P10 LILLIAD: Connected Learning Center

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LILLIAD interior view

The library of University of Lille 1 is in the transformation phase to becoming LILLIAD Learning Center Innovation by 2016. Based on strong service proposal, LILLIAD will offer a unique combination of discovery and experimentation of innovation through an event complex, an experimentarium, educational space and documentary collection. LILLIAD, as desired by University of Lille 1 and the region of Nord-Pas de Calais, will be a place to think, learn and discover about innovation. Situated in the heart of the campus, it will be accessible to companies, innovators, educational institutes and public.



Scope statement

Project overview

Context

Objective

The main goal of this project is to develop a user interface which allows the personnel of LILLIAD to use and maintain the deployed network of sensors.

Project description

LILLIAD is a modern building that will be equipped with huge network of sensors. These sensors will be used to capture and collect data (such as temperature, luminosity, AQI, etc.) to inform the users and personnel of LILLIAD. The sensors will be connected with a Raspberrry Pi in a star topology and the latter will be connected to the local area network (LAN). The Raspberry Pi could be used not only to send data (especially logs) to the central system but also to reconfigure the sensors.

Project phases

  • Reservation of time slot to roll-out configuration
  • Deploying configuration via network
  • Programming the sensors
  • Collecting log and sensor data

Work progress

Reservation of time slot to roll-out configuration

Objective

To enable an administrator to reserve a time slot through a web interface (where the configuration file will be uploaded) so that the boards (daughterboard, d2b) connected to the network are configured according to the schedule.

Conception

To manage the time slots, it’s important to have a database. Thus, I had to come up with a block diagram (of a databse) that describes relationships between each block.

To normalize the diagram, I had to identify the primary and foreign key and use intermediate table such as “configure” and “play_role” as described below:

Role(id[PK],roleName)
User(id[PK],name,login,password)
Play_role(roleId[FK->Role],userId[FK->User],PK[roleID,userId])
TimeSlot(startDate,startTime,endTime,PK(startDate,startTime))
Board(id,type,subId,PK(id,subId))
File(fileName[PK],fileDescription,fileChecksum)
Configuration(startDate, startTime, idUser[FK->User],fileName[FK->File],[FK(startDate, startTime)->TimeSlot],PK(startDate, startTime))
Configure(startDate, startTime,id ,subId, [FK(startDate, startTime)->Configuration], [FK(id, subId)->Board],PK(startDate,startTime, id, subId))

Realization

To implement the database, I started with the installation of LAMP stack in Linux. Thus, the packages “apache2, php5, mysql-server php5-mysql” were installed. Then, it was time I configured the MySQL database with the relational database model conceptualized earlier.

TODO : Web interface


Deploying configuration via network

Programming the sensors

Collecting log and sensor data