Hi,
Maybe you know that there are 2 big companies building PLC and PLC Platforms for industrial automation systems, Delta PLC and Siemens PLC.
Recently I've got an Delta DVP-10SX and they only support Windows for WPL Soft and ISP Soft, the platforms used to develop software for their PLC. I tried to install and use it under Wine but I'm unable to get COM ports to work inside those apps. (I'm able to see in other apps but not inside those). I contacted them to ask about Linux Support and they told me that they have requests from Russia for porting ISP and WPL Soft to Linux.
They asked me to provide them some statistics about Linux Systems numbers in Industrial use because they are open for this, they take in consideration to support Linux.
I would like if you can do some research in your country regarding this. Is time for Linux to be supported by one of the bigest PLC builders.
Thank You and sorry for my English!
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On 07/30/2014 06:18 PM, Iosif Bancioiu wrote:
Maybe you know that there are 2 big companies building PLC and PLC Platforms for industrial automation systems, Delta PLC and Siemens PLC.
Well, there are others...like Beckhoff [1] and they support, as far as remember, with ADS and/or a kernel driver the communication between a linux host and their hardware. Only speaking about the communication and not IDE.
Recently I've got an Delta DVP-10SX and they only support Windows for WPL Soft and ISP Soft, the platforms used to develop software for their PLC. I tried to install and use it under Wine but I'm unable to get COM ports to work inside those apps. (I'm able to see in other apps but not inside those). I contacted them to ask about Linux Support and they told me that they have requests from Russia for porting ISP and WPL Soft to Linux.
The issue here is that PLCs are only interesting for a very small target audience, the industrial automation guys. It's possible to get hands on this kind of hardware but it's not a cheap endeavor (referring to Siemens here). I think that a Soft-PLC can not be easily ported to another platform because their are special requirements (protocols, real-time, etc.) which are are to fulfill.
They asked me to provide them some statistics about Linux Systems numbers in Industrial use because they are open for this, they take in consideration to support Linux.
If there is a linux tool that customers can use to program their PLC, they will probably start using linux. My experience is that they still will use the windows version because all other tools (speaking about CAD, CAE, et al) are not available for other platforms that windows.
I would like if you can do some research in your country regarding this.
It's very unlikely that you can get accurate data without investing a lot of time.
Is time for Linux to be supported by one of the bigest PLC builders.
IMHO, better have a well-maintained implementation on one platform than lousy one on several.
Kind regards,
Fabian
Hello Everyone,
IMHO, better have a well-maintained implementation on one platform
than lousy one on several.
Concur 100%.
I am working about five versions of kernels on my Fedora systems and I really enjoy the experience. ;)
Sending positive Fedora energy from my computers to yours!!! :)
David
Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2014 19:23:17 +0200 From: fab@fedoraproject.org To: ambassadors@lists.fedoraproject.org Subject: Re: [Ambassadors] To all Ambassadors and Fedora Contributors
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On 07/30/2014 06:18 PM, Iosif Bancioiu wrote:
Maybe you know that there are 2 big companies building PLC and PLC Platforms for industrial automation systems, Delta PLC and Siemens PLC.
Well, there are others...like Beckhoff [1] and they support, as far as remember, with ADS and/or a kernel driver the communication between a linux host and their hardware. Only speaking about the communication and not IDE.
Recently I've got an Delta DVP-10SX and they only support Windows for WPL Soft and ISP Soft, the platforms used to develop software for their PLC. I tried to install and use it under Wine but I'm unable to get COM ports to work inside those apps. (I'm able to see in other apps but not inside those). I contacted them to ask about Linux Support and they told me that they have requests from Russia for porting ISP and WPL Soft to Linux.
The issue here is that PLCs are only interesting for a very small target audience, the industrial automation guys. It's possible to get hands on this kind of hardware but it's not a cheap endeavor (referring to Siemens here). I think that a Soft-PLC can not be easily ported to another platform because their are special requirements (protocols, real-time, etc.) which are are to fulfill.
They asked me to provide them some statistics about Linux Systems numbers in Industrial use because they are open for this, they take in consideration to support Linux.
If there is a linux tool that customers can use to program their PLC, they will probably start using linux. My experience is that they still will use the windows version because all other tools (speaking about CAD, CAE, et al) are not available for other platforms that windows.
I would like if you can do some research in your country regarding this.
It's very unlikely that you can get accurate data without investing a lot of time.
Is time for Linux to be supported by one of the bigest PLC builders.
IMHO, better have a well-maintained implementation on one platform than lousy one on several.
Kind regards,
Fabian
[1] http://www.beckhoff.com -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1
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