Paper |
Title |
Page |
MOPPC137 |
IEC 61850 Industrial Communication Standards under Test |
427 |
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- F.M. Tilaro, B. Copy, M. Gonzalez-Berges
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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IEC 61850, as part of the International Electro-technical Commission's Technical Committee 57, defines an international and standardized methodology to design electric power automation substations. It specifies a common way of communicating and integrating heterogeneous systems based on multivendor intelligent electronic devices (IEDs). They are connected to Ethernet network and according to IEC 61850 their abstract data models have been mapped to specific communication protocols: MMS, GOOSE, SV and possibly in the future Web Services. All of them can run over TCP/IP networks, so they can be easily integrated with Enterprise Resource Planning networks; while this integration provides economical and functional benefits for the companies, on the other hand it exposes the industrial infrastructure to the external existing cyber-attacks. Within the Openlab collaboration between CERN and Siemens, a test-bench has been developed specifically to evaluate the robustness of industrial equipment (TRoIE). This paper describes the design and the implementation of the testing framework focusing on the IEC 61850 previously mentioned protocols implementations.
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Poster MOPPC137 [1.673 MB]
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MOPPC145 |
Mass-Accessible Controls Data for Web Consumers |
449 |
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- B. Copy, M. Labrenz, R.P. Niesler, F.M. Tilaro
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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The past few years in computing have seen the emergence of smart mobile devices, sporting multi-core embedded processors, powerful graphical processing units, and pervasive high-speed network connections (supported by WIFI or EDGE/UMTS). The relatively limited capacity of these devices requires relying on dedicated embedded operating systems (such as Android, or iOS), while their diverse form factors (from mobile phone screens to large tablet screens) require the adoption of programming techniques and technologies that are both resource-efficient and standards-based for better platform independence. We will consider what are the available options for hybrid desktop / mobile web development today, from native software development kits (Android, iOS) to platform-independent solutions (mobile Google Web toolkit [3], JQuery mobile, Apache Cordova[4], Opensocial). Through the authors' successive attempts at implementing a range of solutions for LHC-related data broadcasting, from data acquisition systems, LHC middleware such as DIP and CMW, on to the World Wide Web, we will investigate what are the valid choices to make and what pitfalls to avoid in today’s web development landscape.
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Poster MOPPC145 [1.318 MB]
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