IIC Journal of Innovation 5th Edition | Page 78

A Practical Guide to Using the Industrial Internet Connectivity Framework  Of course, this design targets a future world of vastly connected systems. There is a more immediate question: “if I’m starting an IIoT project, what should I use?” Next, we present the IICF guidance and a simple tool to navigate that guidance. Have standards-defined Core Gateways to all other connectivity core standards. With that definition, the IIC experts proceeded to define criteria, survey standards and evaluate all the standards against those criteria. The criteria definitions alone are a huge contribution, beyond the scope of this paper. They resulted in an “Assessment Template” with deep analyses of the six standards with greatest IIoT traction: DDS, OPC UA, oneM2M, RESTful HTTP, MQTT, and CoAP. The assessment Many domain technologies Standard Core Gateways Few Core Standards Figure 4: Core Connectivity Architecture. Each core connectivity standard requires a standardized core gateway to connect to the other core architectures. Other domain technologies can then interface to the system via any core standard. This design scales linearly with the number of technologies, thus enabling a true Internet. includes business, usage, functional and implementation viewpoints. It is a unique analysis of connectivity technologies for industrial systems. In the end, the IICF identified four of the six as potential core standards: DDS, OPC UA, oneM2M, and RESTful HTTP. - 76 - September 2017