Blockchain in edge computing framework
Keywords:
Blockchain-Edge Integration, Lightweight Consensus Protocols, IoT Security, Latency Optimization, Resilient Edge Computing.Abstract
There has been an exponential rise of Internet of Things (IoT) devices and autonomous systems, which have thrown light on the weaknesses of centralized cloud computing, especially in latency, bandwidth, and security. This paper will solve such problems by suggesting an integrated blockchain-edge architecture, which uses distributed trusting mechanisms to protect and optimize edge networks. The process of the methodology consists of four steps: architectural modeling, lightweight consensus design, performance-security trade-off analysis, and real-life validation. Experiments with iFogSim and BlockSim showed that edge networks enhanced with blockchain cuts latency and bandwidth consumption by 37 and 36 percent respectively compared to cloud-centric models. Consensus protocols such as Practical Byzantine Fault Tolerance (pBFT), Proof-of-Elaboration (PoE) and Leased Proof-of-Stake (LPoS) were designed and tested, using much less energy and having much faster transaction finality compared to Proof-of-Work. High resilience to Sybil, tampering, and 51% attacks was proven with Raspberry Pi clusters, and an 8% latency trade-off was observed, when smart contracts were used to enforce automated access control. Lastly, experimental validation with healthcare and industrial IoT datasets demonstrated that blockchain decreased attempts to access information unauthorized to nearly zero in the healthcare industry and minimized manipulations with machine logs by 70 percent in the industrial IoT. These results highlight blockchain-edge convergence as a potential direction towards the construction of scalable, secure and trustful decentralized systems.
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