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Diagnostics and troubleshooting, Reading status data from the module, Required hardware – ProSoft Technology MVI56-BSAPS User Manual

Page 43: E 43), 4 diagnostics and troubleshooting

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Diagnostics and Troubleshooting

MVI56-BSAPS ♦ ControlLogix Platform

Bristol Babcock Serial Slave Module

ProSoft Technology, Inc.

Page 43 of 83

September 22, 2008

4 Diagnostics

and

Troubleshooting

In This Chapter

™

Reading Status Data from the Module .................................................. 43

™

LED

Status

Indicators............................................................................ 52

The module provides information on diagnostics and troubleshooting in the
following forms:
ƒ

Status data values are transferred from the module to the processor.

ƒ

Data contained in the module can be viewed through the

Configuration/Debug port attached to a terminal emulator.

ƒ

LED status indicators on the front of the module provide information on the

module's status.

4.1

Reading Status Data from the Module

The MVI56-BSAPS module returns a 22-word Status Data Block that may be
used to determine the module's operating status. This data is located in the
module's database at the location specified in the configuration.

This data is transferred to the ControlLogix processor continuously with each
read block.

The Configuration/Debug port provides the following functionality:
ƒ

Full view of the module's configuration data

ƒ

View of the module's status data

ƒ

Complete display of the module's internal database (registers 0 to 8999)

ƒ

Version

Information

ƒ

Control over the module (warm boot, cold boot, transfer configuration)

4.1.1 Required

Hardware

You can connect directly from your computer's serial port to the serial port on the
module to view configuration information, perform maintenance, and send
(upload) or receive (download) configuration files.

ProSoft Technology recommends the following minimum hardware to connect
your computer to the module:
ƒ

80486 based processor (Pentium preferred)

ƒ

1 megabyte of memory

ƒ

At least one UART hardware-based serial communications port available.

USB-based virtual UART systems (USB to serial port adapters) often do not
function reliably, especially during binary file transfers, such as when
uploading/downloading configuration files or module firmware upgrades.

ƒ

A null modem serial cable.