Measurement Specialties 9116 Manual Do Utilizador

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Pressure Systems, Inc.                                                                                        Model 9116 User’s Manual 
 
 
 
Page 19 
 
www.PressureSystems.com 
directed to “well-known” port 9000 (default).  After the connection is made, a socket is 
established as a logical handle to this connection.  The host and module may then 
communicate, via this socket, until it is closed or is lost at either module or host end, due to 
power failure or reboot). The host and module may also communicate in a limited fashion 
without a connection, using the middle-level UDP/IP protocols. In that case, the host simply 
broadcasts commands via port 7000, and each module (that chooses to respond) returns the 
response on port 7001. Only a few commands use UDP/IP in Model 9116 modules. 
 
3.1.2  
  Commands 
 
The commands (and responses) used by Model 9116 modules consist of short strings of ASCII 
characters. The TCP/IP and UDP/IP protocols allow for the transfer of either printable ASCII 
characters or binary data. When using certain formats, internal binary data values are often 
converted to ASCII-hex digit strings externally. Such values may include the ASCII number 
characters ‘0’ through ‘9,’ the uppercase ASCII characters ‘A’ through ‘F,’ and the lowercase 
letters ‘a’ through ‘f’.’ These hex values may represent bit maps of individual options, or actual 
integer or floating point (IEEE) binary data values. In other cases (see optional format 7 below) 
binary data may be transmitted directly as 4-byte (32-bit) binary values without any formatting 
change.  Such binary transmissions use big-endian (default) byte ordering but may be 
commanded to use little-endian for some data. 
 
3.1.2.1  
  General Command Format 
 
A typical TCP/IP command (contained in the data field following a TCP packet header) is a 
variable-length character string with the following general fields: 
! a 
1-character 
command letter (c)
! an 
optional 
position field (pppp), a variable length string of hexadecimal digits. 
!  a variable number of optional datum fields ( dddd): each a variable length string, normally 
formatted as a decimal number (with a leading space character, and with or without sign 
and/or decimal point, as needed). 
 
Using brackets ( [ ] ) to show optional elements, and ellipsis ( ...) to show indefinite repetition, a 
typical TCP/IP command may be viewed schematically as follows: 
 
 “c[[[[p]p]p]p][ dddd][ dddd]...]” 
 
From this schematic, it should be clear that the command letter (c) is required, the position field 
(pppp) immediately follows it, and may have 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4 characters, and there may be zero 
or more datum fields ( dddd), as required. For simplicity, the variable length nature of each “ 
dddd” string is not shown [with brackets] above, but the required leading space character is 
shown. The position field is similarly simplified (as “pppp”) below.