Broadly speaking, there's three different kinds of slave.

The most basic have fixed PDO configuration and assignment.  If these implement 
CoE at all (which is also optional), you can't change any part of the PDO 
layout.

The middle tier (reasonably common in slaves that implement CoE at all) have 
variable PDO assignment but fixed configuration.  This means that you cannot 
change the contents of the PDOs but you can select which of them to include in 
your domain (although not always freely -- many slaves have mutually exclusive 
PDOs or specific ordering/size requirements or other such limitations).

Lastly there are those that do support changing the PDO configuration as well 
as assignment.  These are very rare (typically just things like PLCs and other 
highly programmable slaves).

For the former, you just "ethercat cstruct" and that's the only layout you'll 
ever get.
For the other two, you can do some manipulation before you "ethercat cstruct".  
But that manipulation only happens at "pre-commission" time (when you're 
writing your application) -- it never happens at actual run-live.

The table that is generated by "ethercat cstruct" encapsulates all of the PDO 
configuration and assignment, and when you use this table properly (see the 
examples) you don't have any "manual" writes to the PDO assignment or 
configuration objects at all in your code; that's taken care of by the Etherlab 
master itself.

The ecrt_slave_config_sdo* calls are only for "extra" not-PDO-related 
configuration that your slave may require.


Gavin Lambert
Senior Software Developer TOMRA Fresh Food

 


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-----Original Message-----
From: Fontana Nicola <n...@entidi.it> 
Sent: Monday, 26 July 2021 5:21 pm
To: Gavin Lambert <gavin.lamb...@tomra.com>; Graeme Foot 
<graeme.f...@touchcut.com>; etherlab-users@etherlab.org
Subject: Re: [Etherlab-users] Configuring EL7047 stepper driver

Il giorno lun, 26/07/2021 alle 04.54 +0000, Gavin Lambert ha scritto:
> ...
> It's not really something you can do from a bash script.

Hi Gavin,

yes, I learnt it the hard way. That particular device has fixed PDO mappings 
and settings, i.e. all 0x1[468A]? entries are read-only. The only relevant 
parameters I can touch are the PDO assignement registers.
Coming from CANopen I thought anything can be done by just manipulating the 
object dictionary but... well, this is not the case.

Thank you again.
--
Nicola


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