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BS EN 62769-3:2015

$198.66

Devices and integration in enterprise systems; Field Device Integration – FDI Server

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2015 66
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This part of IEC 62769 specifies the FDI Server. The overall FDI architecture is illustrated in Figure 1. The architectural components that are within the scope of this document have been highlighted in this figure.

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
6 English
CONTENTS
9 FOREWORD
11 INTRODUCTION
12 1 Scope
2 Normative references
Figures
Figure 1 – FDI architecture diagram
13 3 Terms, definitions, abbreviated terms and acronyms
3.1 Terms and definitions
3.2 Abbreviated terms and acronyms
4 Overview
14 5 Information Model
5.1 General
15 5.2 Online/Offline
5.2.1 Overview
5.2.2 Transfer to device
5.2.3 Transfer from device
16 5.3 Access privileges
5.4 Private Parameters
5.5 Locking
17 5.6 EditContext
5.6.1 Concept and usage model
Figure 2 – Locking services
18 5.6.2 Services
Figure 3 – EditContext models
19 5.6.3 NodeIds
5.6.4 Reading
5.6.5 Writing
20 5.6.6 Writing dominant and dependent Variables
5.6.7 Actions (EDD METHODS)
21 5.6.8 UIDs
5.6.9 Synchronization
5.7 Reading
5.7.1 General
Figure 4 – EditContext for EDD Methods
22 5.7.2 Reading offline variables
Figure 5 – Offline variable read
23 5.7.3 Reading online variables
Figure 6 – Online variable read
24 5.8 Writing
5.8.1 General
5.8.2 Write offline variables
25 5.8.3 Writing online variables
Figure 7 – Offline variable write immediate
26 Figure 8 – Online variable write immediate
27 5.8.4 Writing to an EditContext
Figure 9 – Write with EditContext
28 5.9 Subscription
5.9.1 General
5.9.2 Subscription of offline variables
29 5.9.3 Subscription of online variables
Figure 10 – Offline variable subscription
30 Figure 11 – Online variable subscription
31 5.10 Device topology
5.10.1 General
5.10.2 Connection Points
Figure 12 – Topology with Network objects (non-normative)
32 5.10.3 Topology management
33 Figure 13 – Add Device to topology
34 Figure 14 – Remove Device from topology
35 5.10.4 Topology scanning
Figure 15 – Scan topology
36 5.10.5 Use of SCAN function
5.10.6 Validation of defined topology
37 5.11 User Interface Elements
5.11.1 User Interface Descriptions
38 5.11.2 User Interface Plug-ins
5.12 Actions
5.12.1 FDI Server – FDI Client interaction
40 Figure 16 – Action execution
41 5.12.2 Action state machine
Figure 17 – Action state machine
Tables
Table 1 – Action states
42 5.12.3 Actions Proxies
Table 2 – Action state transitions
43 5.12.4 Actions, EDD Actions and Actions Proxies
Table 3 – EDD Action types and the EDD constructs that use them
44 6 OPC UA services
6.1 OPC UA profiles
6.2 Service error information
6.2.1 Overview
45 6.2.2 OPC UA services and their response
6.2.3 Mappings of EDDL response codes to OPC UA service response
Table 4 – OPC UA severity bits and EDDL response codes TYPE
46 6.3 Parameter value update during write service request
6.4 Localization
47 6.5 Audit events
7 Communication
7.1 Notation
7.2 General
7.2.1 Concepts
Figure 18 – System communication integration example
48 Figure 19 – FDI Communication Server integration example
49 7.2.2 Terms
Figure 20 – Gateway integration example
50 7.3 Communication Service processing
7.3.1 Communication Service invocation
7.3.2 Analyze communication path
51 7.3.3 Manage communication relations
7.3.4 Communication service request mapping
52 7.3.5 Communication service request propagation
Figure 21 – Message propagation example scenario
53 7.3.6 Communication error handling
7.4 FDI Communication Server specific handling
7.4.1 Discovery
54 7.4.2 Information Model synchronization
8 Parallel Execution within the FDI Server
8.1 Motivation
8.2 Internal structure of the EDD interpreter
55 8.3 Rules for running an EDD entity
56 Annex A (informative) FDI Server functional structure
A.1 FDI functional elements
Figure A.1 – Functional components of an FDI Server
57 A.2 FDI Server extension
Figure A.2 – FDI Server extensions
59 Annex B (informative) Access privileges and user roles
B.1 User roles and usage case
Figure B.1 – User roles and access privileges
60 B.2 Private data usage
61 Annex C (informative) Parallel execution within the FDI Server – Examples
C.1 Simple example for a synchronous execution
C.2 Example for a concurrent execution
Figure C.1 – Synchronous execution of two triggers
Figure C.2 – Concurrent execution of two triggers (step1)
62 Figure C.3 – Concurrent execution of two triggers (step 2)
Figure C.4 – Concurrent execution of two triggers (step 3)
Figure C.5 – Concurrent execution of two triggers (step 4)
63 C.3 Deadlock detection in concurrent execution
Figure C.6 – Concurrent execution of two triggers
64 Bibliography
BS EN 62769-3:2015
$198.66