Paper |
Title |
Page |
WEPHA047 |
Cable Database at ESS |
1199 |
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- R.N. Fernandes, S.R. Gysin, J.A. Persson, S. Regnell
ESS, Lund, Sweden
- L.J.G. Johansson
OTIF, Malmö, Sweden
- S. Sah
Cosylab, Ljubljana, Slovenia
- M. Salmič
COSYLAB, Control System Laboratory, Ljubljana, Slovenia
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When completed, the European Spallation Source (ESS) will have around half a million of installed cables to power and control both the machine and end-stations instruments. To keep track of all these cables throughout the different phases of ESS, an application called Cable Database was developed at the Integrated Control System (ICS) Division. It provides a web-based graphical interface where authorized users may perform CRUD operations in cables, as well as batch imports (through well-defined EXCEL files) to substantially shortened the time needed to deal with massive amounts of cables at once. Besides cables, the Cable Database manages cable types, connectors, manufacturers and routing points, thus fully handling the information that surrounds cables. Additionally, it provides a programmatic interface through RESTful services that other ICS applications (e.g. CCDB) may consume to successfully perform their domain specific businesses. The present paper introduces the Cable Database and describes its features, architecture and technology stack, data concepts and interfaces. Finally, it enumerates development directions that could be pursued to further improve this application.
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2019-WEPHA047
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About • |
paper received ※ 30 September 2019 paper accepted ※ 09 October 2019 issue date ※ 30 August 2020 |
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WEPHA048 |
Management of IOCs at ESS |
1204 |
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- R.N. Fernandes, S.R. Gysin, T. Korhonen, J.A. Persson, S. Regnell
ESS, Lund, Sweden
- M. Pavleski, S. Sah
Cosylab, Ljubljana, Slovenia
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The European Spallation Source (ESS) is a neutron research facility based in Sweden that will be in operation in 2023. It is expected to have around 1500 IOCs controlling both the machine and end-station instruments. To manage the IOCs, an application called IOC Factory was developed at ESS. It provides a consistent and centralized approach on how IOCs are configured, generated, browsed and audited. The configuration allows users to select EPICS module versions of interest, and set EPICS environment variables and macros for IOCs. The generation automatically creates IOCs according to configurations. Browsing retrieves information on when, how and why IOCs were generated and by whom. Finally, auditing tracks changes of generated IOCs deployed locally. To achieve these functionalities, the IOC Factory relies on two other applications: the Controls Configuration Database (CCDB) and the ESS EPICS Environment (E3). The first stores information about IOCs, devices controlled by these, and required EPICS modules and snippets, while the second stores snippets needed to generate IOCs (st.cmd files). Combined, these applications enable ESS to successfully manage IOCs with minimum effort.
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2019-WEPHA048
|
|
About • |
paper received ※ 30 September 2019 paper accepted ※ 09 October 2019 issue date ※ 30 August 2020 |
|
Export • |
reference for this paper using
※ BibTeX,
※ LaTeX,
※ Text/Word,
※ RIS,
※ EndNote (xml)
|
|
|