|
|
|
Now that we have successfully completed a large part of the testing for our N2 Switch we thought we would share some of our experiences with our customers and integration partners. When we decided to develop the N2 Router product line one of our early priorities were to set up a test lab that provided the flexibility that would be needed to thoroughly test our systems in an open environment. To that end, we need to be able to quickly insert or remove any device in the test configuration with a minimal amount of effort and associate it with any N2 network. What we decided on was using the tried and true modular telephone jack system with RJ-11 (4-pin) connectors. This worked out extremely well for the initial product testing in our lab environment and has proven to be invaluable as we moved into testing multi-vendor equipment that might have never before been used in a N2 networking environment. The basic technology of a N2 network is defined around the ubiquitous RS-485 set of data communications standards. The N2 network runs at 9600bd, 8 data bits, and no parity and in half-duplex mode. No surprises here. This is very standard data communications stuff and the RS-485 technology is very well known and well understood by industry. The terminology N2(+) and N2(-) has been adopted by Johnson Controls for the two data wires in a N2 network. A third wire provides a reference. One of our early design goals for the N2 Router product family was in acknowledgement that we are not a hardware manufacturer, did not want to be, and therefore needed to design our software to work with standard off the shelf hardware platforms and networking products. After all we have been running around for the last couple of years touting the benefits of open systems so we couldn’t do anything proprietary ourselves! What we found surprising was the general amount of confusion, and conflicting information, we found in naming conventions and terminology relating to the two data lines associated with commercially available off the shelf half duplex RS-485 implementations. If different vendors talk about the N2(+), Data (+), Positive, or the (B) side of the connection it may or may not mean the same thing. Since a lot of our initial testing has been done with B&B Electronics devices we sought an expert opinion from them and this is what we heard from Mike Fahrion. Mike’s initial response was true to character “Ah this is a sore subject”. Then he proceeded with an explanation of the situation. B&B follows the one and only standard (comes from EIA-485). A and B are the correct designators. Definition is that B is more positive than A on an idle network. So, for equipment that uses the +/- convention, A usually equals "-" and B usually equals "+". That's probably how it works 80-90% of the time. The sure way to tell is with a scope (meter is ok). The challenge is that an idle 485 network is really floating unless biasing resistors are installed (because the driver is tristated and the receiver is always high impedance). If the bias resistors are correct, you'll measure a positive voltage on B with respect to A when the line is idle. The long and the short of this is that you can’t always believe what you read in RS-485 product documentation. Testing of each device in a live N2 network is critical. As a result of all this, we decided that we needed to define a standard for our Lab and needed to take a very practical, and pragmatic, approach to introducing new devices into our test environment. To that end, we decided on the following standard for cabling our test N2 networks. As mentioned earlier we are using RJ-11 jacks and connectors so we settled in on the following internal wiring standard using CAT-5 or telephone station wire.
We can’t guarantee that technical notes for every device that we test will be published due to time constraints, but we will attempt to publish as many as practical. Since we are promoting open systems and standards, we won’t endorse a specific product as being superior to any other. For detailed information about the products please contact the product vendors directly.
As testing progressed we found that it was a very handy device that allowed us to utilize the built in RS-232 ports as target N2 networks on PCs we are using for testing the software only version of our N2 Router . For details about how to the 485TBLED to your N2 network please see our technical note. Remember, these notes will be written in the context of our standard RJ-11 telephone jack wiring scheme for the S4 test lab. Next, we tested two Ethernet to RS-485 serial servers, the Advantech ADAM 4571 and the B&B Electronics ESP901 with our N2 Switch. Both of these devices worked fine, both provide adequate configuration and port mapping utilities, and both have multiport versions available which work equally well with the N2 Switch.
Please see our technical notes on the ADAM 4571 or the B&B Electronics VLINX ESP901 for details on how to connect these devices to your N2 networks. Additional device testing with other manufacturers’ serial server and wireless products is underway so if you have a specific device that you would like us to test please let us know and we would be happy to work with you. We intend to periodically publish installments of Extreme N2 Networking and would like to use this space to publish customer and integration partner experiences. Let us know what you’re doing with the N2 Router product line and any send us any success stories you would like to see published.
|
Building Automation Non-IT System Integration Enterprise Integration S4 Open Appliance Applications SNMP OPC Gateway Applications |
|
©2002 - 2008 The S4 Group, Inc. For questions about this site contact webmaster@thes4group.com |