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1. process 5 Separate the interface module from the processor by placing your finger tips between the two modules Pull directly and evenly upward Do not pry the interface module away from the processor by pulling on one corner or side You will bend the connector header s pins 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Using This Chapter Before You Begin You must assign a unique IP address for each Ethernet hardware address Chapter 3 Configuring the Interface Module for Ethernet Communication For information about See page Before you begin 3 1 Configuring channel 3A 3 2 Specifying Ethernet Specific information 3 2 Manually entering module configuration information 3 2 Using BOOTP to enter configuration information 3 4 Before configuring channel 3A for Ethernet communication be sure to e know the Ethernet hardware address see page 2 2 e assign an IP address to the module Because the PLC 5 Ethernet interface module uses the TCP IP protocol each Ethernet hardware address on the network requires a unique IP address If the interface module is connected to You must assign an Ethernet PLC 5 processor two 2 IP addresses one for the PLC 5 processor one for the interface module an Enhanced PLC 5 processor one 1 IP address for the interface module a ControlNet PLC 5 proces
2. 64 PCCC internal inconsistency 65 Dual port system call failed 66 Dual port internal inconsistency 67 ISR system call failed 68 ISR internal inconsistency 71 AC power fail 72 Reset asserted 73 Fault asserted 74 Watchdog timeout 75 Unknown NMI 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Ty Pub Name Allen Bradley Publication Problem Report If you find a problem with our documentation please complete and return this form PLC 5 Enthernet Interface Module User Manual Cat No 1785 ENET Pub No Check Problem s Type Technical Accuracy Completeness What information is missing Clarity What is unclear Sequence What is not in the right order Other Comments Use back for more comments Describe Problem s tex 1785 6 5 19 pup Date November 1998 illustration Part No 955134 59 Internal Use Only procedure step example explanation illustration guideline other definition feature info in manual accessibility LJ info not in manual Your Name Location Phone Return to Marketing Communications Allen Bradley Co 1 Allen Bradley Drive Mayfield Hts OH 44124 6118Phone 440 646 3166 Publication ICCG 5 21 Au
3. A 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 1 8 Quick Start Notes 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Using This Chapter d i f I ENET Status STAT O lt a indicator XMT CO lt Transmit indicator TRANSCEIVER FUSE 1 9AMP 250V External lt q transceiver fuse E T H E R 8 Channel 3A E 15 pin AUI T connector port H 3 A Allen Bradley __1785 ENET 206114M Chapter 2 Installing the Interface Module Read this chapter to connect your Ethernet interface module to a PLC 5 processor e install the processor and interface module combination in a 1771 I O chassis For information about See page Checking the 1785 ENET package before you begin 2 2 Equipment you must provide 2 3 Preventing electrostatic discharge ESD damage 2 4 Complying with the European Union Directive 2 4 Installing the Ethernet interface module 2 5 Removing the Ethernet interface module 2 8 The PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module is a single slot module that attaches to the side of any enhanced PLC 5 series B or later processor to provide Ethernet connectivity for the attached processor When used with The interface module provides Enhanced PLC 5 processor Ethe
4. ENET devices 3 and 4 device2 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 3 6 Configuring the Interface Module for Ethernet Communication Based on this configuration the BOOTPTAB file would look like this Legend gw ha ht ip sm vm ie gateways hardware address hardware type host IP address subnet mask BOOTP vendor extensions format template host Default string for each type of Ethernet client defaults5E ht 1 vm rfc1048 Entries for 1785 ENET devicel tc defaults5E device2 tc defaults5E device4 tc defaults5E modules ip 12 34 56 1 ha 0000BC031234 ip 12 34 56 2 ha 0000BC035678 ip 12 34 56 4 ha 0000BC038827 Entries for Ethernet PLC 5 processors device3 tc defaults5E ip 12 34 56 3 ha 0000BC1C9012 1l 1 10MB Ethernet 2 userfc1048 Run your BOOTP server utility and then cycle power on the chassis that contains the Ethernet interface module This sends the configuration information to the Ethernet sidecar module If you do not have access to a BOOTP server Rockwell Automation offers a BOOTP tool on http www ab com networks 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Using This Chapter Applying Power to the Chassis Monitoring the LEDs Chapter 4 Communic
5. PLC 5 processor 2 Push the exposed pins into the connector header port holes on the PLC 5 processor Attach the interface module to a this end of the connector header 205963M 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 2 6 Installing the Interface Module Important Make sure you carefully align the pins and holes before you press the connector header into the processor If you improperly align them you will bend the connector header pins when you press them together Do not use excessive force on the connector header when seating it into the processor You do not need to key the connector Connect the Interface Module to the Processor Lay the processor on a flat surface and follow these steps to connect the interface module to the processor 1 Align the pins and holes ofthe Frontof the interface modul interface module to those on a ve the connector header Press the interface module into the connector header 2 3 Tighten the screws Front of the PLC 5 processo Installed connector header 20597 Important Make sure you carefully align the pins and holes before you press the interface module into the connector header If you improperly align them you will bend the connector header pins Install the Processor Interface Module into the Chassis To install the attached modules into the 1771 I O chass
6. This product is tested to meet Council Directive 73 23 EEC Low Voltage by applying the safety requirements of EN 61131 2 Programmable Controllers Part 2 Equipment Requirements and Tests For specific information required by EN 61131 2 see the appropriate sections in this publication as well as the Industrial Automation Wiring and Grounding Guidelines for Noise Immunity publication 1770 4 1 This equipment is classified as open equipment and must be mounted in an enclosure during operation to provide safety protection Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Installing the Interface Module 2 5 Installing the Interface Module To install the PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module you must e attach the connector header to the processor e attach adhesive washers to the processor e connect the interface module to the processor e install the combination into the chassis ATTENTION If your power supply is already installedin the chassis be sure the chassis power supply is turned OFF before you begin the installation procedures Do not attempt to install the interface module with chassis power ON Installing the module with chassis power ON will damage the module Attach the Connector Header to the Processor If you have not already done so attach a grounding wrist strap to your wrist Then follow these steps to attach the connector header to the processor 1 Locate the
