For autonomous vehicles to be fully aware of its environment, it needs to collect data consistently from other vehicles and Road Side Units (RSU) in the surroundings. This heavy exchange increases latency and cybersecurity threats. This paper introduces Multi-Access Edge Computing (MEC), a 5G specification, as a promising solution to this significant issue. It proposes the adoption of a MEC platform, at the autonomous car premises capable of providing the environment required for running vehicular MEC applications, therefore reducing latency and decentralizing data treatment. For that purpose, the standard established by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) for the MEC framework is adopted. This work introduces few open-source solutions while analyzing how strongly it respects the ETSI standard, and it supports mobility in a Cooperative, Connected, and Automated Mobility (CCAM) context. It also recommends possible MEC security solutions.
@article{arxiv.2208.08674,
title = {On the implementation of an ETSI MEC using open source solutions},
author = {Fatma Raissi and Mandimby Nirina Ranaivo Rakotondravelona and Marwane El-Bekri and Djibrilla Amadou Kountche and Abdessalem Kheder and Tidjani Mahamat Brahim and Sarra Naifar and Eric Barrieres},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2208.08674},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
VIRTUAL ITS EUROPEAN CONGRESS, Nov 2020, Lisbon, Portugal