Ethernet fault timing analysis tool is free

A GarrettCom Europe product story
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk editorial team Aug 31, 2004

Manufacturer of Industrial Ethernet switches and connectivity tools offers free Ethernet fault timing analysis tool that allows accurate fault timing based on sser-defined LANs.

GarretCom Europe, a broadline manufacturer of Industrial Ethernet switches and connectivity tools, is offering industrial Ethernet users the company's Fault Timing Analysis (FTA) software free of charge.

Fault timing data are critical to implementation of redundant networks in high-availability industrial applications, however, until now, accurate fault timing has been subject to trial-and-error analysis - reinventing the wheel every time.

The FTA tool, which works with both mesh and ring topologies, is now available.

"Our objective in releasing the FTA tool free of charge is to allow industrial Ethernet users to determine for themselves the fault recovery time they can expect in their self-healing LAN installation," said Frank Madren, GarrettCom president.

"We want users to have the information available to make the choice that is best for them." "The technology of fault recovery is not yet mature.

This means that users are faced with simplistic, but statistically impossible, claims that different vendors' products can achieve fault recovery in, say, precisely 50 or 250 milliseconds (ms.)," said Madren.

"In reality, even the same test using the same LAN equipment and set-up will have statistically significant variances from one test to the next.

In sensitive control applications, the range of response times is critical to avoid errors under operating conditions, and to plan for successful fault recovery.

Our FTA software provides users with an easy and tested way to determine the fault response range in their own application." GarrettCom has been testing the FTA tool in-house and with customers for more than a year.

It has also been used hands-on by show attendees at events including ISA Expo 2003 and SUPERCOMM 2004.

FTA is easy to use: a clock window displays the elapsed time, in thousandths of seconds, from the start of the test.

FTA operates by sending a rapid sequence of pings over the target network, timed by a 1 ms.

counter.

A ping response shows that the network is working normally at that instant.

When the user initiates a fault in the network, the ping response is not returned and the connection is considered broken.

A ms.

counter window tracks the elapsed time from fault detection to recovery (when ping responses are again received), and then updates the on-screen postings for the fault times measured, the number of fault incidents recorded, and the fault-recovery min./ave./max.

statistics at the bottom of the FTA screen.

FTA is downloaded as a 700kb zipped file; the FTA.exe file is a 1Mb Windows-executable file.

Fault Recovery vs.

Path Recovery - a critical distinction, according to Madren, is between path recovery and fault recovery.

Path recovery is fairly straightforward.

It is defined as the operating state where a new node can come on and find a working path enabling use of the ring elements to communicate with another new node.

Fault recovery, on the other hand, is defined as the operating state where all existing nodes that previously communicated using the ring elements can communicate again.

Fault recovery can be skewed because of differences in how network devices behave.

If the ping target device sends regular packets announcing its presence on the network, inaccurate fault recovery times will be noted.

Since an announcement packet forces switches in the network to relearn the sender's location, the measured test result will be less than or equal to the true fault recovery.

Devices that do not regularly announce their presence, however, are not accessible for packet transmittal until intervening switches have flushed their buffers and relearned all node addresses in the network, i.e, full fault recovery.

Elapsed time for full fault recovery may take as long as 5 minutes in most off-the-shelf Ethernet switches available today.

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