7. i e one line per module 3 Edit each copy of the template as follows A Replace sidecar with the name you assigned the Ethernet interface module Use only letters and numbers do not use underscores B Replace aa bb cc dd with the IP address to be assigned to the interface module C Replace xxyy with the last four digits of the Ethernet hardware address Use only valid hexadecimal digits 0 9 A F do not use the hyphens or colons that separate the numbers You will find the hardware address on a label affixed to the printed circuit board of the Ethernet interface module 4 Save close and make a backup copy of this file Example In this example there are three PLC 5 processors two enhanced processors and one Ethernet processor with attached 1785 ENET interface modules and an HP 9000 workstation The names and hardware addresses are device specific Name IP Address Hardware Address devicel 12 34 56 1 00 00 BC 03 12 34 device2 12 34 56 2 00 00 BC 03 56 78 device3 12 34 56 3 00 00 BC 1C 90 12 device4 12 34 56 4 00 00 BC 03 88 27 a a a HP 9000 23 Re H8 5 1 MEE J E PLC 5 20S cst 5 PLC 5 40E with attached enhanced PLC 5 PLC 5 20S 1785 ENET module processor with enhanced PLC 5 for use of additional 1785 ENET processor with communication port devicet 1785
8. ms per MSG Words per second read 1 20 2 49 5 20 read 20 19 8 50 5 396 read 100 18 8 53 2 1 880 read 1000 10 6 94 3 10 600 write 1 21 4 46 7 21 write 20 21 3 46 9 426 write 100 20 4 49 0 2 040 write 1000 114 87 7 11 400 Workstation to PLC Solicited Asynchronous Operation Words MSG per second ms per MSG Words per second read 1 99 3 10 1 99 read 20 96 8 10 3 1 936 read 100 90 7 11 0 9 070 read 1000 54 7 18 2 54 700 write 1 102 6 9 7 102 write 20 100 4 10 0 2 008 write 100 94 0 10 6 9 400 write 1000 49 8 20 1 49 800 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com B 2 Performance Data Workstation to PLC Solicited Synchronous Operation Words MSG per second ms per MSG Words per second read 1 45 8 21 8 45 read 20 43 6 22 9 872 read 100 41 8 23 9 4 180 read 1000 23 3 42 9 23 300 write 1 45 4 22 0 45 write 20 443 22 6 886 write 100 41 7 24 0 4 170 write 1000 21 9 45 7 21 900 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Appendix C SNMP Management Information Base MIB Il Data Groups Simple Network Management Protocol SNMP specifies the diagnostic data that a host computer must maintain for a network management software to access Hosts typically keep statistics on the status of their ne
9. unique path to an end device such as a ControlNet PLC 5 processor on a ControlNet link attached via a 1756 CNB module Each unique path uses a different connection There is an exception for a PLC 5 processor on a DH link attached via a 1756 DHRIO module Each 1756 DHRIO module uses only one connection regardless of how many devices are attached to it and how many paths you define to those devices Multiple MSG instructions can use the same path to a device but only one connection is used because the path is the same 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 4 4 Communicating via the Interface Module Monitoring Ethernet Status Data Be sure you have assigned a diagnostics file before you try to monitor channel 3A See page 3 4 Monitor the status of communication through the PLC 5 Ethernet interface module by accessing the Ethernet Channel 3A status screen The diagnostic counter data displayed is stored in the diagnostics file you defined on the Ethernet Channel 3A configuration screen see page 3 3 Status field Bytes Displays the number of Commands sent 0 3 Commands sent by the channel received 4 7 Commands received by the channel Replies sent 8 11 Replies sent by the channel received 12 15 Replies received by the channel sent with error 16 19 Replies containing errors sent by the chan
10. 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 2 4 Installing the Interface Module Preventing Electrostatic Discharge ESD Damage Complying with European Union Directives 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 The Ethernet interface module is shipped in a static shielded container to guard against electrostatic discharge ESD ESD can damage integrated circuits or semiconductors in the module if you touch the backplane connector pins Avoid electrostatic damage by observing the following precautions e Remain in contact with an approved ground point while handling the module by wearing a properly grounded wrist strap e Do not touch the backplane connector or connector pins e When not in use keep the module in its static shielded container If this product has the CE mark it is approved for installation within the European Community or EEA regions It has been designed and tested to meet the following directives EMC Directive This product is tested to meet Council Directive 89 336 EC Electromagnetic Compatibility EMC and the following standards in whole or in part documented in a technical construction file EN 50081 2 EMC Generic Emission Standard Part 2 Industrial Environment e EN 50082 2 EMC Generic Immunity Standard Part 2 Industrial Environment This product is intended for use in an industrial environment Low Voltage Directive
11. 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Quick Start 1 5 Step 7 Configure channel 3A for Ethernet communication See Chapter 3 Configuring the Interface Module for Ethernet Communication A Be sure channel 3A is designated as the channel supporting the 1785 ENET module e Your programming software must support configuration for channel 3A e The PLC 5 processor must contain the proper firmware revision See chapter 2 e If you are configuring online and the interface module is attached to the processor channel 3A will automatically support the interface module e If you are configuring offline follow the steps listed in your programming software documentation B Specify Ethernet specific configuration information including the IP address using any one of these methods e manually configure channel 3A using your programming software e use a BOOTP server already on your network see your Ethernet network administrator for assistance Rockwell Automation offers a BOOTP tool on http www ab com Important Assign a diagnostics file to store all status information for channel 3A Use your programming software to select an unused integer file number 10 999 The software creates an integer file that is 44 words long 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 1 6 Quick Start Step 8 Apply power to the 1 0 chassis a
12. Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Communicating via the Interface Module 4 3 Establishing an Ethernet Connection Fault Code Description 91 Sidecar module undefined message type 92 Sidecar module requesting undefined pool 93 Sidecar module illegal maximum pool size 94 Sidecar module illegal ASCII message 95 Sidecar module reported fault which may be the result of a bad program that corrupts memory or of a hardware failure 96 Sidecar module not physically connected to the PLC 5 processor 97 Sidecar module requested a pool size that is too small for PCC command occurs at power up 98 Sidecar module first last 16 bytes RAM test failed 99 Sidecar module to processor data transfer faulted 100 Processor to sidecar module transfer failed 101 Sidecar module end of scan transfer failed 102 The file number specified for raw data transfer through the sidecar module is an illegal value 103 The element number specified for raw data transfer through the sidecar module is an illegal value 104 The size of the transfer requested through the sidecar module is an illegal size 105 The offset into the raw transfer segment of the sidecar module is an illegal value 106 Sidecar module transfer protection violation for PLC 5 26 5 46 and 5 86 processors only The Ethernet interface module supports 64 simultaneous connections per module A connection is a
13. Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Using This Manual Contents of This Manual Chapter Title Contents Preface Describes the purpose background and scope of this manual Also specifies the audience for whom this manual is intended 1 Quick Start Provides brief installation and configuration procedures for the advanced user 2 Installing the Interface Module Explains and illustrates how to install and remove the interface module into and from the 1771 I O chassis Also specifies compliance with European Union Directives 3 Configuring the Interface Provides instructions for Module for Ethernet configuring channel 3A Communication assigning an IP address to the module using the BOOTP servers on the utility disk 4 Communicating via the Describes how to establish an Ethernet connection and monitor Interface Module status data Also specifies how to use the MSG instruction over the Ethernet link A Specifications Provides physical electrical and environmental specifications for the interface module B Performance Data Provides measured performance data for the interface module C SNMP Management Describes the SNMP Management Information Base MIB II Information Base MIB II Data Data Groups Groups D Status LED Error Codes Describes the status LED error codes 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Related Documentation For additional information regarding Allen Bradley
