Forwarding it tot he list (i think chris simply hit reply...) : )

Am 11.09.20, 09:27 schrieb "Christofer Dutz" <christofer.d...@c-ware.de>:

    And my only concern about native-drivers is that I want to prevent us from 
becoming lazy.

    I know we had the EIP and Modbus drivers by using external libs and that 
wasn't very pleasant (At least not for me)
    We were relying on libs we had no control over. It got us to the point 
where we could support these protocols,
    But looking back it cost us (mainly me) way more time in supporting them 
than it would have cost me if we had implemented the parts we needed.

    So I would generally say:
    - If it’s a technical problem preventing us from implementing it fully in 
plc4x (CAN, Profibus, ...) then this is the way to go ...
    - If it's a protocol problem (want to avoid implementing the protocol in 
order to save time) ... then we should put it in the sandbox

    Chris



    Am 11.09.20, 09:01 schrieb "Julian Feinauer" <j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>:

        Hi folks,

        thanks for all the replies and the controversy in here shows that ist 
good to discuss the matter, indeed : )

        I like Cesars way of putting it (which is pretty close to mine) that 
PLC4X is a unified API.
        This is the Killer thing here.

        And what we currently do and mostly did was "PLC4X native". Because we 
get all these nice benefits of controlling everyhting and doing code for all 
languages.

        But, we may end up in situations where there i seither no possiblity to 
do a native implementation (profinet, profibus, CAN, ...) where we need some 
kind of special hardware where I would like to still have it in the project.
        This would mean that there is some special setup instruction how to 
setup the "native" part and then there is some glue code (could easily again be 
plattform independent) like a PLC4X generic driver (@Christofer Dutz a bit like 
what we reasoned about with PLCnext) which "binds" them together.

        As we are really small on man-power and maintainers I think it is a 
good and reasonable way to go with a "integrate whats already there" instead of 
a "try to find the single silver bullet and die in beatuy".

        So my reasoning at the moment is to place something like this wrapper 
as native code in a generic section somewhere in the "PLC4X native" part, that 
it can be integrated. But then host install instructions fort he "agent" or 
proprietary part somewhere else in an "integration" part (not like integration 
into other downstream systems but integration of other communication layers).

        Is this something which sounds acceptable for the community are there 
feelings against it?

        Julian

        Am 11.09.20, 02:20 schrieb "Ben Hutcheson" <ben.hut...@gmail.com>:

            Hi,

            I agree with Chris, having new drivers in a contrib section would 
be a good
            idea to make it clear that it hasn't been developed as much as other
            protocols or that there is some constraint excluding it from the 
main
            driver section. The worst that could happen is that it gets culled
            eventually because it isn't maintained and no one else shows 
interest.

            What protocol is it?

            I'm assuming you've already set your mind on developing it, but 
something
            to consider. Is anybody else likely to want to use it to warrant 
spending
            time on it? Is there a spec that is published? Does the 
manufacturer change
            the protocol often? Can they provide information on the protocol?

            Kind Regards

            Ben

            On Thu, Sep 10, 2020 at 5:03 PM Łukasz Dywicki 
<l...@code-house.org> wrote:

            > It is pretty good question to answer. Given that Julien proposal
            > includes native binary I can also add that socketcan stuff I am 
working
            > on .. is bound only to Linux due to native dependency in JavaCAN 
transport.
            >
            > From my perspective I can tell that it really depends on budget 
you
            > have. Our CAN journey started from CAN over Ethernet (UDP) and 
ended up
            > in dark corner which some of you could observe over past weeks. 
We had
            > to do it, because that was customer requirement (skip vendor 
gateway).
            > If you don't have such requirement then I would say there is 
quite weak
            > case to invest in it.
            > My point comes from observations. I wrote couple of MSpec files 
and it
            > was indeed fun. Both profinet and lldp took me a little bit, but
            > structures I got structures and I was able to parse real traffic. 
What I
            > skipped in my earlier attempts was implementation of driver api 
where
            > you actually start implementing necessary conversation logic. 
Having a
            > fresh look from CANopen perspective - it is quite big effort which
            > requires time.
            >
            > My point outlining above is simple - as long as we have just one
            > dominant language as we have and we fail to attract more diverse 
pool of
            > people to start writing conversation logic for other languages 
does not
            > give big benefit. I agree it is important, but it is much more 
necessary
            > now to support wider pool of end devices. Once we will build big 
enough
            > pool of people who have commercial interest in moving stuff 
between
            > operating systems and platforms we will be able to start joint
            > investment together. There is no better explanation than savings 
on
            > hardware when it comes to large scale deployments.
            >
            > From my point of view - I would welcome your stuff anywhere, even 
in
            > sandbox. Just remember to unify DLL loading logic. ;-)
            >
            > Best regards,
            > Łukasz
            >
            > On 10.09.2020 00:32, Cesar Garcia wrote:
            > > Hello,
            > >
            > > I think the concept of the project is clear:
            > >
            > > "PLC4X is a set of libraries for communicating with industrial
            > programmable
            > > logic controllers (PLCs) using a variety of protocols but with 
a shared
            > > API."
            > >
            > > If your client allows you to publish the project in PLC4X, it 
is a very
            > > important opportunity for this project to increase and share 
knowledge.
            > >
            > > As for DCOM, it is a reality that will be with us no less than 
20 years
            > in
            > > the future due to its installed base [1]. We need to live with 
the
            > Windows
            > > and Linux environment for years to come, and that is a reality.
            > >
            > > As for solutions with DCOM we have [2], in my case which allows 
using
            > > OPC-DA from Java, as in [3].
            > >
            > > My grain of sand
            > >
            > > 1.
            > >
            > 
https://opcfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/ARC-Report-OPC-Installed-Base-Insights.pdf
            > > 2. http://j-interop.org/
            > > 3. https://www.eclipse.org/eclipsescada/
            > >
            > > El mié., 9 sept. 2020 a las 8:31, Otto Fowler 
(<ottobackwa...@gmail.com
            > >)
            > > escribió:
            > >
            > >>  I think this should be hosted and more importantly 
_maintained_ outside
            > >> the project.  If you want to add reference to it to the 
project site or
            > >> something, that would be something to talk about.
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> On September 9, 2020 at 08:28:12, Stefano Bossi (
            > stefano.bo...@gmail.com)
            > >> wrote:
            > >>
            > >> Hi,
            > >>
            > >> personally I think this kind of approach will limit the 
usability of the
            > >> library in a very narrow subset of uses do to the windows 
operating
            > system
            > >> dependency.
            > >>
            > >> I think you guys put a lot of effort in portability and small 
footprint
            > of
            > >> the library and this is a great think in the industrial world 
where
            > >> typically there are small PC or embedded one.
            > >>
            > >> Using the library in a small PC like a Rasperry Pi with a 
linux distro
            > and
            > >> a lot of attention for the security and hardening of the 
environment I
            > >> think is a pro for any industrial project
            > >> (e.g. Selinux, Firewall, minimal service installation, OSCAP 
security
            > >> profile compliance, etc ).
            > >>
            > >> Evaluating the effort required in reversing the DCOM protocol 
is
            > something
            > >> to be taken into consideration before integrating a windows 
library in
            > the
            > >> plc4x code.
            > >>
            > >> Maybe this could be a transient solution or a way to validate 
a full
            > open
            > >> source solution.
            > >>
            > >> Regards,
            > >> Stefano
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> On 09/09/2020 13:35, Christofer Dutz wrote:
            > >>
            > >> Hi Julian,
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> the issue I see here is that it will make the build more 
complex (the
            > >> part using the wrapper will only be runnable on windows and 
not sure
            > >> if the license of the wrapped DLLs would allow including them).
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> It will also eliminate the ability to auto-port the driver to 
other
            > >> languages.
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> And, beyond that, it would limit these drivers to only work on 
a
            > >> subset of platforms (Aka ... a Java Driver that only works on 
Windows
            > >> Systems with installed subsystem for the PLC)
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> I wouldn't want to make such a solution a first class citizen 
(aka
            > >> live in plc4j/drivers) ... we could sort of start providing 
some sort
            > >> of "plc4j/contrib" modules, if we have to go this path.
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> But personally I would opt for at least having a look at the 
path I
            > >> described in slack:
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> - Use the native libs and build an application that does the 
basic
            > >> interaction with the Windows DLLs
            > >>
            > >> - Use WireShark to record the communication
            > >>
            > >> - Have a look if it's not just a very small subset of DCOM 
that is used
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> Perhaps it would sort of be like using some mspec types with a 
lot of
            > >> const fields to allow communication without any intermediate 
DLL ....
            > >> this would make it runnable on all target platforms and 
auto-portable
            > >> to all target languages of PLC4X.
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> Chris
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >> Am 09.09.20, 09:50 schrieb "Julian Feinauer"
            > >> <j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de> <j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>:
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>     Hi all,
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>     wanted to bring it tot he list as we already had a 
discussion in
            > >> the slack channel.
            > >>
            > >>     We have a project where we consider integrating machinery 
in our
            > >> system.
            > >>
            > >>     The machinery offers an SDK for communication which is 
windows
            > >> only and based on DCOM.
            > >>
            > >>     Thus, the integration would be a wrapper around the SDK 
with
            > >> „only“ a PLC4X „frontend“.
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>     Personally, I consider this viable as our aim ist o have 
one
            > >> interface for „everything“.
            > >>
            > >>     Nonetheless, I also agree with everybody saying that its 
not as
            > >> nice as having the complete stack in our hands.
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>     What do others think, should this be part oft he PLC4X 
project or
            > >> should we just do it separately.
            > >>
            > >>     Personally idk that much but think it would be nice to have
            > >> maximum support in plc4x, if possible.
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>
            > >>     Best
            > >>
            > >>     Julian
            > >>
            > >
            > >
            >



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