How to Log Siemens Alarms to SQLite
Open Automation Software can be configured to connect to Siemens devices using the Siemens connector, trigger alarms and log them to a SQLite database. This guide walks you through downloading and installing OAS, configuring a Siemens connector, configuring tags, setting an alarm limit and configuring alarm logging to SQLite.
For this guide on how to log Siemens alarms to SQLite you will need:
- A Siemens device connected to your workstation
1 - Download and Install OAS
If you have not already done so, you will need to download and install the OAS platform.
Fully functional trial versions of the software are available for Windows, Windows IoT Core, Linux, Raspberry Pi and Docker on our downloads page.
On Windows, run the downloaded setup.exe file to install the Open Automation Software platform. For a default installation, Agree to the End User License Agreement and then click the Next button on each of the installation steps until it has completed.
If you'd like to customize your installation or learn more, use the following instructions:
The OAS Service Control application will appear when the installation finishes on Windows.
Click on each START SERVICE button to start each of the three OAS services.
2 - Configure OAS
Configure OAS is the main application used to configure local and remote OAS instances.
From your operating system start menu, open the Configure OAS application.
Select the Configure > Tags screen.
Important
If this is the first time you have installed OAS, the AdminCreate utility will run when you select a screen in the Configure menu. This will ask you to create a username and password for the admin user. This user will have full permissions in the OAS platform.
For further information see Getting Started - Security.
If this is the first time you are logging in, you will see the AdminCreate utility. Follow the prompts to set up your admin account. Otherwise, select the Log In menu button and provide the Network Node, username and password.
Info
In this guide you will use the Configure OAS application to configure the local Network Node which by default is localhost.
If you have installed OAS on a remote instance you can also connect to the remote instance by setting the relevant IP address or host name in the Network Node field.
3 - Configure Siemens Data Source
In the following steps you will create and configure an Siemens Connector using an Siemens driver type. This guide assumes that you have an S7-1200 or similar series controller connected to the same network as the OAS instance.
Select Configure > Drivers from the top menu.
Enter a meaningful Driver Interface Name to give this driver interface instance a unique name.
Ensure the following parameters are configured:
- Driver: Siemens
- IP Address: Your controller IP address
- Processor Type: S7 1200 (or your own controller type)
- Link Type: PC
Click on the ADD DRIVER button on the left hand side to add this driver configuration. Once added, the driver interface name should appear in the list of drivers.
4 - Add Data Source Tag
In this section you will create a Tag to represent your data point in the field (for example a temperature sensor). This can then be transferred your desired destination.
Select Configure > Tags from the top menu.
If you want to add a Tag to the root Tags group make sure the Tags node is selected in the tag list and click on the ADD TAG button.
If you want to add a Tag to a Tag Group, select the Tag Group first and then click on the ADD TAG button.
You can also add Tag Groups by using the ADD GROUP button.
Provide a Tag Name such as TemperatureSensor and click the OK button.
5 - Assign Siemens as Tag Data Source
You will now set the Tag's data source to the Siemens driver interface that you created previously.
Select the Tag that will source data from a Siemens data source.
Set the Data Source to Siemens.
Set the Select Driver Interface drop-down to the S7-1200-Source interface created previously.
In the Address field enter the address of an analog input (for example IW64). Adjust the Siemens Data Type if required.
Info
For more information about Siemens addressing see the article Siemens Address Syntax
Optionally, in the Gain and Offset fields enter a value to adjust the raw value. For example, let's say you have a temperature sensor with a range of 0-50 degC and the Siemens analog value typically has a maximum value of 27648 then you would calculate the Gain as follows:
Gain = 50 / 27648 = 0.0018084 Offset = 0
Click on the Apply Changes button to apply the changes.
Check that the quality status is Good Quality and the data in the Value field is as expected.
6 - Set Tag Alarm Limit
Select the Tag where you want to enable the alarm limit.
Select the High tab to open the high alarm limit configuration screen.
Configure the following setting to enable the high alarm limit:
- Tick the Enable Alarm checkbox
- Set the High Limit value to your desired value threshold for triggering the alarm
Optionally you can also configure:
- Alarm Text to customize the alarm text that will be shown. You can combine this with different Alarm Text Type settings in order to prepend, append, overwrite or replace the alarm text with a calculation.
- Group to categorize the alarm into a specific group. This can be used to filter alarms when configuring logging and notifications.
- Priority to order and apply a specific priority to each alarm.
- Time Delay which suppresses the alarm for the specified amount of time after it is triggered.
- Log As Event which means the alarm will only be recorded as a single instance without an acknowledgement state.
7 - Configure Alarm Logging
You will now configure alarm logging to a local SQLite database file.
Select Configure > Alarm Logging from the top menu.
Enter a meaningful Logging Group Name to give this alarm logging group a unique name. An alarm logging group is defined by a specified filter, OAS node list (default localhost) and database connection or CSV file configuration.
On the Common tab leave all the default values which will ensure the logging group is active.
On the Filters tab you can customize which alarms should be included in your logging. This includes filtering by:
- Alarm state
- Alarm priority
- Alarm type
- Alarm group
On the Nodes tab you can leave the default settings if you only want to include alarms generated on the local node. Once you add the alarm group the localhost node will be added to the list automatically.
On the Database tab you will configure the database type and connection parameters:
- Tick the Log to Database checkbox to enable logging to a database
- Set the Provider to SQLite
- Set the absolute File Path of the SQLite database file. This will be created automatically
- Set Table to a table name such as Temperatures
Click on the ADD GROUP button to add the alarm logging group. Once added, the alarm logging group name should appear in the list of logging groups.
Your alarm logging group is now active.
8 - Save Changes
Once you have successfully configured your OAS instances, make sure you save your configuration.
On each configuration page, click on the Save button.
If this is the first time you are saving the configuration, or if you are changing the name of the configuration file, OAS will ask you if you want to change the default configuration file.
If you select Yes then OAS will make this configuration file the default and if the OAS service is restarted then this file will be loaded on start-up.
If you select No then OAS will still save your configuration file, but it will not be the default file that is loaded on start-up.
Important
Each configuration screen has an independent configuration file except for the Tags and Drivers configurations, which share the same configuration file. It is still important to click on the Save button whenever you make any changes.
For more information see: Save and Load Configuration
Info
- On Windows the configuration files are stored in C:\ProgramData\OpenAutomationSoftware\ConfigFiles.
- On Linux the configuration files are stored in the ConfigFiles subfolder of the OAS installation path.