14. Looking for more information Artisan Visit us on the web at http www artisan scientific com for more information QUALITY INSTRUMENTATION GUARANTEED Price Quotations Drivers Technical Specifications Manuals and Documentation Artisan Scientific is Your Source for Quality New and Certified Used Pre owned Equipment Tens of Thousands of In Stock Items Fast Shipping and Delivery Equipment Demos Hundreds of Manufacturers Supported Leasing Monthly Rentals Consignment Service Center Repairs InstraView Remote Inspection Experienced Engineers and Technicians on staff in our Remotely inspect equipment before purchasing with our State of the art Full Service In House Service Center Facility Innovative InstraView website at http www instraview com We buy used equipment We also offer credit for Buy Backs and Trade Ins Sell your excess underutilized and idle used equipment Contact one of our Customer Service Representatives today Talk to a live person 888 88 SOURCE 888 887 6872 Contact us by email sales artisan scientific com Visit our website http www artisan scientific com Allen Bradley PLC 5 Ethernet User Manual Interface Module Cat No 1785 ENET Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Important User Information Solid state equipment has operational characteristics differing from those of electromechanica
15. at channel Ethernet address The interface module s Ethernet Assigned by Allen Bradley and cannot be changed hardware address Displayed as a set of 6 bytes in hex separated by colons Display only IP address The interface module s Internet Cursor to the field and enter an address in this form address a b c d Where a b c d are between 1 254 decimal You must specify the IP address to have the interface module connect to the TCP IP network Do not use 0 or 255 as a b c or d in the IP address BOOTP enable Whether BOOTP is enabled Cursor to the field and specify No for manual configuration Before you disable BOOTP make sure you have an IP address specified With BOOTP set to No the interface module uses the parameters that you specify locally To enable BOOTP see Using BOOTP to Enter Configuration Information on page 3 4 MSG conn timeout The number of milliseconds allowed for an MSG instruction to establish a connection with the destination node Cursor to the field and enter a timeout period in milliseconds The interface module rounds to the nearest 250 ms The valid range for a timeout period is 0 65 535 ms The default is 15 000 ms MSG reply timeout The number of milliseconds the Ethernet interface waits for a reply to a command it initiated through an MSG instruction Cursor to the field and enter a timeout period in milliseconds The interface module rounds to the nearest 250 ms T
16. ating via the Interface Module Once the PLC 5 Ethernet interface module is connected and configured the interface module and the processor function as one unit For information about See page Applying power to the chassis 4 1 Monitoring the LEDs 4 1 Establishing an Ethernet connection 4 3 Monitoring Ethernet status data 4 4 Using the MSG instruction 4 5 Communicating with ControlLogix Devices 4 6 Interpreting error codes 4 7 Identifying the interface module within a network 4 9 Saving restoring programs 4 9 After installing the interface module into the chassis and configuring channel 3A for Ethernet communication apply power to the 1771 I O chassis Upon power up the PLC 5 Ethernet interface module performs the following functions e establishes communication with the PLC 5 processor e broadcasts BOOTP requests if BOOTP is enabled see page 3 4 If your module is operating correctly you see these LED indications e Status LED remains lit green Ethernet Transmit LED briefly lights green when transmitting packets If the LEDs do not indicate the above normal operation see the following table for an explanation of indicator lights 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 4 2 Communicating via the Interface Module Monitor the series of blinks to determine the fault code Count the first and last s
17. cating via the Interface Module This Parameter IP Address When you enter 3A as the port number an Ethernet instruction entry screen appears In addition to the information you entered previously this screen includes a field for entering the Host Internet IP address Enter the IP address of the destination processor here Specifies The MSG instruction s destination node Ifthe destination is a PLC 5 20E 5 40E 5 80E or another 1785 ENET equipped PLC 5 processor the destination must be a full IP address fthe destination is an INTERCHANGE client program type CLIENT in the Destination Node field Important You must set the port number to 3A in order to access this function Communicating with ControlLogix Devices The Ethernet interface module series A revision E and later with a PLC 5 processor can communicate over Ethernet with ControlLogix devices or through a ControlLogix Ethernet 1756 ENET module to other PLC 5 processors The following diagram shows an Ethernet PLC 5 processor or PLC 5 processor with a 1785 ENET sidecar module and the other PLC and SLC processors it can communicate with using a multihop MSG instruction nj Ethernet PLC 5 processor or PLC 5 processor with 1785 ENET sidecar PTC ToT mu EE Ethernet U z nj I E ie ControlLogix
18. celeration for 1141 ms duration Non operating 50 g peak acceleration for 1141 ms duration Vibration 2 g 10 to 500 Hz operating and non operating 0 012 inches peak to peak displacement Hardware Addressing Module communicates through processor channel 3A It does not communicate across the 1771 I O backplane Communication Ethernet TCP IP protocol 15 pin AUI transceiver port 64 simultaneous connections per module Connections 512 unsolicited definitions per module used by RSLinx and INTERCHANGE software packages Location 1771 A1B A2B A3B A3B1 A4B chassis second left most slot attached to the processor Keying none Weight 0 95 kg 2 1 Ibs a CSA Class I Division 2 Groups A B C D Agency Certification when product or packaging is marked UL listed CE marked for all applicable directives 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com A 2 Module Specifications Notes 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Appendix B Performance Data PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module 1785 ENET The following tables show measured performance data for the 1785 ENET module PLC to PLC 1 active MSG instruction Operation Words MSG per second
19. cessor See Chapter 2 Installing the Interface Module connector header Attach the interface module to this end Push the exposed pins into the holes on the PLC 5 processor Wear a grounding wrist strap to guard against ESD 19379 Important Make sure you carefully align the pins and holes before you press the connector header into the processor If you improperly align them you will bend the connector header pins when you press them together Do not use excessive force on the connector header when seating it into the processor You do not need to key the connector Step 4 Use the captive screws to connect the interface module to See Chapter 2 the processor Installing the Interface Module Front of the PLC 5 processo Installed connector header 205972M 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 1 4 Quick Start Step 5 Install the interface module processor combination in the left most See Chapter 2 slot of the 1771 1 0 chassis Installing the Interface Module SS Be sure power to the Ex 1771 1 0 chassis is OFF Tic a NSEBESC S 205823M Step 6 Assign an IP address to the interface module See Chapter 3 Configuring the Interface Module for Ethernet Communication 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed
