Lecture Notes in Computer Science 6369 CommencedPublicationin1973 FoundingandFormerSeriesEditors: GerhardGoos,JurisHartmanis,andJanvanLeeuwen EditorialBoard DavidHutchison,UK TakeoKanade,USA JosefKittler,UK JonM.Kleinberg,USA AlfredKobsa,USA FriedemannMattern,Switzerland JohnC.Mitchell,USA MoniNaor,Israel OscarNierstrasz,Switzerland C.PanduRangan,India BernhardSteffen,Germany MadhuSudan,USA DemetriTerzopoulos,USA DougTygar,USA GerhardWeikum,Germany Services Science SublineofLecturesNotesinComputerScience SublineEditors-in-Chief RobertJ.T.Morris,IBMResearch,USA MichaelP.Papazoglou,UniversityofTilburg,TheNetherlands DarrellWilliamson,CSIRO,Sydney,Australia SublineEditorialBoard BoualemBentallah,Australia IngolfKrueger,USA AthmanBouguettaya,Australia PaulMaglio,USA MurthyDevarakonda,USA ChristosNikolaou,Greece CarloGhezzi,Italy KlausPohl,Germany Chi-HungChi,China StefanTai,Germany HaniJamjoom,USA YuzuruTanaka,Japan PaulKlingt,TheNetherlands ChristopherWard,USA Arne J. Berre Asunción Gómez-Pérez Kurt Tutschku Dieter Fensel (Eds.) Future Internet – FIS 2010 Third Future Internet Symposium Berlin, Germany, September 20-22, 2010 Proceedings 1 3 VolumeEditors ArneJ.Berre SINTEFInformationandCommunicationTechnology Forskningsveien1,0373Oslo,Norway E-mail:[email protected] AsunciónGómez-Pérez UniversidadPolitécnicadeMadrid,FacultaddeInformática CampusdeMontegancedo,sn,28660BoadilladelMonte,Spain E-mail:asun@fi.upm.es KurtTutschku UniversityofVienna,InstituteofDistributedandMultimediaSystems Universitätsstr.10/T11,1090Vienna,Austria E-mail:[email protected] DieterFensel UniversityofInnsbruck Technikerstr.21a,6020Innsbruck,Austria E-mail:[email protected] LibraryofCongressControlNumber:2010934213 CRSubjectClassification(1998):C.2,H.4,H.3,H.5,J.1,H.2 LNCSSublibrary:SL1–TheoreticalComputerScienceandGeneralIssues ISSN 0302-9743 ISBN-10 3-642-15876-5SpringerBerlinHeidelbergNewYork ISBN-13 978-3-642-15876-6SpringerBerlinHeidelbergNewYork Thisworkissubjecttocopyright.Allrightsarereserved,whetherthewholeorpartofthematerialis concerned,specificallytherightsoftranslation,reprinting,re-useofillustrations,recitation,broadcasting, reproductiononmicrofilmsorinanyotherway,andstorageindatabanks.Duplicationofthispublication orpartsthereofispermittedonlyundertheprovisionsoftheGermanCopyrightLawofSeptember9,1965, initscurrentversion,andpermissionforusemustalwaysbeobtainedfromSpringer.Violationsareliable toprosecutionundertheGermanCopyrightLaw. springer.com ©Springer-VerlagBerlinHeidelberg2010 PrintedinGermany Typesetting:Camera-readybyauthor,dataconversionbyScientificPublishingServices,Chennai,India Printedonacid-freepaper 06/3180 Preface The current Internet has undergone an essential transformation: it has changed froma network of networksthat enables accessto remote machines by a consis- tentprotocolsuite(TCP/IP),toanetworkofcontent,applications,andservices. Thus, it has become a modern commodity for everyone. TheFutureInternet(FI)isdestinedtocontinuethisdevelopmentandtopro- videimprovedfeaturesandusabilityforindividualsandbusiness.Itsapplications are expected to originatefrom areas such as entertainment, health, energy grid, utilities and the environment,transport,mobility, and logistics.Tight economic constraints, however, require the Future Internet to consolidate and converge application-specific networks and support for the Internet of Services (IoS), the Internet of Things (IoT), and the Internet of Content (IoC) in a homogenous and, if possible, a single system. A simple investigation of network performance requirements of the antic- ipated