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Using .NET with Wonderware

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24 Aug 2010GPL33 min read 220.4K   3.1K   22   113
This article will show how to read and write to Wonderware from VB

Introduction

This article is born out of several projects I have had extending Wonderware by calling VB.NET applications. Wonderware is an HMI/SCADA front end made by Wonderware. Wonderware is fairly easy to use, although I am not a huge fan of it, I don't have much against it either. It is just a common program in the SCADA industry. This will show you how to write applications that communicate with Wonderware. I usually have to do this to extend the functionality or to fill in the gaps between what Wonderware can do and what the customer requires.

Background

I write HMI/SCADA software mostly for the oil and gas industry. In this industry, many companies use a product called Wonderware. I have also come across it in waste water plants as well as food processing plants (Cheese Cake to be exact!!!). At most of these facilities, they need a function in the Wonderware application, but Wonderware can't do it. This will give you another option. I have seen other options using DDE. However, DDE is no longer supported so we will be using the Wonderware Toolkit. This code will contact the Wonderware running on the same computer.

Using the Code

Using the code will be pretty easy. We will create 2 VB files that are required to call the Wonderware toolkit (ptacc.dll and wwheap.dll). After that, all that will be left is your application to call the read/write functions of the Wonderare Toolkit. These files were created based on information from Wonderware West and my experience with using the 2 DLLs.

To do this, you need to copy the Intouch.vb and the Ptacc.vb into your project as well as reference the wwheap.dll and the ptacc.dll. Doing this will allow you to communicate with the Wonderware database.

The Ptacc.vb file will contain everything necessary to communicate with Wonderware. However it isn't very pretty, so that is why we use the Intouch.vb file. It is just the basic level.

The Intouch.vb file is going to contain our commands for reading and writing values with the Wonderware database. This will allow you to read/write Strings, Floats, Booleans(Discrete), and Integers.

So if you want to read the first 132 characters from the string variable with the tag SBuffer, then you call IntouchToolkit.ReadString("SBuffer", 132) or you can use ReadInteger, ReadDiscrete and ReadFloat for the respective types. Also, the similar is true but the functions is WriteString, WriteFloat, WriteInteger and WriteDiscrete. The Tag name is always a string.

Now that we got the basics out of the way, you need to call this from your application. This is pretty simple. In your main VB file, whether it is Windows Form or console application doesn't matter. I have not tried this with a web form, but I would like to hear your experience with it if you do try it.

VB.NET
Public Class Form1
    Dim accid As Integer
    Dim hPt As Integer
    Dim SB As String
    Dim IntouchToolkit As Intouch

    '------------------------------------------------
    'Form1_Load
    '------------------------------------------------
    Private Sub Form1_Load(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
		ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load

        IntouchToolkit = New Intouch(0, 0)
        SB = IntouchToolkit.ReadString("SBuffer", 132)	'SBuffer is the Tag 
						'I want to read in Wonderware

    End Sub
    
    Private Sub btnOpen_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
		ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles btnOpen.Click
        IntouchToolkit = New Intouch(0, 0)
        IntouchToolkit.WriteDiscrete("SomeTag", 1)
    End Sub
End Class

These are the write functions available to call:

  • VB.NET
    IntouchToolkit.WriteString("SomeTag", "FooBar")

    This is to write a string value.

  • VB.NET
    IntouchToolkit.WriteFloat("SomeTag", 3.1415)

    This is to write a float value.

  • VB.NET
    IntouchToolkit.WriteInteger("SomeTag", 10)

    This is to write an integer value.

  • VB.NET
    IntouchToolkit.WriteDiscrete("SomeTag", 1)

    This is to write a boolean value.

These are the read functions available to call:

  • VB.NET
    IntouchToolkit.ReadString("SomeTag")

    This is to read a string value.

  • VB.NET
    IntouchToolkit.ReadFloat("SomeTag")

    This is to read a float value.

  • VB.NET
    IntouchToolkit.ReadInteger("SomeTag")

    This is to read a integer value.

  • VB.NET
    IntouchToolkit.ReadDiscrete("SomeTag")

    This is to read a boolean value.

*NOTE: Replace "SomeTag" with the tagname you want to read or write from.

Points of Interest

As you can see, this is pretty simple. I have used this code several times on Wonderware 7.1 to 10.0. I usually put in some code that starts my application when an icon in Wonderware is clicked. This is the reason why I get the x and y values from Wonderware. It took me about a week with Wonderware support to find this information, and they do not support the Wonderware toolkit, but it has been reliable for me.

History

Well, this is the initial version.

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The GNU General Public License (GPLv3)


Written By
Software Developer Chemex Modular
United States United States
I am a Developer and Electrical Engineer. I work mostly on HMI and SCADA systems in the Houston area. I have worked mostly around oil and gas industry. I have also spent time in Indiana working on automotive assembly plants.