20. chassis ic Fes ez SLC 5 05 Processor DH sE m V o FCCC HITTTITTTTITITIT FCCC TT moo 5 PLC 5 Processor 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 PLC 5 processor with ControlNet 1785 ENET sidecar ControlNet PLC 5 processor Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Interpreting Error Codes Communicating via the Interface Module 4 7 To communicate through a ControlLogix 1756 ENET module you configure the multihop feature of a MSG instruction from the Ethernet PLC 5 processor or PLC 5 processor with 1785 ENET sidecar module to the target device You need RSLogix 5 programing software For more information see the MSG instruction in the PLC 5 Programmable Controller Instruction Set Reference Manual publication 1785 6 1 If you want to go through the ControlLogix 1756 ENET module and out the 1756 DHRIO module to the target device you e use Gateway configuration software to configure the 1756 DHRIO module routing table in the ControlLogix system specify a Link ID number on channel properties for channel 2 3A of the Ethernet PLC 5 processor or PLC 5 p
21. ct routing ipRouteType type direct remote valid invalid 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Group IP continued SNMP Management Information Base MIB Il Data Groups C 3 MIB Description ipRouteProto mechanism used to determine route ipRouteAge age of route in seconds ipRouteMask subnet mask for route ipNetToMediafllndex interface number ipNetToMediaPhysAddress media address of mapping ipNetToMediaNetAddress IP address of mapping ipNetToM ediaType how mapping was detemined ipReasmReqds fragments received needing reassembly ipReasmOKs datagrams successfully reassembled ipReasmFails reassembly failure ipFragOKs datagrams successfully fragmented ipFragCreates fragments created ipAdEntAddr the IP address of this entry ipAdEntflIndex interface number ipAdEntNetM ask subnet mask for IP address ipAdEntBcastAddr LSB of IP broadcast address ipAdEntReasMaxSize the largest IP datagram able to be reassembled ICMP 26 counters two counters for each ICMP message type TCP tcpRtoAlgorithm identifies retransmission algorithm tcpRtoMin minimum retransmission timeout in milliseconds tcpRtoMax maximum retransmission timeout in milliseconds tcpmaxConn maximum of simultaneous TCP connections allowed tcpActiveOpens number of active opens tcpPassiveOpe
22. e Module into the Chassis 2 6 Removing the Interface Module 0 cee 2 8 Configuring the Interface Module Chapter 3 for Ethernet Communication Using This Chapter csse 31 Before You Begin anunua aunan rrna n arna 3 1 Configuring Channel 3A 000 cece eens 3 2 Specifying Ethernet Specific Information 3 2 Manually Entering Module Configuration Information 3 2 Using BOOTP to Enter Configuration Information 3 4 Edit the BOOTPTAB Configuration File 3 4 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com toc ii Table of Contents Communicating via the Interface Module Module Specifications Performance Data SNMP Management Information Base MIB Il Data Groups Status LED Error Codes 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Chapter 4 Using This Chapter v scs aeos exci ucc ic ace datas 4 1 Applying Power to the Chassis cc cece cece eee 4 1 Monitoring the LEDS tisha adv Ras DR rec alias 4 1 Establishing an Ethernet Connection 4 3 Monitoring Ethernet Status Data 0005 4 4 Using the MSG Instruction 0 cece eens 4 5 Entering Parameters acc ceadasata te wean wk eked 4 5 Communicating with ControlLogix Devices 4 6 Interpreting Error Codes iocos cess tet ERR 4 7 Identifying the Interface Module within a Network 4 9 Saving a
23. e owned Equipment Tens of Thousands of In Stock Items Fast Shipping and Delivery Equipment Demos Hundreds of Manufacturers Supported Leasing Monthly Rentals Consignment Service Center Repairs InstraView Remote Inspection Experienced Engineers and Technicians on staff in our Remotely inspect equipment before purchasing with our State of the art Full Service In House Service Center Facility Innovative InstraView website at http www instraview com We buy used equipment We also offer credit for Buy Backs and Trade Ins Sell your excess underutilized and idle used equipment Contact one of our Customer Service Representatives today Talk to a live person 888 88 SOURCE 888 887 6872 Contact us by email sales artisan scientific com Visit our website http www artisan scientific com
24. eries of slow blinks disregarding the series of fast blinks between the slow series 1 we Indicator Color Description Probable Cause Recommended Action STAT Solid red Critical hardware fault Interface module requires Contact your local Jj internal repair Allen Bradley distributor Blinking red Hardware or software fault Fault code dependent See Appendix D detected and reported via a code Off Ethernet interface is functioning Normal operation Attach the processor and properly but it is not attached to interface module to an an active Ethernet network active Ethernet network Green Ethernet channel 3A is Normal operation No action required functioning properly and has detected that it is connected to an active Ethernet network XMIT Green Lights green briefly when the Ethernet port is transmitting a packet It does not indicate whether or not the Ethernet Port is receiving a packet Important The interface module will flash the indicator lights as shown in Appendix D The processor may fault even though the interface module does not The table below lists all major processor fault codes pertinent to a sidecar module such as the Ethernet interface module For a complete list of fault codes for PLC 5 processors see the Enhanced and Ethernet PLC 5 Programmable Controllers User Manual publication 1785 6 5 12 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation
25. for which the first transmission attempt is delayed because the medium is busy late collisions 84 87 Times that a collision is detected later than 512 bit times into the transmission of a packet 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Using the MSG Instruction MSG EN SEND RECEIVE MESSAGE Control Block DN ER This Parameter Command Type Communicating via the Interface Module 4 5 The message MSG instruction transfers up to 1000 elements of data the size of each element depends on the data table section that you specify and the type of message command that you use One binary element contains one 16 bit word for example and one floating point element contains two 16 bit words The MSG instruction transfers data in packets Each packet can contain up to 709 words for Ethernet processors and interface modules If your message transfer contains more words than fit in one packet the transfer requires more than one packet of transfer data The more packets of data to transfer the longer the total transfer takes Entering Parameters The control block is where all of the information relating to the message is stored Ethernet message instructions use two consecutive control blocks This block Contains first message information second destination address Important Because Ethernet messages
26. gust 1995 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com FAX 440 646 4320 PN 955107 82 PLEASE FASTEN HERE DO NOT STAPLE Other Comments PLEASE FOLD HERE NO POSTAGE NECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES BUSINESS REPLY MAIL FIRST CLASS MAIL PERMIT NO 18235 CLEVELAND OH POSTAGE WILL BE PAID BY THE ADDRESSEE N Rockwell Automation Allen Bradley 1 ALLEN BRADLEY DR MAYFIELD HEIGHTS OH 44124 9705 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation mmn lalah ulladildalli TT illa jl ll cie ul nti II com PLEASE REMOVE ControlLogix ControlBus Logix5550 PLC 5 PLC 3 PLC 2 SLC ControlNet DH Allen Bradley and Rockwell Software are trademarks of Rockwell Automation DeviceNet is a trademark of the Open DeviceNet Vendor Association Ethernet is a trademark of Digital Equipment Corporation Intel and Xerox Corporation 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Allen Bradley a Rockwell Automation Business has been helping its customers Rockwell Automation improve productivity and quality for more than 90 years We design manufacture Allen Bradley and support a broad range of automation products worldwide They include logic processors power and motion control devices operator interfaces sensors and a variety of
