M2M Device or gateway. This package is also called Fault and
Performance Management;
Software/Firmware Management (SFW): Allows installation
/update/removal of application specific orSCL related software / firmware
in M2M Device or gateway;
Area Network Management (ANW): Allows M2M Gateway-specific
configuration and M2M Area Network and Device management through a
M2M gateway;
Service Capability Layer Management (SCL): Allows remote
configuration and retrieval of M2M Device or gateway service capability
layer parameters.
In a similar fashion, Section 4.2.2 of this document identifies different Functional
Components used for management functionalities. These include:
Configuration: Initialising the system configuration. Gathering and
storing configurations from FCs and Devices, tracking configuration
changes;
Fault: The goal of the Fault FC is to identify, isolate, correct and log
faults that occur in the IoT system;
Member: This FC is responsible for the management of the membership
and associated information of any relevant entity (FG, FC, VE, IoT
Service, Device, Application, and User) to an IoT system;
Reporting: The Reporting FC can be seen as an overlay for the other
Management FCs. It distils information provided by them. One of many
conceivable reporting goals is to determine the efficiency of the current
system;
State: The State FC monitors and predicts state of the IoT system. For a
ready diagnostic of the system, as required by Fault FC, the past, current
and predicted (future) state of the system are provided.
When mapping these different management components, it becomes obvious
once again that the focus of ETSI M2M is narrower in terms of its scope and
therefore it is more detailed in the definition of its management capabilities and
does not include all of the functionality defined by IoT-A. For instance, there is
no equivalent to State FC in terms of its temporal distribution and the related
billing capabilities. This aspect is not really central, as it is not contradictory and
could be built upon the D&M package. In general however there is a strong
overlap, as D&M roughly relates to the Reporting FC, CFG closely resembles
Configuration, and both D&M and Fault deal with monitoring functionalities.
Error and fault handling as such is handled specifically in the Fault FC, whereas
D&M also handles performance management. On the other hand, and in line
with the general focus of ETSI-M2M, the different aspects of the Configuration