BS EN IEC 61158-5-4:2023 – TC
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Tracked Changes. Industrial communication networks. Fieldbus specifications – Application layer service definition. Type 4 elements
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2023 | 168 |
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
92 | undefined |
95 | Annex ZA (normative)Normative references to international publicationswith their corresponding European publications |
96 | Blank Page |
97 | CONTENTS |
99 | FOREWORD |
101 | INTRODUCTION |
102 | 1 Scope 1.1 General |
103 | 1.2 Specifications 1.3 Conformance 2 Normative references |
104 | 3 Terms, definitions, symbols, abbreviated terms and conventions 3.1 ISO/IEC 7498-1 terms 3.2 ISO/IEC 8822 terms |
105 | 3.3 ISO/IEC 9545 terms 3.4 ISO/IEC 8824-1 terms 3.5 Fieldbus data-link layer terms 3.6 Fieldbus application layer specific definitions |
111 | 3.7 Abbreviations and symbols |
112 | 3.8 Conventions 3.8.1 Overview |
113 | 3.8.2 General conventions 3.8.3 Conventions for class definitions |
114 | 3.8.4 Conventions for service definitions |
115 | 4 Concepts 4.1 Overview |
116 | 4.2 Architectural relationships 4.2.1 Relationship to the Application Layer of the OSI basic reference model 4.2.2 Relationships to other fieldbus entities Figures Figure 1 ā Relationship to the OSI basic reference model |
117 | Figure 2 ā Architectural positioning of the fieldbus Application Layer |
118 | 4.3 Fieldbus Application Layer structure 4.3.1 Overview 4.3.2 Fundamental concepts 4.3.3 Fieldbus application processes |
119 | Figure 3 ā Client/server interactions |
120 | Figure 4 ā Pull model interactions |
121 | Figure 5 ā Push model interactions |
122 | 4.3.4 Application process objects |
123 | Figure 6 ā APOs services conveyed by the FAL |
124 | 4.3.5 Application entities Figure 7 ā Application entity structure |
125 | 4.3.6 Fieldbus application service elements |
126 | Figure 8 ā Example FAL ASEs Figure 9 ā FAL management of objects |
127 | Figure 10 ā ASE service conveyance |
128 | 4.3.7 Application relationships |
130 | 4.4 Fieldbus Application Layer naming and addressing 4.4.1 General 4.4.2 Identifying objects accessed through the FAL Figure 11 ā Defined and established AREPs |
131 | 4.4.3 Addressing APs accessed through the FAL 4.5 Architecture summary 4.6 FAL service procedures 4.6.1 FAL confirmed service procedures Figure 12 ā FAL architectural components |
132 | 4.6.2 FAL unconfirmed service procedures 4.7 Common FAL attributes |
133 | 4.8 Common FAL service parameters |
134 | 4.9 APDU size 5 Type 4 communication model specification 5.1 Concepts 5.1.1 Overview 5.1.2 Application entities |
135 | Figure 13 ā FAL AE |
136 | 5.1.3 Gateway and routing |
137 | 5.1.4 Architecture summary Figure 14 ā Summary of the FAL architecture |
138 | 5.1.5 FAL service procedures and time sequence diagrams Figure 15 ā FAL service procedure overview |
139 | Figure 16 ā Time sequence diagram for the confirmed services |
140 | 5.2 Variable ASE 5.2.1 Variable types Figure 17 ā Time sequence diagram for unconfirmed services |
142 | 5.2.2 Variable model class specification |
143 | 5.2.3 Basic variable type specifications |
148 | 5.2.4 Constructed variable type specifications |
152 | 5.2.5 Route endpoint ASE |
155 | 5.2.6 Route endpoint ASE service specification Tables Table 1 ā REQUEST service parameters |
156 | Table 2 ā RESPONSE service parameters |
157 | Table 3 ā Error codes by source Table 4 ā Reserve REP service parameters |
158 | Table 5 ā Free AREP service parameters Table 6 ā Get REP attribute service parameters |
159 | 5.3 Application relationship ASE 5.3.1 Overview 5.3.2 Application relationship class specification Table 7 ā Set REP attribute service parameters |
161 | 5.3.3 Application relationship ASE service specifications |
163 | Table 8 ā AR send service parameters Table 9 ā AR acknowledge service parameters |
164 | Table 10 ā AR get attributes service parameters Table 11 ā AR set attributes service parameters |
166 | Bibliography |