27. he valid range for a timeout period is 0 65 535 ms The default is 3 000 ms Inactivity timeout The number of minutes of inactivity before the connection is closed Cursor to the field and enter a timeout period in minutes The valid range for a timeout period is 0 65 535 minutes The default is 30 minutes Broadcast address The broadcast address to which the processor should respond Subnet mask The processor s subnet mask used when network has subnets Gateway address The IP address of the gateway that provides a connection to another IP network See the Enhanced and Ethernet PLC 5 Programmable Controllers User Manual publication 1785 6 5 12 for information about how to configure these advanced Ethernet functions Link ID A DH link number Use the link ID number to identify the processor when configuring a ControlLogix system using the ControlLogix Gateway software Enter a link ID number The valid range is 0 199 Only enter a Link ID number if you plan to configure multihop MSG instructions through a 1756 DHRIO module in a ControlLogix chassis See chapter 4 for more information After entering the channel 3A configuration information either accept edits or access status information about channel 3A 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 3 4 Configuring the Interface Module for Ethe
28. ion information using the screens within your programming software package e supplying module configuration information using a BOOTP utility use a BOOTP server on your network and edit the BOOTPTAB file Manually Entering Module Configuration Information The default for the Ethernet interface module is BOOTP enabled You must first disable BOOTP before you can use the programming software to enter module configuration information To disable BOOTP and to manually enter module configuration information for channel 3A follow the steps specified in your programming software documentation Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com This field Diagnostics file Specifies The file containing the channel s status information Configuring the Interface Module for Ethernet Communication 3 3 Enter configuration information in the appropriate fields Configure by doing the following Cursor to the field type an unused integer file number 10 999 and press Enter The system creates an integer file 44 words long ATTENTION Do not assign a diagnostic file number that is the I O status file you assigned to another communication channel or any other used file Unpredictable machine action can result Important You must define a diagnostics file for a channel configured for anything but unused even if you are not using the channel if you want status information for th
29. is follow these steps 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Installing the Interface Module 2 7 1 Verify that power to the 1771 1 0 chassis is OFF ary 2 Raise the locking bar J a ZS L L ZF Remember to wear a grounding wrist strap to guard against ESD o 3 Insert the module combination into the 1771 1 0 chassis in the left most slots and slide along the the card guides 4 Lower the locking bar into place over the modules 20615 M 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 2 8 Installing the Interface Module Removing the Interface Module To remove the interface module from its installed position follow the instructions below 1 Remove power to the 1771 1 0 chassis 2 Lift the locking bar up and away from the processor and interface module Ejector tabs Remember to wear a grounding re wrist strap to guard against ESD er 3 Lift the ejector tabs on the front of each module simultaneously and remove the connected modules 4 Loosen the four screws on the side of the interface module PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module
30. l equipment Safety Guidelines for the Application Installation and Maintenance of Solid State Controls publication SGI 1 1 describes some important differences between solid state equipment and hard wired electromechanical devices Because of this difference and also because of the wide variety of uses for solid state equipment all persons responsible for applying this equipment must satisfy themselves that each intended application of this equipment is acceptable In no event will the Allen Bradley Company be responsible or liable for indirect or consequential damages resulting from the use or application of this equipment The examples and diagrams in this manual are included solely for illustrative purposes Because of the many variables and requirements associated with any particular installation the Allen Bradley Company cannot assume responsibility or liability for actual use based on the examples and diagrams No patent liability is assumed by Allen Bradley Company with respect to use of information circuits equipment or software described in this manual Reproduction of the contents of this manual in whole or in part without written permission of the Allen Bradley Company is prohibited Throughout this manual we use notes to make you aware of safety considerations ATTENTION Identifies information about practices or circumstances that can lead to personal injury or death property damage or economic loss Attentio
31. nd Restoring Programs sssssssss 4 9 Appendix A Appendix B Appendix C Appendix D Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 1 ENET STAT XMT 5 TRANSCEIVER porto 4mzamr m 0000000 000000080 Allen Bradley 1785 ENET O Status lt a indicator T7 Transmit indicator External transceiver fuse 2 Channel 3A 15 pin AUI connector port 20611xM Chapter 1 Quick Start This chapter can help you get started quickly using the PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module We base the procedures here on the assumption that you have an understanding of e PLC 5 products e TCP IP protocol Internet addressing Because this is a quick start guide for experienced users this chapter does not contain detailed explanations about the procedures listed It does however reference other chapters in this book where you can get more information If you have any questions or are unfamiliar with the terms used or concepts presented in the procedural steps always read the referenced chapters and other recommended documentation before trying to apply the information This chapter e tells you what equipment you must provide for installing the Ethernet interface module e helps you install and configure the module e helps you connect to an Ethernet link and communicate via the interface module 1785 6 5 19 N
32. nd processor See Chapter 4 Communicating via the Interface Module Turn on the I O chassis power supply 20634 M Step 9 Establish an Ethernet connection See Chapter 4 Communicating via the Interface Module Step 10 Check that the module is operating correctly See Chapter 4 Communicating via the Interface Module Be sure that you assigned a diagnostics file to store status information for channel 3A 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com What You Have Done What s Next Quick Start 1 7 You have now successfully installed and configured the PLC 5 Ethernet interface module for operation with the attached processor on an Ethernet link If your module is operating successfully it is not necessary to continue reading this manual For more information about operation PLC 5 processors within your control system see the Enhanced and Ethernet PLC 5 Programmable Controller User Manual publication 1785 6 5 12 If necessary see the remainder of this manual for more detailed information about installing and configuring the interface module For information about See installing the interface module chapter 2 configuring the interface module for Ethernet communication chapter 3 communicating over Ethernet via the interface module chapter 4 interface module specifications appendix
