HSYCO Remote

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The HSYCO Remote I/O Server is a powerful and secure server-to-server communication system that allows an HSYCO server read and write access to all the I/O data points and GUI variables of other remote HSYCO servers.

Using the HSYCO Remote I/O Server you can build a multi-level architecture with one or more HSYCO servers acting as concentrators for data points managed by other HSYCO servers.

Communication

The I/O Server communicates with the remote HSYCO server by establishing encrypted HTTPS connections to the HTTPS port of that server. The network infrastructure should be configured to allow these connections. The bandwidth and latency requirements depend on the specific application and the amount of data points on the remote HSYCO server.

HSYCO Configuration

Options

ID Default Values Description
discovery true true automatically creates the list of remote devices and individual data points in the systemtopo.txt file
false discovery is disabled
startupevents false true generate IO events also during the driver’s start-up phase
false start generating events only after HSYCO is aligned with the current status of the system
io true true I/O data points of the remote HSYCO server are replicated on this server
false I/O data points of the remote HSYCO server are not used
ui false true Web GUI elements of the remote HSYCO server are replicated on this server
false Web GUI elements of the remote HSYCO server are not used
drift 4 0...9999 used in combination with a remote SYSTEM I/O Server, sets the maximum clock drift between the local and the remote clocks, in seconds

Events and Control

On the local HSYCO server, all data points of the remote server will be mapped with the original data point names, prefixed with the I/O server name and a separation point. For example, if the I/O server name is “remote”, a remote data point “dummy.light.1” will be mapped as “remote.dummy.light.1” on the local server.

User Interface

On the local HSYCO server, all GUI elements of the remote server will be mapped with the original names, prefixed with the I/O server name and a separation point. For example, if the I/O server name is “remote”, a remote GUI element “status.text” will be mapped as “remote.status.text” on the local server.

Release Notes

3.2.0

  • added support of the SYSTEM I/O Server on remote systems for clock drift check
  • the RemoteServerAddress option can now be set to * to allow any remote IP address
  • new RemoteServerIOFilter and RemoteServerUIFilter options to filter the status data returned to the remote server

3.1.0

  • initial release