-layer” model. However, the IIC experts found that these models did not adequately capture the requirements of industrial networks. Thus, the IICF defines a new model, called the IIoT Connectivity Stack Model (See Figure 3). The layers focus on what is exchanged. At the network layer, participants exchange bounded-length packets of information. This is usually implemented by the familiar Internet Protocol (IP). Figure 3: IIoT Connectivity Stack. Below layer 3 “Networking”, the IIoT stack duplicates traditional Internet stacks. Above, it focuses on clarifying the interoperability that industrial IoT systems need. Above it, the transport layer exchanges variable-length messages. Participants share opaque sequences of bytes. Participants using Both the Enterprise Internet and the Industrial Internet function by sharing data. However, industrial systems present - 74 - September 2017