33. need two consecutive control blocks the message control block that you specify must start on an even number Use your programming software package to enter the control block address After entering the control block the programming terminal automatically displays a data entry screen from which you enter instruction parameters that are stored at the control block address Specifies Whether the MSG instruction performs a read or write operation The software toggles between PLC 5 Typed Read PLC 5 Typed Write PLC 5 Typed Write to SLC PLC 5 Typed Read from SLC SLC Typed Logical Read SLC Typed Logical Write PLC 2 Unprotected Read PLC 2 Unprotected Write PLC 3 Word Range Read and PLC 3 Word Range Write PLC 5 Data Table Address The data file address of the processor containing the message instruction If the MSG operation is write this address is the starting word of the source file If the MSG operation is read this address is the starting word of the destination file Size in Elements The number of elements 1 1000 to be transferred Destination Address The starting address of the source or destination file in the target processor Port Number The channel for message communications Communications through the Ethernet interface module use channel 3A 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 4 6 Communi
34. nel received with error 20 23 Replies containing errors received by the channel timed out 24 27 Replies not received within the specified timeout period Ethernet in octets 28 31 Octets received on the channel out octets 32 35 Octets sent on the channel in packets 36 39 Packets received on the channel including broadcast packets out packets 40 43 Packets sent on the channel including broadcast packets alignment errors 44 47 Frames received on the channel that are not an integral number of octets in length FCS errors 48 51 Frames received on the channel that do not pass the FCS check carrier sense errors 52 55 Times that the carrier sense condition was lost or never asserted while trying to transmit a frame excessive collisions 56 59 Frames for which a transmission fails due to excessive collisions excessive deferrals 60 63 Frames for which a transmission is deferred for an excessive period of time MAC receive errors 64 67 Frames for which reception on an interface fails due to internal MAC sublayer receive error MAC transmit errors 68 71 Frames for which reception on an interface fails due to internal MAC sublayer transmission error single collisions 72 15 Successfully transmitted frames for which transmission was delayed because of collision multiple collisions 76 79 Successfully transmitted frames for which transmission was delayed more than once because of collision deferred transmissions 80 83 Frames
35. nitor screen 00D5 Incorrect address for the local data table 0500 Message timed out waiting for a response from a client 1000 Illegal command specified in MSG instruction 2000 Error communicating with a client 3000 Client session has disconnected 4000 Processor connected but faulted hardware 5000 Client generated an error converting data 6000 Requested function is not available Client s unsolicited handler returned an error 7000 Processor is in program mode 8000 Processor s compatibility file does not exist 9000 Client s backlog has been exceeded B000 Processor is downloading so it is inaccessible F001 Processor incorrectly converted the address F002 Incomplete address F003 Incorrect address F006 Addressed file does not exist in target processor F007 Destination file is too small for number of words requested FOOA Target processor cannot put requested information in packets FOOB Privilege error access denied FOOC Requested function is not available FOOD Request is redundant F011 Data type requested does not match data available F012 Incorrect command parameters 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Identifying the Interface Module within a Network Saving and Restoring Programs Communicating via the Interface Module 4 9 The PLC 5 Etherne
36. ns help you e identify a hazard e avoid the hazard recognize the consequences Important Identifies information that is especially important for suc cessful application and understanding of the product 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Who Should Use This Manual Purpose of This Manual Preface Using This Manual Read this preface to familiarize yourself with the rest of the manual This preface covers the following topics e who should use this manual e the purpose of this manual e Allen Bradley support Use this manual if you are responsible for designing installing programming or troubleshooting control systems that use Allen Bradley programmable controllers or interface modules You should have a basic understanding of PLC 5 programmable controller products and the following Ethernet related topics e TCP IP protocol e Internet addressing If you do not have an understanding of these areas contact your local Allen Bradley representative for information on available training courses before using this product This manual e tells you what equipment you must provide for installing the PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module helps you install and configure the interface module e helps you connect to an Ethernet link and communicate via the interface module 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality
37. ns number of passive opens tcpAttemptFails number of failed connection attempts tcpEstabResets number of connections reset tcpCurrEstab number of current connections 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com C 4 SNMP Management Information Base MIB II Data Groups 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Group TCP continued MIB Description tcpInSegs number of segments received tcpOutSegs number of segments sent tcpRetransSegs number of segments retransmitted tcplnErrors number of segments discarded due to format errors tcpOutRsts number of resets generated tcpConnState state of connection tcpConnLocalAddress local IP address tcpConnLocalPort local TCP port tcpConnRemAddress remote IP address tcpConnRemPort remote TCP port Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Interpreting LED Error Codes Appendix D Status LED Error Codes When the status LED blinks red it signals that a hardware or software fault has been detected and it reports that error via a code This code is a two digit fault code signalled by a flash sequence First the LED begins the sequence with ten rapid flashes Then the LED signals the first digit of the code by a number of slow flashes Approximately two seconds after the LED displays the firs
38. on This Manual If you find a problem with this manual please notify us of it on the enclosed Publication Problem Report If you have any suggestions for how this manual could be made more useful to you please contact us at the address below Technical Communication Allen Bradley Comapny 1 Allen Bradley Drive Mayfield Heights Ohio 44124 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com iv Using This Manual Notes 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Table of Contents Quick Start Chapter 1 Installing and Configuring the Interface Module 1 2 What You Have Done 0 0 assy acne e aD oaa dcc ad 1 7 What s NeXt ico rkerpdggddad40 dg dgdqdddddqdoks 1 7 Installing the Interface Module Chapter 2 Using This Chapter a2 2233 ba e bs 2 1 Before You Begin cece eee eee eee eens 2 2 Necessary Equipment c cece eee eee 2 3 Preventing Electrostatic Discharge ESD Damage 2 4 Complying with European Union Directives 2 4 EMC Directive nick Sends eo ea hees GeGnee an aud 2 4 Low Voltage Directive cece eee eee 2 4 Installing the Interface Module 00 00s 2 5 Attach the Connector Header to the Processor 2 5 Connect the Interface Module to the Processor 2 6 Install the Interfac
