![Allen-Bradley 1763-L16AWA Скачать руководство пользователя страница 536](http://html.mh-extra.com/html/allen-bradley/1763-l16awa/1763-l16awa_instruction-set-reference-manual_2900141536.webp)
Publication 1763-RM001C-EN-P - October 2009
536
Protocol Configuration
Ethernet Driver
The MicroLogix1100 supports Ethernet communication via the Ethernet
communication channel 1. Ethernet is a local area network that provides
communication between a variety of network devices at 10/100 Mbps.
TCP/IP is the mechanism used to transport Ethernet messages. The
MicroLogix1100 processor uses TCP/IP to establish sessions and to send
MSG commands. Connections can be initiated by either a client program
(INTERCHANGE or RSLinx application) or a processor. Refer to
Communications Instructions on page 341 for the MSG instruction
operation to see how connections are established using the MSG
instruction. The MicroLogix1100 Ethernet connector conforms to ISO/IEC
8802-3 STD 802.3 and utilizes 10/100Base-T media. Connections are made
directly from the MicroLogix1100 to an Ethernet hub or switch. The
network setup is simple and cost-effective.
There are two ways to configure the MicroLogix1100 Ethernet channel 1.
The configuration can be done via a BOOTP or DHCP request at
processor power up, or by manually setting the configuration parameters
using RSLogix 500 Programming Software (refer to Example 5 -
Configuring an Ethernet/IP Message on page 381).
Ethernet Configuration Parameters
Parameter
Options
Programming
Software Default
Driver
Ethernet
Ethernet
Hardware
Address
The processor's Ethernet hardware address. This value cannot be changed.
Ethernet Hardware
Address
IP Address
1 to 254 (zero and 255 are reserved for broadcast purposes.)
The processor's internet address. You must specify the IP address to enable the processor to connect
to the TCP/IP network. You can specify the address manually, or enable BOOTP or DHCP (located in
the Protocol Control section of this dialog) to provide the address.
0.0.0.0
Subnet Mask
0 to 255 in each field.
Used by the processor to interpret IP addresses when the Internet is divided into subnets. The subnet
mask must be specified. You can do this either manually or by enabling BOOTP or DHCP.
The processor compares and screens addresses using the mask to identify its own address to see if it
should listen to corresponding messages. The comparison occurs in binary. Any address position for
which the mask is set to a binary 1 will be compared; any address position for which the mask is set to
a binary 0 will be ignored. For example, if the mask is 255.255.255.0 the processor will listen to all
addresses whose first three segments match its own address regardless of the value in the last
segment. (255 in decimal equals to 1111 1111 in binary.)
0.0.0.0
Gateway
Address
1 to 254 in each field.
The IP address of the gateway that provides a connection to another IP network. This field is required
when you communicate with other network devices, not on a local subnet.
0.0.0.0
efesotomasyon.com - Allen Bradley,Rockwell,plc,servo,drive