BSI PD CLC/TR 61158-1:2010:2011 Edition
$198.66
Industrial communication networks. Fieldbus specifications – Overview and guidance for the IEC 61158 and IEC 61784 series
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2011 | 68 |
This technical report presents an overview and guidance for the IEC 61158 series by:
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explaining the structure and content of the IEC 61158 series;
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relating the structure of the IEC 61158 series to the ISO/IEC 7498 OSI Basic Reference Model;
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showing the logical structure of the IEC 61784 series;
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showing how to use parts of the IEC 61158 series in combination with the IEC 61784 series;
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providing explanations of some aspects of the IEC 61158 series that are common to the parts of the IEC 61158-5 series.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
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7 | CONTENTS |
10 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Abbreviations 4 Guidelines for implementers and users 4.1 Background and purpose |
11 | 4.2 Supported options 4.3 Benefits from using a common and formal style |
12 | 5 Concept of the IEC 61158 series Figures Figure 1 – Generic fieldbus network |
13 | 6 Mapping onto the OSI Basic Reference Model 6.1 Overview Figure 2 – Concept of DL/AL to separate service and protocol parts |
14 | 6.2 Physical layer service and protocol Figure 3 – Basic fieldbus reference model Tables Table 1 – OSI and IEC 61158 layers |
15 | 6.3 Data-link layer service Figure 4 – General model of physical layer |
16 | 6.4 Data-link layer protocol 6.5 Application layer service Figure 5 – Relationship of the IEC 61158 3 and IEC 61158 4 series to other fieldbus layers and to users of the fieldbus data-link service |
17 | 6.6 Application layer protocol Figure 6 – Relationship of the IEC 61158 5 and IEC 61158 6 series to other fieldbus layers and to users of the fieldbus application service |
18 | 7 Structure of IEC 61158 and IEC 61784 series 7.1 The IEC 61158 physical layer 7.2 The IEC 61158 data-link layer |
19 | 7.3 The IEC 61158 application layer 7.4 IEC 61784 1 and IEC 61784 2 fieldbus profiles |
20 | Figure 7 – Structure of communication profile families |
21 | Figure 8 – Example of a CPF structure |
22 | Table 2 – CPF, CP, and type relations |
23 | 7.5 IEC 61784 3 functional safety communication profiles |
24 | 7.6 IEC 61784 5 installation profiles |
25 | Figure 9 – Document structure of IEC 61918 and the IEC 61784 5 series |
26 | 8 Brief summary of the characteristics of each service and protocol for each type of fieldbus 8.1 Summary of the physical layer service and protocol characteristics |
28 | 8.2 Summary of data-link layer service characteristics |
29 | 8.3 Summary of data-link layer protocol characteristics |
31 | 8.4 Summary of application layer service characteristics |
32 | 8.5 Summary of application layer protocol characteristics |
34 | 9 Application layer service description concepts 9.1 Overview |
35 | 9.2 Architectural relationships Figure 10 – Relationship to the OSI Basic Reference Model |
36 | Figure 11 – Architectural positioning of the fieldbus application layer |
37 | 9.3 Fieldbus application layer structure |
38 | Figure 12 – Client/server interactions |
39 | Figure 13 – Pull model interactions |
40 | Figure 14 – Push model interactions Table 3 – Types of timeliness defined for publisher/subscriber interactions |
41 | Figure 15 – APOs services conveyed by the FAL |
43 | Figure 16 – Application entity structure |
45 | Figure 17 – Example FAL ASEs Figure 18 – FAL management of objects |
46 | Figure 19 – ASE service conveyance |
49 | 9.4 Fieldbus application layer naming and addressing Figure 20 – Defined and established AREPs |
50 | 9.5 Architecture summary 9.6 Notional FAL service procedures Figure 21 – FAL architectural components |
51 | 9.7 Common FAL attributes |
52 | 9.8 Common FAL service parameters |
53 | 9.9 APDU size 10 Data type ASE 10.1 Overview |
54 | Figure 22 – Data-type class hierarchy example |
56 | 10.2 Formal definition of data type objects |
58 | Annex A (informative) Trade name declarations Table A.1 – Trade names of CPFs and CPs |
60 | Bibliography |