Abstract
Effectively managing multi-source heterogeneous data remains a critical challenge in distributed cyber-physical systems (CPS). To address this, we present a novel and edge-centric computing framework integrating four key technological innovations. Firstly, a hybrid OPC communication stack seamlessly combines Client/Server, Publish/Subscribe, and P2P paradigms, enabling scalable interoperability across devices, edge nodes, and the cloud. Secondly, an event-triggered adaptive Kalman filter is introduced; it incorporates online noise-covariance estimation and multi-threshold triggering mechanisms. This approach significantly reduces state-estimation error by 46.7% and computational load by 41% compared to conventional fixed-rate sampling. Thirdly, temporal asynchrony among edge sensors is resolved by a Dynamic Time Warping (DTW)-based data-fusion module, which employs optimization constrained by Mahalanobis distance. Ultimately, a content-aware deterministic message queue data distribution mechanism is designed to ensure an end-to-end latency of less than 10 ms for critical control commands. This mechanism, which utilizes a "rules first" scheduling strategy and a dynamic resource allocation mechanism, guarantees low latency for key instructions even under the response loads of multiple data messages. The core contribution of this study is the proposal and empirical validation of an architecture co-design methodology aimed at ultra-high-performance industrial systems. This approach moves beyond the conventional paradigm of independently optimizing individual components, and instead prioritizes system-level synergy as the foundation for performance enhancement. Experimental evaluations were conducted under industrial-grade workloads, which involve over 100 heterogeneous data sources. These evaluations reveal that systems designed with this methodology can simultaneously achieve millimeter-level accuracy in field data acquisition and millisecond-level latency in the execution of critical control commands. These results highlight a promising pathway toward the development of real-time intelligent systems capable of meeting the stringent demands of next-generation industrial applications, and demonstrate immediate applicability in smart manufacturing domains.