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Core Context Management

If you want your application to be “smart”, you have to first make it “aware”. FIWARE provides you with means to produce, gather, publish and consume context information at large scale and exploit it to transform your application into a truly smart application.

Context information is represented through values assigned to attributes that characterize those entities relevant to your application.

To learn more about Core Context Management Enablers, check out the documentation

NGSI-v2 Context Broker Implementations

Orion

License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Documentation 🎓 Academy 🎯 Roadmap

What is Orion?

The Orion Context Broker is an implementation of the Publish/Subscribe Context Broker GE, providing the NGSI interfaces. Using these interfaces, clients can do several operations:

  • Register context producer applications, e.g. a temperature sensor within a room
  • Update context information, e.g. send updates of temperature
  • Being notified when changes on context information take place (e.g. the temperature has changed) or with a given frequency (e.g. get the temperature each minute)
  • Query context information. The Orion Context Broker stores context information updated from applications, so queries are resolved based on that information.

Why Use Orion?

If you are developing a Data/Context scenario, a broker like the Orion Context Broker is a must. You would need a component in the architecture able to mediate between consumer producers (e.g. sensors) and the context consumer applications (e.g. an mobile phone applications taking advantage of the context information provided by the sensors). The Orion Context Broker fulfils this functionality in your architecture.

Orion is an implementation of the FIWARE Publish/Subscribe Context Broker Generic Enabler. More specifically, Orion implements the following API and Open Specification:

For context data management, NGSI and the Orion context broker have been accepted as standards or recommendations by a variety of independent standards bodies, for example, GSMA recommends NSGI as a standard for relevant parts of their IoT Big Data architecture and promotes the Orion Context Broker as the primary example of the standard and NGSI specification has been selected by the European Commission as a CEF Building Block for the implementation of new smart applications and Public Administration.

The use of the Orion context broker is mandatory for any platform or solution to be labelled as “Powered by FIWARE” within the FIWARE marketplace


NGSI-LD Context Broker Implementations

Scorpio

License

:octocat: Git Repository 🐳 Docker Hub 📚 Documentation

What is Scorpio?

Scorpio is an NGSI-LD Broker that allows managing and requesting context information. Context Producers can manage their context – creating, updating, appending and deleting context information. Context Consumers can request the context information they require, either identifying the entity or discover relevant entities by providing the entity type, possibly filtering according to property value, existing relationship and/or geographic scope provided as a GeoJSON feature.

Two interaction styles are supported, a synchronous query-response, and an asynchronous subscribe / notify, where notifications can be based on a change in property or relationship, or on a fixed time interval. In addition to the regular context interface that provides the most current properties and relationships for each entity, Scorpio implements NGSI-LD’s optional temporal interface for requesting historic information, e.g. the property values measured within a specified time interval.

Scorpio supports multiple deployment configurations including centralized, distributed and federated ones. In addition to the Context Producers mentioned above, there can be Context Sources that themselves implement the NGSI-LD interface. These Context Sources can register themselves with the information they can provide on request (not the information (values) itself).

A Scorpio Broker in a distributed setting can then discover the Context Sources that may have information for answering a request based on their registrations, request and aggregate the information from different Context Sources and provide it to the requesting Context Consumer. In a federated setting the Context Source can itself be an NGSI-LD Broker. Federations can be used to combine information from multiple providers that want to (partially) share information. An important difference is then typically in the granularity of the registration, e.g. “I have information about entities of entity type building within a geographic area”, instead of “I have information about Building X”

Why Use Scorpio?

Scorpio implements NGSI-LD, which is the evolution of NGSI-v2 and previous versions going back to the OMA NGSI context interfaces. This standardized version is based on the NGSI-LD specification published by the ETSI Industry Specification Group on Context Information Management.

NGSI-LD has a number of new features compared to NGSI-v2. NGSI-LD distinguishes properties and relationships instead of only having attributes. While properties have values, relationships explicitly refer to other entities. The result is an explicit entity graph, as specialized knowledge graph. Relationships can be followed to find relevant related entities. NGSI-LD is based on JSON-LD, where LD stands for linked data. As required in JSON-LD, NGSI-LD uses entity types, relationships and properties defined as unique URIs. The representation of the data is still concise as shortname strings can be used, the mapping to URIs is done in an @context element that can be part of the JSON or be referenced as a header. As JSON-LD is a serialization of RDF, NGSI-LD provides a semantic grounding and can be used with semantic tools and combined with other information.

