毕业设计(机械)外文翻译.doc

上传人:飞****2 文档编号:63857067 上传时间:2022-11-27 格式:DOC 页数:20 大小:326KB
返回 下载 相关 举报
毕业设计(机械)外文翻译.doc_第1页
第1页 / 共20页
毕业设计(机械)外文翻译.doc_第2页
第2页 / 共20页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《毕业设计(机械)外文翻译.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《毕业设计(机械)外文翻译.doc(20页珍藏版)》请在taowenge.com淘文阁网|工程机械CAD图纸|机械工程制图|CAD装配图下载|SolidWorks_CaTia_CAD_UG_PROE_设计图分享下载上搜索。

1、| You have to believe, there is a way. The ancients said: the kingdom of heaven is trying to enter. Only when the reluctant step by step to go to it s time, must be managed to get one step down, only have struggled to achieve it. - Guo Ge TechVisualization of PLC Programs using XMLM. Bani Younis and

2、 G. FreyJuniorprofessorship Agentenbased AutomationUniversity of KaiserslautemP. 0. Box 3049, D-67653 Kaiserslautem, Germany Abstract - Due to the growing complexity of PLC programs there is an increasing interest in the application of formal methods in this area. Formal methods allow rigid proving

3、of system properties in verification and validation. One way to apply formal methods is to utilize a formal design approach in PLC programming. However, for existing software that has to be optimized, changed, or ported to new systems .There is the need for an approach that can start from a given PL

4、C program. Therefore, formalization of PLC programs is a topic of current research. The paper outlines a re-engineering approach based on the formalization of PLC programs. The transformation into a vendor independent format and the visualization of the structure of PLC programs is identified as an

5、important intermediate step in this process. It is shown how XML and corresponding technologies can be used for the formalization and visualization of an existing PLC program. I. INTRODUCTIONProgrammable Logic Controllers (PLCs) are a special type of computers that are used in industrial and safety

6、critical applications. The purpose of a PLC is to control a particular process, or a collection of processes, by producing electrical control signals in response to electrical process- related inputs signals. The systems controlled by PLCs vary tremendously, with applications in manufacturing, chemi

7、cal process control, machining, transportation, power distribution, and many other fields. Automation applications can range in complexity from a simple panel to operate the lights and motorized window shades in a conference room to completely automated manufacturing lines.With the widening of their

8、 application horizon, PLC programs are being subject to increased complexity and high quality demands especially for safety-critical applications. The growing complexity of the applications within the compliance of limited development time as well as the reusability of existing software or PLC modul

9、es requires a formal approach to be developed I. Ensuring the high quality demands requires verification and validation procedures as well as analysis and simulation of existing systems to be carried out 2. One of the important fields for the formalization of PLC programs that have been growing up i

10、n recent time is Reverse-engineering 3. Reverse Engineering is a process of evaluating something to understand how it works in order to duplicate or enhance it. While the reuse of PLC codes is being established as a tool for combating the complexity of PLC programs, Reverse Engineering is supposed t

11、o receive increased importance in the coming years especially if exiting hardware has to be replaced by new hardware with different programming environmentsVisualization of existing PLC programs is an important intermediate step of Reverse Engineering. The paper provides an approach towards the visu

12、alization of PLC programs using XML which is an important approach for the orientation and better understanding for engineers working with PLC programs. The paper is structured as follows. First, a short introduction to PLCs and the corresponding programming techniques according to the IEC 61131-3 s

13、tandard is given. In Section an approach for Re-engineering based on formalization of PLC programs is introduced. The transformation of the PLC code into a vendor independent format is identified as an important first step in this process. XML and corresponding technologies such as XSL and XSLT that

14、 can be used in this transformation are presented in Section IV. Section V presents the application of XML for the visualization of PLC programs and illustrates the approach with an example. The final Section summarizes the results and gives an outlook on future work in this ongoing project. PLC AND

15、 IEC 61131Since its inception in the early 70s the PLC received increasing attention due to its success in fulfilling the objective of replacing hard-wired control equipments at machines. Eventually it grew up as a distinct field of application, research and development, mainly for Control Engineeri

16、ng. IEC 61 131 is the first real endeavour to standardize PLC programming languages for industrial automation. In I993 the International Electrotechnical Commission 4 published the IEC 61131 Intemational Standard for Programmable Controllers. Before the standardization PLC programming languages were

