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Page 1: Iscram 2008 presentation

Rich Feeds for RESCUEAn Integration Story

Barry Demchak and Ingolf KrügerCalifornia Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2)

May 7, 2008

Page 2: Iscram 2008 presentation

Roadmap

• Introduction to RESCUE and Rich Feeds

• Rich Feeds Objectives

• Unconventional and emergent data feeds

• SOA-based Systems of Systems Integration

• Rich Services applied to rapid integration

• Rich Feeds at Calit2/UCSD

Page 3: Iscram 2008 presentation

RESCUE Project

• Calit2 at UC San Diego

• Gather, maintain, leverage, present emergency information

• Serve emergency response networks and general public

• Save lives and infrastructure, return to normalcy

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Rich Feeds for RESCUE

• Captures, preserves, integrates, and exposes

• Unconventional and emergent data feeds

• Real time or archivally

• Serve emergency response networks and general public

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Rich Feeds Objectives and Challenges

• Acquisition of data feeds from (disinterested) producers⇒ Heterogeneous data sources⇒ Possibly uncooperative producers

• Distribution of data feeds to arbitrary consumers (agencies or public) for domain integration, historical analysis, ???

⇒ Data must be purveyed as received⇒ Multiple data access paths

• Data feed intermediaries can add new feeds, determine who can add data, who can consume data, …

⇒ Policy driven authorizations⇒ Authentication of all users⇒ Policy definition infrastructure

• Long term archiving⇒ Database with schemas

• Access by external systems

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Research Feeds

Calit2 Traffic Incidents Calit2 Tracked Assets

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User View

• Today’s Data Feeds– Traffic– Trackable Objects– UCSD Police Cameras– CalIT2 Cameras

• Today’s Visualizations– Google Maps– Google Earth (soon)

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Preview

• Integration Architecture and Methodology

• Visualizations

• Operating in the Real World

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Our View: Systems of Systems Integration

• Bottom up• Unintrusive to producer

• Quick• Ripe for Services and SOA

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Services and SOA

• Manageability• Scalability• Dependability• Testability

Network Implementation

Single Server, Multiple Processes

Single Application, Linked Modules

Logical Deployment

• Malleability• Interoperability• Composition• Incremental

development

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Patterns

Composite Pattern – Hierarchy (Vertical Integration)

Interceptor Pattern

Service 1

Service 1.2Service 1.1 Service 1.3

Service 1.3.1 Service 1.3.2

Service 2

Service 2.2Service 2.1

Interceptor Service

Message Pattern – Loose Coupling (Horizontal Integration)

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Rich Services Architectural Pattern

From tightly to l o o s e l y coupled systems

a hierarchically decomposed structure supporting“horizontal” and “vertical” service integration

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Rich Feeds Logical Architecture

• Scales to support large numbers of users• Storage that scales

• Processing and DB intensive data analysis• Integration with GIS systems and databases• Appropriate visualization methods

Authorization Monitor

Authentication Monitor

Integration System

ODBC Adapter

Database

Logging System

Service / Data

Connector

Visualizer Client

Consumer Adapter

Consumer Systems

Service / Data

Connector

Producer

Adapter

Experiment

Server

Producer Systems

System of Systems

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Deployment Architecture

• Scales to support large numbers of users• Storage that scales

• Processing and DB intensive data analysis• Integration with GIS systems and databases• Appropriate visualization methods

Page 15: Iscram 2008 presentation

Rich Feeds Web Visualization

• UC San Diego Active Shooter Drill– October 2007– Demonstrated Gizmo moving with embedded camera image

• San Diego Firestorms – October 2007

– Demonstrated addition of Calit2 Webcams (2 hours)

• San Diego Metropolitan Medical Strike Team Drill – January 2008– Demonstrated policy exclusion of UCSD Police Webcams

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Demonstrate Showing All Feeds

(Click on map)

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Demonstrate Animation

(Click on map)

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Rich Services Development Process

Page 19: Iscram 2008 presentation

Rich Services to the RESCUE

“To boldly go where

no service has gone before”.

• an extension of the service notion, based on an architectural pattern• Dynamic adaptation

– new services can be introduced at runtime

– no need to change or adapt the implementation of existing services

• Manage the complexity of a system-of-systems – decomposing into primary and crosscutting concerns– providing flexible encapsulation for these concerns

– generating a model that can easily be leveraged into a deployment

• Workflow management– Service choreography at the infrastructure or application level

Page 20: Iscram 2008 presentation

Roadmap

• Introduction to RESCUE and Rich Feeds

• Rich Feeds Objectives

• Unconventional and emergent data feeds

• SOA-based Systems of Systems Integration

• Rich Services applied to rapid integration

• Rich Feeds at Calit2/UCSD

Page 21: Iscram 2008 presentation

Credits

• Funding– NSF RESCUE (#03311690)

– NSF Responsphere (#0403433)

– NSF ASOSA: Automotive Service-Oriented Software and Systems Engineering (#CCF0702791)

– California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2)

• Pictures– Barry Demchak (2008 MMST Drill at Coors Amphitheater)

– San Diego County Firestorms After Action Report 2007 (http://www.sdcounty.ca.gov/oes/ready/docs/2007_SanDiego_Fire_AAR_Main_Document_FINAL.pdf)

– MMST Exercise @ UCSD (http://mmstexercise.calit2.net/)

– Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composite_pattern,

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Backup Slides

• Go back …

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Logical Architecture

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Logical Architecture w/Policy

Policy System

RESCUE

ODBC Adapter

Dat

a F

eed

P

rod

ucer

Au

then

ticat

ion

S/D Connector

Vis

ualiz

ato

in

To

ol

Au

then

ticat

ion

S/D Connector

Dat

aba

se

Ob

ligat

ion

Pro

cess

ing

S/D Connector

Request + Identity Certificate (X.509 or SAML)Request + Obligations

(Identity � Attributes) x Policy = [Decision, Obligations]

Logging System

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PERMIS Organization

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PERMIS Sequencing

Subject PEPUser Subject PDPCredential Issue Svc

Attribute Authority *

Target PEPIdentity SOA

Target PEPMaster Target

PDPTarget PDP *

Certificate Authority

Obligation Svc

Execute(action, target, identity)

Valiidate(identity)

Exportable Attribute List

GetAttributeList(target)

GetCredentials(attributeList, identity)

SignCredential(attribute)

SignedCredential

Execute(action, target, identity, credentialList)

CredentialList

AttributeList

Subject

Target

Valiidate(identity)

Credential Issue Svc

Attribute Authority *

Valiidate(credentialList)

GetCredentialis(attributeList, identity)SignCredential

(attribute)SignedCredential

CredentialListValidation, ValidatedAttributeList

Integrate(attributeList, subjectEnvironment)

DecideAccess(attributeList)

Credential Validation Svc

DecideAccess(attributeList)

Decision, Obligations

PerformObligations(action, target, obligationList)

Target

ResultExecute(result)

Integrate(decisions, obligations)

Result

Valiidate(credemtial)Result

Integrate(validatedAattributeList, targetEnvironment)

Decision, Obligations