Scorpio supports different deployment configurations, which support scalability and extension of scenarios in an evolutionary way. For example two separate deployments can be combined or for scalability reasons different brokers can be used – completely transparent to Context Consumers that can still use a single point of access. Scorpio also implements the optional temporal NGSI-LD interface, so any updated context information can automatically be made available as history information through the temporal interface.


Orion-LD

License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Documentation 🎓 Academy 🎯 Roadmap

What is Orion-LD?

Orion-LD is an alternative NGSI-LD Context Broker written in C/C++. It is a standalone executable and therefore small, fast, lightweight and easy to handle. Context brokers allow for the management and requesting context of information in a structured manner based on linked data standards following the NGSI-LD specification. Orion-LD is more suitable for smaller installations or possibly in embedded environments - it currently supports only a subset of the standard NGSI-LD endpoints.

Why Use Orion-LD?

Orion-LD implements the NGSI-LD linked data interface, which is the evolution of NGSI-v2 and previous versions going back to the OMA NGSI context interfaces. This standardized version is based on the NGSI-LD specification published by the ETSI Industry Specification Group on Context Information Management.

NGSI-LD has a number of new features compared to NGSI-v2. NGSI-LD distinguishes properties and relationships instead of only having attributes. While properties have values, relationships explicitly refer to other entities. The result is an explicit entity graph, as specialized knowledge graph. Relationships can be followed to find relevant related entities. NGSI-LD is based on JSON-LD, where LD stands for linked data. As required in JSON-LD, NGSI-LD uses entity types, relationships and properties defined as unique URIs. The representation of the data is still concise as shortname strings can be used, the mapping to URIs is done in an @context element that can be part of the JSON or be referenced as a header. As JSON-LD is a serialization of RDF, NGSI-LD provides a semantic grounding and can be used with semantic tools and combined with other information.


Stellio

License

:octocat: Git Repository 🐳 Docker Hub 📚 Documentation

What is Stellio?

Stellio is a NGSI-LD context broker implementing the API specification published by the ETSI Industry Specification Group for Context Information Management (ISG CIM). Context information means any piece of data which is contextualized in time, space and in relation to other data through linked data principles.

Stellio is built around a Kafka message broker for improved extensibility, scalability and decoupling of services. These services embed a PostgreSQL database for context management, enhanced with timeseries (Timescale) and geospatial (PostGIS) extensions to efficiently manage temporal and geospatial properties.

Stellio, developed in Kotlin, is also built upon the Spring Boot and Spring Cloud frameworks. It is based on a modular architecture and follows the reactive and functional paradigms.

Stellio acts as a central broker and is currently adding support for distributed operations. It supports major operations on context information, subscriptions and temporal queries. It does not aim to support NGSIv1 and NGSIv2 specifications.

Why use Stellio?

Stellio is a mature and robust context broker deployed in many production environments. It is thoroughly tested and has a clean code base backed by strong quality and security checks.

In addition, Stellio includes the support of the NGSI-LD API for querying the temporal evolution of entities, as long as the interface for performing geospatial queries. The included Timescale and PostGIS extensions of the well-known PostgreSQL database allow efficient queries while allowing off-the-shelves storing of large volumes of historical data.

By leveraging the Spring Cloud features, it can easily be deployed in cloud native environments.

Finally, Stellio has native but optional support for authentication (based on the OpenID Connect and OAuth2 protocols) and authorization. It is currently validated with the use of Keycloak as the complementary identity and access management solution.


Context-Data Awareness

Cygnus

License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Documentation 🎓 Academy 🎯 Roadmap

What is Cygnus?

Cygnus is a connector in charge of persisting context data sources into other third-party databases and storage systems, creating a historical view of the context. Internally, Cygnus is based on Apache Flume, Flume is a data flow system based on the concepts of flow-based programming. It supports powerful and scalable directed graphs of data routing, transformation, and system mediation logic. It was built to automate the flow of data between systems. While the term 'dataflow' can be used in a variety of contexts, we use it here to mean the automated and managed flow of information between systems.

