As I explored in a previous #askIoT post, nearly every IoT system needs some way to connect sensors/devices to the cloud so that data can be sent back-and-forth between them. IoT gateways can be essential in making this connection possible because gateways act as bridges between sensors/devices and the cloud. Many sensors/devices will “talk” to a gateway and the gateway will then take all that information and “talk” to the cloud.
At a high level, this is actually the way that cellular technology works too. Your phone doesn’t communicate directly with other phones, but instead communicates with the nearby cellular tower which in turn communicates with the cellular provider’s (e.g. AT&T’s) servers. Information then flows the opposite way, from the cellular provider’s servers, to towers, to someone else’s phone. For IoT applications, the underlying concept is the exact same, just switch out gateway for cellular tower and the cloud for the cellular provider’s servers.
Including the extra step of communicating with a gateway in-between yields several benefits:
If a sensor/device is in a remote area, it may need a long-range connection such as satellite connectivity to talk to the cloud. As explained here, longer range typically means increased power consumption (and costs); this can be a problem for small sensors/devices with limited battery life.
If you’re doing Smart Agriculture, you want your field sensors to last years, not months or weeks. By using an elevated gateway installed near the top of an outbuilding or grain silo, the sensors/devices only have to send data a short distance to the gateway and the gateway can backhaul the data to the cloud through a single higher bandwidth connection.
Gateways allow sensors/devices to communicate over shorter distances, boosting battery life.
A complete IoT application might involve many different kinds of sensors and devices. Using Smart Agriculture again, you might want sensors for temperature, moisture, and sunlight and devices such as automated irrigation and fertilizer systems.
All of the different sensors and devices can use varying network connectivity types (basically, the rules and format for the information being transmitted). Connectivity types include LPWAN, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Zigbee, among many others.
Gateways can communicate with sensors/devices over varying connectivity types and then translate that data into a standard protocol such as MQTT to be sent to the cloud.
Sometimes, sensors/devices can generate so much data that it’s overwhelming to the system or extremely costly to transmit and store. Often in such cases, only a small fraction of the data is actually valuable. For example, a security camera doesn’t need to send video data of an empty hallway.
Gateways can pre-process and filter the data being generated by sensors/devices to decrease transmission, processing, and storage requirements.
n my previous post on how IoT solutions actually work (part 2), I explained that time can be critical for certain IoT applications; the sensors/devices can’t afford to transmit data to the cloud and wait to get a response before taking action. This is true for life-or-death situations in the medical realm or for fast-moving objects like cars.
Higher latency can be avoided by processing the data on the gateway and giving commands locally. However, many sensors/devices in IoT applications are too small and too low-battery to do the processing themselves.
Gateways can reduce latency in time-critical applications by performing processing on the gateway itself rather than in the cloud.
Every sensor/device that is connected to the internet becomes vulnerable to being hacked. Hacked sensors/devices are bad. Not just for the owner, but for everyone else too.
A few years ago, malware called Mirai was used to hack and control thousands of IoT devices. This “bot-net” of devices was then used to take down major parts of the internet
Gateways reduce the number of sensors/devices connected to the internet because the sensors/devices are only connected to the gateway. However, this makes gateways themselves targets and also the first line of defense. This is why security needs to be a priority for any gateway.
If you’re interested in a deeper dive into other underlying technologies in IoT, I encourage you to check out the IoT 101: Introduction to Internet of Things eBook I’ve written (which is free!).