List of Figures
1.1 | Wireless embedded 6LoWPAN device |
1.2 | The Internet of Things vision |
1.3 | The relation of 6LoWPAN to related standards and alliances |
1.4 | Example of a personal fitness monitoring application |
1.5 | Example of an industrial safety application |
1.6 | An example of a facility management system including an automatic metering infrastructure (AMI) |
1.7 | The 6LoWPAN architecture |
1.8 | IP and 6LoWPAN protocol stacks |
1.9 | IPv6 edge router with 6LoWPAN support |
1.10 | 6LoWPAN header compression example |
1.11 | 6LoWPAN/UDP compressed headers (6 bytes) |
1.12 | Standard IPv6/UDP headers (48 bytes) |
1.13 | A 6LoWPAN example |
2.1 | Uncompressed IPv6 packet with 6LoWPAN header |
2.2 | Composition of an EUI-64 |
2.3 | Composition of an IPv6 address from an EUI-64: U is the inverted L bit |
2.4 | Interface identifier for 16-bit short addresses |
2.5 | The IP routing model |
2.6 | The LoWPAN routing model (L3 routing, “Route-Over”) |
2.7 | DLL mesh forwarding below the LoWPAN adaptation layer |
2.8 | LoWPAN adaptation layer mesh forwarding |
2.9 | Mesh addressing type and header |
2.10 | Hop-by-hop header compression with two different header compression methods |
2.11 | HC1-compressed IPv6 packet: without and with HC2 |
2.12 | IPv6 header: non-address fields |
2.13 | Best-case HC1-/HC2-compressed IPv6 packet |
2.14 | LOWPAN_IPHC header |
2.15 | LOWPAN_IPHC traffic class and flow label compression ... |