FI applications reveals a set of contrary needs that have challenged research on network architectures and protocols for decades. Only a few ap- plications have been successful, e.g., P2P systems, which can adapt easily to heterogeneousenvironments.Similarly,semantictechnologyhasprovidedmean- ingfulrelationshipsofcontent,buthasfailedwhenithascometomanageability and performance in universal and heterogeneous network systems. Thus Internet applications have so far been developed mainly for fitting to specificnetworks.Nowitis timeforachange.Networksshouldbe developedfor applications. The universe of these networks might be considered as the Future Internet. The future network ecosystem will be supported by a consolidated, preferably single, platform. This platform needs to include support for services, things, and content on both a network and an application level. The FI ecosys- tem has to be sustainable, meaning that applications are supported efficiently, i.e., consuming a minimal amount of required resources, e.g., capacity, electric- ity, etc., while providing dedicated security and sufficient performance for the applications throughout their lifetime. Classicalresearchonnetworkarchitecturesandprotocols,semantictechnolo- gies,servicetechnologies,contentandmedia,sensorsandthingsisisolated.Thus these disciplines have been unable to meet all requirements. Therefore, an in- terdisciplinary approach of these research areas is suggested for a sustainable Future Internet. The aim of the Future Internet Symposium 2010 (FIS 2010) was to bring together scientists and engineers from academia and industry and from vari- ous disciplines to exchange and discuss their ideas, views, and research results towards a consolidated, converged, and sustainable Future Internet. September 2010 Arne J. Berre Asun Gom´ez-P´erez Kurt Tutschku Dieter Fensel Committees Conference Chair Dieter Fensel (STI Innsbruck, Austria) TPC Co-chairs InternetofServices,ThingsandContentTrack: Arne J. Berre (SINTEF, Norway) Semantic Technologies Track: AsunGom´ez-P´erez(UniversidadPolit´ecnicade Madrid, Spain) Network Architecture and Protocols Track: Kurt Tutschku (University of Vienna, Austria) Education Chairs Ruzica Piskac (EPFL, Switzerland) Elena Simperl (KIT, Germany) Finance Alexander Wahler (STI International, Austria) Industrial Chair UdoBub(DeutscheTelekomAG,Laboratories, Germany) Publication Chair Rau´lGarc´ıaCastro(UniversidadPolit´ecnicade Madrid, Spain) Local Chair Robert Tolksdorf (Freie Universita¨t Berlin, Germany) Meta Data Knud Mo¨ller (DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland) Axel Polleres (DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland) Panel Chair Elmar Dorner (SAP, Germany) Poster and Demo Chairs Harith Alani (Open University, UK) Pierluigi Plebani (Politecnico di Milano, Italy) Tutorial Chairs Oscar Corcho (UPM, Spain) Marko Luther (DoCoMo, Germany) Workshop Chairs Anna Fensel (FTW, Austria) Dumitru Roman (SINTEF, Norway) Steering Committee Dieter Fensel (Chair, STI Innsbruck, Austria) Hendrik Berndt (DoCoMo, Germany) Udo Bub (Telekom, Germany) Elmar Dorner (SAP, Germany) John Domingue (Open University, UK) Rudi Studer (KIT, Germany) Robert Tolksdorf (Freie Universita¨t Berlin, Germany) VIII Committees Technical Program Committee Semantic Technologies Karl Aberer (EPFL, Germany) Track Oscar Corcho (Universidad Polit´ecnica de Madrid, Spain) Manolis Koubarakis (University of Athens, Greece) Kirk Martinez (University of Southampton, UK) NormanPaton(UniversityofManchester,UK) Terry Payne (University