17、 being developed as proprietary programming languages usable to PLCs of a special vendor. But in order to enhance compatibility, openness and interoperability among different products as well as to promote the development of tools and methodologies with respect to a fixed set of notations the IEC 61

18、131 standard evolved. The third part of this standard defines a suit of five programming languages:Instruction List (IL) is a low-level textual language with a structure similar to assembler. Originated in Europe IL is considered to be the PLC language in which all other IEC61 131-3 languages can be

19、 translated.Ladder Diagram (LO) is a graphical language that has its roots in the USA. LDs conform to a programming style borrowed from electronic and electrical circuits for implementing control logics.Structured Text (STJ is a very powerful high-level language. ST borrows its syntax from Pascal, a

20、ugmenting it with some features from Ada. ST contains all the essential elements of a modem programming language.Function Block Diagram (FBD) is a graphical language and it is very common to the process industry. In this language controllers are modelled as signal and data flows through function blo

21、cks. FBD transforms textual programming into connecting function blocks and thus improves modularity and software reuse.Sequential Function Chart (SFC) is a graphical language. SFC elements are defined for structuring the organization of programmable controller programs.One problem with IEC 61 131-3

22、 is that there is no standardized format for the project information in a PLC programming tool. At the moment there are only vendor specific formats. This is also one reason for the restriction of formalization approaches to single programs or algorithms. However, recently the PLC users organization

23、 PLCopen (see http:/www.plcopen.org) started a Technical Committee to define an XML based format for projects according to IEC 61131-3. This new format will ease the access of formalization tools to all relevant information of a PLC project. RE-ENGINEERING APPROACHThe presented approach towards re-e

24、ngineering (cf. Fig.1) is based upon the conception that XML can be used as a medium in which PLC codes will be transformed.This transformation offers the advantage of obtaining avendor independent specification code. (Even if the PLCopen succeeds in defining a standardized format for PLC applicatio

25、ns, there will remain a lot of existing programs that do not conform to this standard.) Based on this code a step-wise transformation to a formal model (automata) is planned. This model can then be used for analysis, simulation, formal verification and validation, and finally for the re-implementati

26、on of the optimized algorithm on the same or another PLC.Since re-engineering of complete programs will, in most cases, be only a semi-automatic process, intermediate visualization of the code is an important point. At different stages of the process different aspects of the code and/or formal model

27、 have to be visualized in a way that a designer can guide the further work. XML with its powerful visualization and transformation tools is an ideal tool for solving this task.IV. XML AS A TOOL FOR VISUALIZATIONXML (extensible Markup Language) is a simple and flexible meta-language, i.e, a language

28、for describing other languages. Tailored by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) as a dialect of SGML S, XML removes two constraints which were holding back Web developments 6. The dependence on a single, inflexible document type (HTML) which was being much abused for tasks it was never designed for

29、on one side; and the complexity of full SGML, whose syntax allows many powerful but hard-to-program options on the other side.While HTML describes how data should be presented, XML describes the data itself. A number of industries and scientific disciplines-medical records and newspaper publishing a

30、mong them-are already using XML to exchange information across platforms and applications. XML can be tailored to describe virtually any kind of information in a form that the recipient of the information can use in a variety of ways. It is specifically designed to support information exchange betwe

31、en systems that use fundamentally different forms of data representation, as for example between CAD and scheduling applications.Using XML with its powerful parsers and inherent robustness in terms of syntactic and semantic grammar is more advantageous than the conventional method of using a lexical

32、 analyzer and a validating parser (cf. Fig. 2, 7).The conventional method of analysis of program code requires a scanner (lexical analyser) which generates a set of terminal symbols (tokens) followed by a parser thatchecks the grammatical structure of the code and generates an object net. In the obj

33、ect net the internal structure of the program is represented by identified objects and the relations between them. Both the scanner and the parser to be used in this method are document oriented which implies that analysis of different types of documents requires rewriting the generated code for the

34、 scanner and the parser. An example of an application of this method can be found in 8.The most promising aspect of using XML instead is that XML and its complementary applications for transformations are standardized so as to provide maximum flexibility to its user.The XML based method is advantage

