Third-party OPC Client Connectivity

The Open Communication Standard (OPC) is a standard that ensures data exchange between multi-vendor devices and control applications without any proprietary restrictions.

OPC is implemented in client-server pairs.

OPC DA

The OPC Data Access (OPC DA) specification defines the exchange of real-time data so that Desigo CC can be configured to interoperate with OPC-based field subsystems or devices.

The Desigo CC OPC client uses third-party OPC servers to obtain data from or send commands to the field hardware devices.

 

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Do not confuse Desigo CC server and client stations with the OPC clients and OPC servers. In this OPC-based application, Desigo CC server acts as an OPC client (the requester), while the connected hardware devices act as the OPC servers (responders).

OPC Servers

The third-party OPC-based field devices/subsystems that you want to connect to Desigo CC are integrated as third-party OPC servers. At a high level, an OPC server is comprised of several objects: server, group, and item.

OPC Items

To integrate one or more OPC devices or subsystems into Desigo CC, you must manually edit an OPC devices configuration CSV file that defines the server-groups-items structure for the devices. Then you import that CSV file into Desigo CC, to recreate that hierarchy under an OPC network in the System Browser tree. Each OPC server contains the related groups, and each group contains the related OPC items.

Third-party OPC Client Connectivity Limits

The current version of Desigo CC supports one or more OPC drivers, each one associated with an OPC network. The minimum configuration requires one OPC server configured in an OPC network. The maximum configuration is 20 OPC servers for each OPC network.

OPC in Distributed Systems