of Liverpool, UK) David de Roure (University of Southampton, UK) Kai-Uwe Sattler (Ilmenau University of Technology, Germany) Steffen Staab (University of Koblenz, Germany) Rudi Studer (University of Karlsruhe, Germany) York Sure (Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany) Internet of Services, Things, Luciano Baresi (Politecnico di Milano, Italy) and Content Track Franck Bariber (University of Pau, France) Manuel Carro (Universidad Polit´ecnica de Madrid, Spain) Petros Daras (CERT/ITI, Greece) Werner Kuhn (University of Muenster, Germany) Josef Noll (University of Oslo/UNIK, Norway) Noel Plouzeau (University of Rennes, IRISA/INRIA, France) Mike Surridge (University of Southampton/ITI, UK) Aphrodite Tsalgatidou (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece) Ovidiu Vermesan (SINTEF, Norway) Theodore Zahariadis (Synelixis Solutions Ltd, Greece) Network Architecture and Augusto Casaca (IST, Portugal) Protocols Track Jordi Domingo-Pascual(Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain) Markus Fiedler (Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden) Timur Friedman (UPMC Paris, France) Committees IX Wolfgang Kellerer (DoCoMo Communications Laboratories Europe, Germany) AmundKvalbein(SimulaResearchLaboratory, Norway) Igor Margasinski (Warsaw University of Technology, Poland) Hermann de Meer (University of Passau, Germany) Thomas Magedanz (Technische Universit¨at Berlin, Germany) Sandor Molnar (Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary) Bernhard Plattner (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland) Burkhard Stiller (University of Zu¨rich, Switzerland) Referees K. Aberer W. Kellerer T. Payne L. Baresi M. Koubarakis B. Plattner A. Al-Hezmi E. Koutrouli N. Plouzeau N. Ali W. Kuhn G. Retvari G. Athanasopoulos A. Kvalbein D. de Roure O. Barais G. Ladwig K.-U. Sattler F. Bariber S. Lampe S. Staab G. Biczok G. Lovasz B. Stiller M. Carro T. Magedanz R. Studer O. Corcho I. Margasinski Y. Sure A. Casaca K. Martinez M. Surridge P. Daras S. Molnar A. Tsalgatidou H. de Meer G. Nain K. Tutschku J. Domingo-Pascual J. Noll O. Vermesan M. Fiedler M. Pantazoglou T. Zahariadis T. Friedman N. Paton Sponsoring Institutions FIS2010isbroughttoyouby STIInternationalandsupportedbyFreieUniver- sit¨at Berlin and the SOFI Project. Table of Contents German-Lab Experimental Facility ................................. 1 Dennis Schwerdel, Daniel Gu¨nther, Robert Henjes, Bernd Reuther, and Paul Mu¨ller Design and Evaluation of a Socket Emulator for Publish/Subscribe Networks ....................................................... 11 George Xylomenos and Blerim Cici Publish/Subscribe on Top of DHT Using RETE Algorithm............ 20 Yan Shvartzshnaider, Maximilian Ott, and David Levy Experimental Testing in the Future Internet PERIMETER Project..... 30 Eileen Dillon, Gemma Power, and Frances Cleary Grant An Economic Case for End System Multicast........................ 40 Morteza Analoui and Mohammad Hossein Rezvani Towards a Secure Rendezvous Network for Future Publish/Subscribe Architectures.................................................... 49 Nikos Fotiou, Giannis F. Marias, and George C. Polyzos Mobile Botnet Detection Using Network Forensics.................... 57 Ickin Vural and Hein Venter Towards Linked Open Services and Processes........................ 68 Reto Krummenacher, Barry Norton, and Adrian Marte Energy Consumption Information Services for Smart Home Inhabitants ..................................................... 