35、ous, since the lexical specification is an invariant component of XML; therefore the well-formedness is independent from the respective individual application.Hence, an XML-Parser also can transfer well-shaped XML documents in an abstract representation called Document Object Model (DOM) without usi

36、ng a grammar. DOM is an application programming interface (APII) for valid HTML and well-formed XML documents. It defines the logical structure of documents and the way a document is accessed and manipulated. In the DOM specification, the term document is used in a broad sense increasingly. XML is u

37、sed as a way of representing many different kind of information that may be stored in diverse systems, and much of this would traditionally be seen as data rather than as documents. Nevertheless, XML presents this data as documents, and the DOM can be used to manage this data5.XSLT, the transformati

38、on language for XML is capable of transforming XML not only to another XML or HTML but to many other user-friendly formats. Before the advent of XSLT, the transformation of XML to any other format was only possible through custom applications developed in a procedural language such as C+, Visual Bas

39、ic or, Java. This procedure lacked the generality with respect to the structural variation of XML documents. Capitalizing on the concept that the custom applications for the transformations are all very similar, XSLT evolved as a high-level declarative language 9. XSLT functions in two steps. In the

40、 first step, it performs a structural transformation so as to convert the XML into a structure that reflects the desired output. The second stage is formatting the new structure into the required format, such as HTML or PDF (cf. Fig. 3 ). The most important advantage of this transformation is that i

41、t allows a simple and easily-conceivable representation of the document or data structure embedded inside the well-structured but hard-to-understand XML to be produced. When HTML is chosen as the format of the transformed produce it is possible to use the extensive ability of HTML to produce an easi

42、ly-conceivable and attractive visualization of a program.Every XML document has its own syntax and vocabulary. Therefore, in addition to being well-formed, the XML document needs to conform to a set of rules. According to W3C recommendations this set of rules has to be defined either through a Docum

43、ent Type Definition (DTD) or an XML Schema. The rules defined in a DTD or an XML Schema state the hierarchical and structural constraints of the XML document. The DTD is for defining the document grammars; more recently a number of alternative languages have been proposed. The W3C XML Schema languag

44、e replicates the essential functionality of DTDs, and adds a number of features: the use of XML instance syntax rather than an ad hoc notation, clear relationships between schemas and namespaces, a systematic distinction between element types and data types, and a single-inheritance form of type der

45、ivation. In other words schemas offer a richer and more powerful way of describing information than what is possible with DTDs. Fig. 4 shows the XML technologies discussed above and the connection between them. V. AN APPROACH FOR THE VISUALIZATION OFPLC PROGRAMSA. Overview Since Instruction List (IL

46、) is the most commonly used PLC language in Europe, the presented approach is based on this language. The proprietary IL dialect Siemens STEP 5 and the standardized version according to IEC 61131-3 are considered. The generation of XML documents showing different aspects of a PLC program is realized

47、 in the following three steps (cf. Fig. 5): 1.Transformation of the PLC program to an XML document 2.Validation of the XML against the XML Schema which sets the syntax of the XML 3.Identification of the Instruction elements of the transformed XML according to the instruction set of the source PLC Th

48、ese three steps are discussed in sub-sections B to D respectively. Sub-section E explains the visualization of the different XMLs obtained during the preceding steps.Throughout this Section an example is used to illustrate the presented concepts. Fig. 6 shows a PLC code written in Instruction List S

49、iemens S5. The PLC code is written in atabular form where each row element is either a delimited list consisting of address, label, instruction, operand and description or a comment.Kommentar :AutorErstellt :15.07.2003 Geaendert am: B1B:ONETZWERK 1 EMPFANGEN SLAVE 3 VON MASTERNAME :EMPEMAST0005 :U M98.7 ABFRAGE OB EMPFANG MOEGLICH00060007 :SPB= MOOl00080009 :A DB140 EMPFANGSFACH IST DB 140OOOA :L KF+20 LAEN

展开阅读全文
相关资源
相关搜索

当前位置:首页 > 教育专区 > 教案示例

本站为文档C TO C交易模式,本站只提供存储空间、用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。本站仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知淘文阁网,我们立即给予删除!客服QQ:136780468 微信:18945177775 电话:18904686070

工信部备案号:黑ICP备15003705号© 2020-2023 www.taowenge.com 淘文阁