RuggedServer™ RS416
Modular
Serial IP Encapsulation
Many 'legacy' devices (RTU, PLC, IED, etc.) only support serial communications via RS232, RS422 or RS485. ROS™ encapsulates the serial data within a TCP connection allowing these devices to be reached via an IP network. A wide range of baud rates, frame packetization options, and diagnostics allows any serial protocol to function. The RS416 has specific support for the following serial protocols:
. Raw Socket serial encapsulation . Modbus TCP (client and server) . DNP 3
. WIN and TIN . Microlok
MODBUS TCP
The Modbus protocol is ubiquitous in the industrial control and automation world. ROS converts Modbus RTU master/slave serial data packets to Modbus TCP client/server packets for transmission over an IP network. This allows communications to Modbus RTU slaves via Ethernet and allows multiple masters to poll the same slave device.
Cyber Security
Cyber security is an urgent issue in many industries where advanced automation and communications networks play a crucial role in mission critical applications and where high reliability is of paramount importance. Key ROS™ features that address security issues at the local area network level include:
.Passwords -
.SSH / SSL - Extends capability of password protection to add encryption of passwords and data as they cross the network
.Enable / Disable Ports - Capability to disable ports so that traffic can not pass
.802.1q VLAN - Provides the ability to logically segregate traffic between predefined ports on switches
.MAC Based Port Security - The ability to secure ports on a switch so only specific Devices / MAC addresses can communicate via that port
.802.1x Port Based Network Access Control - The ability to lock down ports on a switch so that only authorized clients can communicate via this port
.Radius - Provides centralized password management .SNMPv3 - encrypted authentication and access security
The ROS™ cyber security features are included to help address the various industry specific security standards such as NERC CIP, ISA S99, AGA 12, IEC 62443, ISO 17799:2005 and PCSRF
Enhanced Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (eRSTP™)
RuggedCom eRSTP allows the creation of
ROSTM Features
that are 'pruned' to prevent loops. eRSTP
yields
solutions.
Quality of Service (IEEE 802.1p)
Some networking applications such as
of heavy network traffic due to the internal queues that buffer frames and then transmit on a first come first serve basis. ROS™ supports 'Class of Service' in accordance with IEEE 802.1p that allows time critical traffic to jump ahead to the front of the queue thus minimizing latency and reducing jitter to allow such demanding applications to operate correctly. ROS™ allows priority classification by port, tags, MAC address, and IP type of service (TOS).
A configurable "weighted fair queuing" algorithm controls how frames are emptied from the queues.
VLAN (IEEE 802.1q)
Virtual local area networks (VLAN) allow the segregation of a physical network into separate logical networks with independent broadcast domains. A measure of security is provided since hosts can only access other hosts on the same VLAN and traffic storms are isolated. ROS™ supports 802.1q tagged Ethernet frames and VLAN trunks. Port based classification allows legacy devices to be assigned to the correct VLAN. GVRP support is also provided to simplify the configuration of the switches on the VLAN.
Link Aggregation (802.3ad)
The link aggregation feature provides the ability to aggregate several Ethernet ports into one logical link (port trunk) with higher bandwidth. This provides an inexpensive way to set up a high speed backbone to improve network bandwidth. This feature is also known as "port trunking", "port bundling", "port teaming", and "ethernet trunk".
IGMP Snooping
ROS uses IGMP snooping (Internet Group Management Protocol v1&v2) to intelligently forward or filter multicast traffic streams (e.g. MPEG video) to or from hosts on the network. This reduces the load on network trunks and prevents packets from being received on hosts that are not involved. ROS™ has a very powerful implementation of
IGMP snooping that:
1eRSTP fault recovery times may be approximated as follows: For 100 Mbps, fault recovery performance is <5ms/hop
For 1,000 Mbps, fault recovery performance is <5ms/hop + 20ms
www.RuggedCom.com | RuggedServer™ RS416 | 3 |
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