78 Michael Schwanzer and Anna Fensel Knowledge Management in Sensor Enabled Online Services............ 88 Dominick Smyth, Paolo Cappellari, and Mark Roantree Managing On-Demand Business Applications with HierarchicalService Level Agreements ................................................ 97 Wolfgang Theilmann, Ulrich Winkler, Jens Happe, and Ildefons Magrans de Abril Controlling Access to RDF Graphs................................. 107 Giorgos Flouris, Irini Fundulaki, Maria Michou, and Grigoris Antoniou An Authoring Tool for User Generated Mobile Services ............... 118 Jos´e Danado, Marcin Davies, Paulo Ricca, and Anna Fensel XII Table of Contents A Provenance-BasedCompliance Framework ........................ 128 Roc´ıo Aldeco-P´erez and Luc Moreau Network Virtualization - Opportunities and Challenges for Operators... 138 Jorge Carapinha, Peter Feil, Paul Weissmann, Saemundur E. Thorsteinsson, C¸a˘grı Etemo˘glu, O´lafur Ingþo´rsson, Selami C¸iftc¸i, and Ma´rcio Melo Cloud Computing and the Impact on Enterprise IT .................. 148 Maximilian Ahrens Author Index.................................................. 157 German-Lab Experimental Facility DennisSchwerdel1,DanielGünther1,RobertHenjes2, BerndReuther1,andPaulMüller1 1UniversityofKaiserslautern,IntegratedCommunicationSystemsLab {schwerdel,guenther,reuther,pmueller}@cs.uni-kl.de 2UniversityofWürzburg,InstituteofComputerScience [email protected] Abstract. TheG-Labprojectaimstoinvestigateconceptsandtechnologiesfor futurenetworksinapracticalmanner.ThusG-Labconsistsoftwomajorfields ofactivities:researchstudiesoffuturenetworkcomponentsandthedesignand setupofexperimentalfacilities.Bothiscontrolledbythesamecommunitytoen- sure,thattheexperimentalfacilityfitstothedemandofresearchers.Researchers gainaccesstovirtualizedresourcesormaygainexclusiveaccesstoresourceif necessary.Wepresentthecurrentsetupoftheexperimentalfacility,describingthe availablehardware,managementoftheplatform,theutilizationofthePlanet-Lab softwareandtheusermanagement. 1 Introduction Today’s Internet has a large economic influence but is based on legacy mechanisms andalgorithmsfromthe70iesand80ies.Therapidevolutionofapplicationsandtrans- porttechnologiesdemandsforchangesevenofcoretechnologiesoftheInternet.Thus severalresearcheffortsworldwidecurrentlyinvestigateconceptsandtechnologiesfor future networks. The goal of the G-Lab project is to foster experimentally driven re- searchtoexploitfuturenetworktechnologies. TheG-Labproject[1]hasstartedin2008asadistributedjointresearchandexper- imentation project for Future Internet studies and development. Initially this BMBF1 funded project was distributed across six universities in Germany: Wrzburg, Kaiser- slautern,Berlin,Mnchen,Karlsruhe,andDarmstadt.G-Labcanbedividedintwomajor workareas,theFutureInternetresearchandtheexperimentalplatform. Multiple research groups focus on theoretical and practical studies from architec- turalquestionsto routing,mobilityandsecurity.The goalof the G-Labprojectis not limitedtoexploretheoreticalpossibilitiesandnovelideasbutalsotouseexperimental approaches to verify the derived results while using the experimental facility. To in- vestigatethefunctionalaspectsofnovelInternetarchitectureapproaches(e.g.routing, addressing,control,monitoring&managementaspects)andtheirinteractionwitheach otherissuchanintricatetaskwhichcouldnotbevalidatedonlybyanalyticalresearch andmethods. 1German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, “Bundesministerium fr Bildung und Forschung”. A.J.Berreetal.(Eds.):FIS2010,LNCS6369,pp.1–10,2010. (cid:2)c Springer-VerlagBerlinHeidelberg2010