39. ovember 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 1 2 Quick Start Installing and Configuring the Interface Module Step 1 Check the contents of your shipment a Quantity Description ES 1 PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module 1785 ENET 1 Connector kit containing 1 PLC 5 58 pin connector header 1 Industrial Automation Wiring and Grounding Guidelines publication 1770 4 1 1 PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module User Manual publication 1785 6 5 19 Step 2 Locate and have ready all equipment and tools necessary for installation D H E m E lt L 1 ss Ec 1 EL I i C E Ei EC Q oo CS i 0 U U SJ U ELI D C 314 J E Co HIE OS To I O Chassis PLC 5 Processor 1771 A1B B A2B B A3 B or A4B B D UE 80009 O ESD phillips n JY Grounding screwdriver o Wrist Strap Any external or internal Allen Bradley power supply 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Quick Start 1 3 Step 3 Attach the connector header to the pro
40. programmable controllers and related products see the Enhanced and Ethernet PLC 5 Programmable Controllers User Manual publication 1785 6 5 12 For Ethernet information see these web sites e http www ab com networks whatnew html ethernet e http standards ieee org catalog olis lanman html e http www ietf cnri reston va us For additional information on TCP IP protocol and networking in general see these publications e Comer Douglas E Internetworking with TCP IP Volume 1 Protocols and Architecture Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall 1990 ISBN 0 13 468505 9 Tanenbaum Andrew S Computer Networks 2nd ed Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall 1989 ISBN 0 13 162959 X Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Allen Bradley Support Using This Manual iii Allen Bradley offers support services worldwide with over 75 sales support offices 512 authorized distributors and 260 authorized systems integrators located throughout the United States alone plus Allen Bradley representatives in every major country in the world Local Product Support Contact your local Allen Bradley representative for e sales and order support e product technical training e warranty support support service agreements Technical Product Assistance If you need technical assistance call your local Allen Bradley representative Your Questions or Comments
41. rnet Communication Be sure you have assigned a diagnostics file in which to store channel status information See an example of a BOOTPTAB file on the page 3 6 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Using BOOTP to Enter Configuration Information BOOTP is a protocol that supplies the interface module with configuration information at power up BOOTP lets you dynamically assign IP addresses to devices on the Ethernet link To use BOOTP a BOOTP server must exist on the local Ethernet subnet The server is a computer either a personal computer VAX or UNIX system that has BOOTP server software installed and reads a text file containing network information for individual nodes on the network To enable BOOTP follow the steps specified in your programming software documentation to specify Ethernet configuration information See the table on page 3 3 for field descriptions When BOOTP is enabled the following events occur at power up e The processor broadcasts a BOOTP request message containing its hardware address over the local network or subnet e The BOOTP server compares the hardware address with the addresses in its look up table in the BOOTPTAB file The BOOTP server sends a message back to the processor with the IP address and other network information that corresponds to the hardware address it received With all hardware and IP addresses in one location you can easily change IP addresses in the BOOTP configuration file if yo
42. rnet connectivity without sacrificing DH RIO ports ControlNet PLC 5 processor Ethernet connectivity Ethernet PLC 5 processor the ability to operate dual Ethernet links 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 2 2 Installing the Interface Module Use the interface module with a programming software package that supports configuration for channel 3A and the following processors Series Revision Processor E and later any all Enhanced Ethernet and ControlNet PLC 5 processors D B PLC 5 11 5 20 5 26 5 30 5 40 5 40L 5 46 5 60 5 60L 5 80 5 86 PLC 5 20E 5 40E 5 80E PLC 5 20C 5 40C 5 80C C K PLC 5 11 5 20 5 26 5 30 5 40 5 40L 5 46 5 60 5 60L 5 80 5 86 PLC 5 20E 5 40E 5 80E PLC 5 20C 5 40C 5 80C B L PLC 5 40 5 40L 5 46 5 60 5 60L A L PLC 5 30 A K PLC 5 11 5 20 5 26 All ControlNet 1 5 PLC 5 processors support the 1785 ENET sidecar module Before You Begin Before installing your Ethernet interface module 1 Check your Ethernet interface module package 2 Make certain that you have the following E LE b Mies onl 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Quantity Description 1 PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module 1785 ENET 1 Connector kit containing 1 PLC 5 58 pin connector header 1 Indu
43. rocessor with a 1785 ENET sidecar module For information on specifying the path of the MSG instruction see the documentation for your programming software When the processor interface module detects an error during the transfer of message data the processor sets the ER bit and enters an error code that you can monitor from your programming software Code Hexadecimal Word 1 of the control block Description Displayed on the data monitor screen 0010 No IP address configured for the network 0011 Already at maximum number of connections 0012 Invalid internet address or host name 0013 No such host 0014 Cannot communicate with the name server 0015 Connection not completed before user specified timeout 0016 Connection timed out by the network 0017 Connection refused by destination host 0018 Connection was broken 0019 Reply not received before user specified timeout 001A No network buffer space available 0037 Message timed out in local processor 0083 Processor is disconnected 0089 Processor s message buffer is full 0092 No response regardless of station type 00D3 Control block formatted incorrectly 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 4 8 Communicating via the Interface Module Code Hexadecimal Word 1 of the control block Description Displayed on the data mo
44. software Rockwell is one of the world s leading technology Worldwide repre Se tant o Qum Argentina e Australia e Austria e Bahrain e Belgium Brazil e Bulgaria e Canada Chile e China PRC Colombia e Costa Rica e Croatia e Cyprus e Czech Republic e Denmark e Ecuador e Egypt e El Salvador e Finland France e Germany e Greece e Guatemala e Honduras e Hong Kong Hungary e Iceland e India e Indonesia e Ireland e Israel Italy e Jamaica Japan e Jordan Korea Kuwait e Lebanon e Malaysia e Mexico e Netherlands e New Zealand e Norway Pakistan e Peru e Philippines e Poland Portugal e Puerto Rico e Qatar e Romania e Russia CIS e Saudi Arabia e Singapore e Slovakia e Slovenia e South Africa Republic e Spain e Sweden Switzerland e Taiwan e Thailand e Turkey United Arab Emirates e United Kingdom e United States e Uruguay e Venezuela e Yugoslavia Publication 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 S des 1785 6 5 19 996 PN 955134 59 wee ee Copyright 1998 Rockwell International Corporation Printed in USA Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Looking for more information Artisan Visit us on the web at http www artisan scientific com for more information QUALITY INSTRUMENTATION GUARANTEED Price Quotations Drivers Technical Specifications Manuals and Documentation Artisan Scientific is Your Source for Quality New and Certified Used Pr
45. sor one 1 IP address for the interface module The IP address is software configurable using either the BOOTP protocol or your programming software package See the Manually Entering Module Configuration Information section on page 3 2 or the Using BOOTP to Enter Configuration Information section on page 3 4 Contact your network administrator or Network Solutions Inc the InterNIC for a unique IP address to assign to your Ethernet interface module You can reach the InterNIC by dialing 703 742 4777 or by email at HOSTMASTER INTERNIC NET 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 3 2 Configuring the Interface Module for Ethernet Communication Configuring Channel 3A Specifying Ethernet Specific Information 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Once you know the unique IP address that you will assign to the PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module you must configure channel 3A so your network recognizes the module Use your programming software package to designate channel 3A as the channel that supports the PLC 5 Ethernet interface module if you are configuring offline if you are configuring online designation is automatic Important To configure the 1785 ENET module online it must be attached to the PLC 5 processor Specify Ethernet specific information for the interface module by either e manually entering module configurat