Each data persistence agent within Cygnus is composed of three parts - a listener or source in charge of receiving the data, a channel where the source puts the data once it has been transformed into a Flume event, and a sink, which takes Flume events from the channel in order to persist the data within its body into a third-party storage.

Why Use Cygnus?

Persisting historical context data is useful for big data analysis - it can be used to discover trends, or data can be sampled and aggregated to remove the influence of outlying data measurements. However within each Smart Solution, the significance of each entity type will differ and entities and attributes may need to be sampled at different rates.

Since the business requirements for using context data differ from application to application, no single standard use case for historical data persistence exists. Therefore rather than overloading the context broker with the job of historical context data persistence, this role has been separated out into a separate, highly configurable component - Cygnus.

Cygnus plays the role of a connector between the Orion Context Broker (which is an NGSI source of data) and a wide range of external systems such as MySQL, MongoDB etc. You should use Cygnus if you need to process and persist context data so that you can keep a historical record. Cygnus can also be used the filter and repost context data back into Orion.


STH Comet

License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Documentation 🎓 Academy 🎯 Roadmap

What is STH Comet?

Short Time Historic (STH) - Comet is a component of the FIWARE ecosystem in charge of managing (storing and retrieving) historical raw and aggregated time series context information about the evolution in time of context data (i.e., entity attribute values) registered in an Orion Context Broker instance.

Why use STH Comet?

The creation and analysis of trend data is a common requirement of context-driven systems - therefore the FIWARE platform offers a generic enabler (STH-Comet) specifically to deal with the issue of persisting and interpreting time series data.

Within the FIWARE platform, historical context data can be persisted to a database - this results in a series of data points. Each time-stamped data point represents the state of context entities at a given moment in time. The individual data points are relatively meaningless on their own, it is only through combining a series data points that meaningful statistics such as maxima, minima and trends can be observed.


Draco

License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Documentation 🎓 Academy 🎯 Roadmap

What is Draco?

Draco is a connector in charge of persisting context data sources into other third-party databases and storage systems, creating a historical view of the context. Internally, Draco is based on Apache NiFi. NiFi is a popular framework for data management and processing from multiple sources.

Draco plays the role of a connector between the Orion Context Broker (which is an NGSI source of data) source of data) and a wide range of external systems such as MySQL, MongoDB etc. You can use Draco if you need to process and persist context data so that you can keep a historical record. Draco can also be used to filter and repost context data back into Orion.

Why Use Draco?

Persisting historical context data is useful for big data analysis - it can be used to discover trends, or data can be sampled and aggregated to remove the influence of outlying data measurements. However within each Smart Solution, the significance of each entity type will differ and entities and attributes may need to be sampled at different rates.

Since the business requirements for using context data differ from application to application, no single standard use case for historical data persistence exists. Therefore rather than overloading the context broker with the job of historical context data persistence, this role has been separated out into another enabler. Amongst the advantages of the component, Draco offers a flexible graphical interface so it is possible to amend your data flows according to your current business needs.


Cosmos

License

:octocat: Git Repository 🐳 Docker Hub : none 📚 Flink 📚 Spark 🎓 Academy 🎯 Roadmap

What is Cosmos?

The Cosmos Big Data Analysis GE is a set of tools that help achieving the tasks of Streaming and Batch processing over context data. These tools are:

Flink
Spark

Why use Cosmos?

As the state of the real world changes, the entities representing your IoT devices are constantly changing. Big data analysis allows for the study of datasets coming from your context data which are too large for traditional data-processing software. You can apply predictive analysis or user behaviour analytics to extract meaningful conclusions as to the state of your smart solution and bring value to your solution.


License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Documentation 🎓 Academy 🎯 Roadmap

What is QuantumLeap?

The QuantumLeap Generic Enabler focuses on persisting historical context data into time-series databases such as CrateDB with reference to maintaining a scalable architecture and compatibility with visualization tools such as Grafana

Why use QuantumLeap?

The appropriate use of time series data analysis will depend on your use case and the reliability of the data measurements you receive. Time series data analysis can be used to answer questions such as:

  • What was the maximum measurement of a device within a given time period?
  • What was the average measurement of a device within a given time period?
  • What was the sum of the measurements sent by a device within a given time period?

QuantumLeap offers great flexibility in measuring and monitoring time-series data and leverages existing time-series-based databases to be able to support complex queries such as cross-entity queries (e.g. an average of averages)

The QuantumLeap project is part of FIWARE and will be rated as part of the next release.


