There are a lot of things to unbox while
exploring through the LoRaWAN technology. Each and every part is crucial &
interesting to know more about. The LoRaWAN Gateway is one of them, which
communicates over multi-channels with multi-spreading factors.
A gateway typically refers
to the physical box or encasement housing the hardware and application software
that performs essential tasks to connect IoT devices to the cloud. IoT devices
use a gateway as a central hub to drop sensed knowledge and connect that data
to external networks hence also termed as a “Data Concentrator”.
A gateway is much like a Wi-Fi router. It has a LoRa concentrator, which allows it to receive RF signals sent out by LoRaWAN devices, which get converted to a signal compatible with a server, such as Wi-Fi, to send data to the cloud.
The IP traffic from a gateway to the
network server can be backhauled via Wi-Fi, hardwired Ethernet or via a
Cellular connection. LoRaWAN gateways operate entirely at the physical layer
and, in essence, are nothing but LoRa radio message forwarders.
For
LoRaWAN downlinks, a gateway executes transmission requests coming from the LNS
without any interpretation of the payload. Since multiple gateways can receive
the same LoRa RF message from a single end device, the LNS performs data
de-duplication and deletes all copies. Based on the RSSI levels of the
identical messages, the network server typically selects the gateway that
received the message with the best RSSI when transmitting a downlink message
because that gateway is the one closest to the end device in question.
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