46. strial Automation Wiring and Grounding Guidelines publication 1770 4 1 1 PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module User Manual publication 1785 6 5 19 If any items are missing or incorrect contact your local Allen Bradley sales office or distributor Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Installing the Interface Module 2 3 3 Locate and record the Ethernet hardware address Allen Bradley assigns each PLC 5 Ethernet interface module an Ethernet hardware address at the factory Look for this address either e in the back upper corner of your module e in the channel 3A configuration screen of your PLC 5 programming software Ethernet hardware address label 19915 Necessary Equipment Locate and have ready all the tools and equipment necessary for installation Yes f U Ld co Alias 368 tir es n Eu g spi es p C rje 0 Chassis PLC 5 Processor 1771 A1B B A2B B A3 B or A4B B Supported processors and current firmware see page 2 1 lt quce 3 o EI e q o ESD phillips B Grounding screwdriver Wrist Strap Any external or internal Allen Bradley power supply 1785 6 5 19 November
47. t Interface Module supports the Simple Network Management Protocol SNMP The module responds automatically to SNMP requests and maintains a Management Information Base MIB file Level II Information kept in this file could include for example e number of datagrams received e number of fragmented packets received maximum number of TCP connections allowed See Appendix C for more details You can physically and logically save and restore all programs provided you are using e any release of RSLogix 5 programming software e Al Programming Software release 7 21 or later for all logical saves restores e 6200 Series Programming Software release 5 2 or later for all logical saves restores e an enhanced PLC 5 processor series B or later 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com 4 10 Communicating via the Interface Module Notes 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Appendix A Module Specifications PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module 1785 ENET Backplane Current 2 2A Heat Dissipation 37 54 BTU hr Environmental Conditions 0 to 60 C 32 140 F 40 to 85 C 40 to 185 F 5 to 9596 without condensation Operating Temperature Storage Temperature Relative Humidity Shock Operating 30 g peak ac
48. t digit the LED displays the second digit This sequence repeats itself until the module is either reset or replaced Code Description 01 General 68000 test failure 02 Bus error 03 Address error 04 Illegal instruction 05 Divide by zero 06 CHK instruction 07 TRAPV instruction 08 Privileged instruction 09 Trace trap 10 Line 1010 instruction 11 Line 1111 instruction 12 Hardware breakpoint 13 Coprocessor violation 14 Uninitialized interrupt 15 Format error 16 Autovector interrupts 24 Spurious interrupt 25 TRAP in instruction 26 Unassigned user 27 Unassigned reserved 31 OS area checksum not valid 32 Static RAM self test failed 33 J ump table wrong 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com D 2 Status LED Error Codes Code Description 34 SONIC chip test failed 35 FLASH BOOT area checksum incorrect 36 PLC 5 dualport initialization failure 37 PLC 5 not compatible with 1785 ENET 41 Could not read FLASH id 42 Could not erase FLASH bank 43 Could not program FLASH bank 51 Software initialization failure 52 ENET firmware hardware fault 53 ENET software failure 54 Network system failure 61 Lump system call failed 62 Lump internal inconsistency 63 PCCC system call failed
49. total octets sent on the media ifOutOcastPkts unicast packets from above ifOutNUcastPkts broadcast multicast packets from above ifOutDiscards packets discarded due to resource limitations ifOutErrors packets discarded due to errors ifOutQlen packet size of output queue ifSpecific MIB specific pointer UDP udpindataGrams datagrams delivered above udpNoPorts datagrams destined for unknown ports udplnErrors datagrams discarded due to format errors udpOutDatagrams datagrams sent from above udpLocalAddress local IP address udpLocalPort local UDP port IP ipForwarding acting as a gateway or host ipDefaultTTL default TTL for IP packets ipInReceives total datagrams from below ipInHdrErrors datagrams discarded due to format errors ipInAddrErrors datagrams discarded due to misdelivery ipForwDatagrams datagrams forwarded ipUnknownProtos datagrams destined for unknown protocols ipInDiscards datagrams discarded due to resource limitations ipInDelivers datagrams delivered above ipOutRequests datagrams from above ipOutNoRoutes datagrams discarded due to no route ipReasmTimeout timeout value for reassmebly queue ipRouteDest destination IP address ipRoutefllndex interface number ipRouteMetricl routing metric number 1 ipRouteMetric2 routing metric number 2 ipRouteMetric3 routing metric number 3 ipRouteMetric4 routing metric number 4 ipRoutenextHop next hop gateway IP address for indire
50. twork interfaces incoming and outgoing traffic dropped datagrams and error messages generated Network management protocols let network management software access these statistics MIB II is the SNMP standard for the management of network data The following tables list the MIB II data items and their definitions Group MIB Description System sysDescr description of device SysObjectlD identity of agent software sysUpTime how long ago the agent started sysName device name sysServices services offered by the device Interfaces iflndex interface number ifDescr description of the interface ifType type of interface ifMTU MTU size ifSpeed transmission rate in bits second ifPhysAddress media specific address ifAdminStatus desired interace state ifOperStatus current interface state ifLastChange how long ago interface changes state iflnOctets total octets received from the data ifUcasPackets broadcast multicast packets delivered above ifinDiscards packets discarded due to resource limitations iflnErrors packets discarded due to format ifUnknownProtos packets destined for unknown protocols 1785 6 5 19 November 1998 Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com C 2 SNMP Management Information Base MIB II Data Groups Group MIB Description Interfaces continued ifOutOctets
51. ur network needs change Edit the BOOTPTAB Configuration File Important Be sure you know the Ethernet hardware address of the module You will enter it in this file You must edit the BOOTPTAB file which is an ASCII text file to include the name IP address and hardware address for each Ethernet interface module you want the server to boot To edit this file 1 Open the BOOTPTAB file using a text editor e The file contains lines that look like this Default string for each type of Ethernet client defaults5E ht 1 vm rfcl1048 These are the default parameters for Ethernet PLC 5 interface module and must always precede the client lines in the BOOTPTAB file e The file also contains a line that looks like this sidecar tc default5E ip aa bb cc dd ha 0000BCO3xxyy Important Use this line as the configuration template for Ethernet devices Artisan Scientific Quality Instrumentation Guaranteed 888 88 SOURCE www artisan scientific com Configuring the Interface Module for Ethernet Communication 3 5 The term sidecar in this template is a logical name used for identification in this file only Itis not associated with the stored processor name Device PLC 5 20S PLC 5 20S PLC 5 40E PLC 5 40S 802 3 Ethernet TCP IP BOOTP server 8 FD E i E 2 Make one copy of the Ethernet device template for every PLC 5 Ethernet Interface Module in your system
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