License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Documentation

What is Canis Major?

Canis Major is a blockchain adaptor that supports various DLT, the adaptor aims to submit the data to DLT in Powered By FIWARE Architecture. The adaptor will not be recommended to work for public-permissionless blockchains (especially tokens, cryptocurrencies).

Canis Major is developed using NodeJS and supports the transaction to IOTA or ethereum clients such as hyplerledger besu, quorum either using own smart contract or using AEI Contract which is based on ERC721 Non-fungible tokens (recommended).

Why use Canis Major?

For some elements of context, it is important to maintain a log of transactions that is verifiable and unchangeable. The use of distributed ledgers helps with this and provides a mechanism for persisting context events. Canis Major can act as a pluggable micro-service that will create, sign and submit the transactions and also keeps the logs of transaction receipts which can be queried using restful APIs.

Canis Major aims to make the integration of DLT's easier in "Powered By FIWARE" architectures.


License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Site

What is NGSI.js?

NGSI.js is the JavaScript library used by WireCloud for adding FIWARE NGSI capabilities to widgets and operators. However, this library has also been designed to be used in other environments as normal web pages and clients/servers running on Node.js.

This library has been developed following the FIWARE NGSI v1, NGSI v2 and the NGSI-LD specifications and has been tested to work against multiple Context Brokers.

Why Use NGSI.js?

NGSI.js provides a series of boilerplate library functions allowing developers to connect and push context data to any NGSI compliant context broker, the removes the need to write custom JavaScript code and speeds up development time.


License

:octocat: Git Repository 🐳 Docker Hub 📚 Documentation 🎯 Roadmap

What is the PySpark Connector?

The PySpark Connector is a FIWARE Generic Enabler (GE) made of a receiver and a replier subcomponents allowing a bidirectional communication between the NGSI-v2 and NGSI-LD Context Brokers and PySpark. The component works on a low-level socket communication implementing a message passing interface between the two aforementioned counterparts. This interface is equipped with a parser function, permitting the creation of both NGSI-v2 and NGSI-LD entities ready to use in a custom PySpark algorithm. Once data are preprocessed inside the PySpark evnironment, the component also provide a write-back interface (via REST API) to the context broker

Why use the PySpark Connector?

The PySpark Connector was created with the idea of expanding the use of compliant context brokers to merge with the Python environment. Python is currently one of the most used programming languages for data analysis, providing lots of scientific libraries for data processing and visualization. This connector is able to open a communication path between these two instruments and to combine the advantages they provide at a minimal development cost.


License

:octocat: Git Repository quay.io 📚 Documentation 🎯 T.B.D

What is FIWARE Apollo?

In order to allow an NGSI-LD broker to receive data sent through subscriptions by another broker, Apollo translates notifications into entity creation or update requests at the NGSI-LD API. For every entity received in the data-part of a notification, the proxy first tries a POST /entities/{entityId}/attrs/ to update(and overwrite the properties) the entity. If 404 - NOT FOUND is returned by the broker, the proxy will try to create the entity via POST /entities.

Why use the FIWARE Apollo?

Within data spaces it may be necessary to duplicate entity information across multiple brokers. For example, a receiving broker may use the raw data provided via a subscription, process it to add value and then offer additional insights on that data. By using a subscribe-and-duplicate mechanism, the data is automatically generated within a protected context broker and it is possible to permit access via a known protected data entrypoint which then adds data to a context broker.


License

:octocat: Git Repository 🐳 T.B.D 📚 Documentation 🎯 T.B.D

What is the O2K-Connector?

O2K-Connector is a lightweight connector, written in Python, that enables context data sharing from Orion Context Broker towards Apache Kafka, supporting both NGSI-V2 and NGSI-LD interfaces. The connector supports both HTTP and MQTT protocols communication to be easily integrated in the most common industrial scenarios.

Why use the O2K-Connector?

Using O2K-Connector offers several benefits. Firstly, it simplifies the integration process between FIWARE and Apache technologies by providing an efficient solution for data forwarding, eliminating the need for complex and time-consuming custom integration efforts. Secondly, O2K-Connector ensures reliable and scalable data transfer, allowing for real-time processing and analysis of data in Apache Kafka by supporting the faster and lighter MQTT Orion subscription.