Comments and Discussions

 
GeneralMy vote of 4 [modified] Pin
knockNrod24-Aug-10 6:50
knockNrod24-Aug-10 6:50 
GeneralRe: My vote of 4 [modified] Pin
earl the dead cat24-Aug-10 10:32
earl the dead cat24-Aug-10 10:32 
GeneralRe: My vote of 4 Pin
knockNrod25-Aug-10 2:28
knockNrod25-Aug-10 2:28 
GeneralRe: My vote of 4 Pin
earl the dead cat25-Aug-10 2:33
earl the dead cat25-Aug-10 2:33 
GeneralRe: My vote of 4 Pin
knockNrod31-Aug-10 5:31
knockNrod31-Aug-10 5:31 
GeneralOther side of the fence Pin
gmeiring2-Sep-10 3:56
gmeiring2-Sep-10 3:56 
GeneralRe: Other side of the fence Pin
earl the dead cat2-Sep-10 6:27
earl the dead cat2-Sep-10 6:27 
GeneralRe: Other side of the fence [modified] Pin
knockNrod5-Sep-10 11:10
knockNrod5-Sep-10 11:10 
I'm actually trying to write my own article on this. There are two of us trying to rewrite our HMI to better support embedding within WinCC and Wonderware's InTouch. Unfortunately, I'm the WinCC guy.

To get started, download Microsoft's Interop Forms Toolkit. It won't work on the express versions. Read the related documentation. It adds two new projects to your project list, and if you want to go this route, you'll want to use the Interop Control Library project. Multiple controls haven't been tested yet in our Wonderware project, but I have no reason to suspect a problem.

Since you're working with C/C++, you have the option to create an actual ActiveX control, which Wonderware supports.

I'm having some trouble working in the article submission tool here, or I'd have someplace to at least send you. IIRC, InTouch does have some pretty serious limitations on what can be displayed in terms of colors. For this reason alone, you may have to rethink the notion of hosting it there.

Something to consider regarding data access. If you create a series of controls to embed independently, each control has to handle its own data independently. Using sockets, you drop 30 controls on one page, open that page on 10 clients, and you have 300 socket connections. I believe the intent was to expose public properties in the embedded control and use memory tags (or PLC tags) to supply data to those properties as the mechanism for getting data into (and out of) these embedded controls.

We are trying to create a control library and use Interface objects (and contracts) per control to define a Data Access Layer (DAL) within the control library. Using the Singleton Pattern, we are able to pass a reference to this DAL object around and share data among all of our controls. This method allows you to do some more interesting solutions: Create a System Service that communicates via IPC to a proxy object that provides all the interfaces, replace the DAL object with an unlimited number of concrete classes which implement data collection using things like SQL Server, Oracle, Sockets, various combinations of each, or even SOA services. Our level 2 code provides most of the data, and it's written in C/C++. As a result, WCF isn't supported directly within C/C++, but if that gets migrated to C# or VB (we still have to support VMS, so that's not likely), then we could also use WCF to service these interface contracts.

Hope that helps. Keep an eye open for a new article on here for embedded controls from me! I'll take whatever feedback I can get. (Update: It's by no means complete, but here's the link http://www.codeproject.com/KB/miscctrl/HMI_Embedded_Controls.aspx)

Without darkness, there are no dreams.
-Karla Kuban



-- Modified Monday, September 6, 2010 3:28 AM
GeneralRe: Other side of the fence Pin
earl the dead cat5-Sep-10 15:37
earl the dead cat5-Sep-10 15:37 
GeneralRe: Other side of the fence Pin
knockNrod6-Sep-10 18:55
knockNrod6-Sep-10 18:55 
GeneralRe: Other side of the fence Pin
earl the dead cat7-Sep-10 2:28
earl the dead cat7-Sep-10 2:28 
GeneralRe: Other side of the fence Pin
knockNrod6-Sep-10 19:08
knockNrod6-Sep-10 19:08 
GeneralRe: My vote of 4 Pin
earl the dead cat2-Sep-10 6:37
earl the dead cat2-Sep-10 6:37 
GeneralRe: My vote of 4 [modified] Pin
knockNrod5-Sep-10 11:06
knockNrod5-Sep-10 11:06 
GeneralRe: My vote of 4 [modified] Pin
ralimin7-Nov-10 23:19
ralimin7-Nov-10 23:19 
General[My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
Luc Pattyn23-Aug-10 10:27
sitebuilderLuc Pattyn23-Aug-10 10:27 
GeneralRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
earl the dead cat23-Aug-10 11:42
earl the dead cat23-Aug-10 11:42 
GeneralRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
Luc Pattyn23-Aug-10 11:45
sitebuilderLuc Pattyn23-Aug-10 11:45 
GeneralRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
knockNrod24-Aug-10 6:58
knockNrod24-Aug-10 6:58 
AnswerRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
Luc Pattyn24-Aug-10 7:12
sitebuilderLuc Pattyn24-Aug-10 7:12 
GeneralRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
knockNrod25-Aug-10 2:39
knockNrod25-Aug-10 2:39 
GeneralRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
earl the dead cat25-Aug-10 2:57
earl the dead cat25-Aug-10 2:57 
GeneralRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
earl the dead cat24-Aug-10 7:30
earl the dead cat24-Aug-10 7:30 
GeneralRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
knockNrod25-Aug-10 3:03
knockNrod25-Aug-10 3:03 
GeneralRe: [My vote of 2] I keep wondering Pin
earl the dead cat25-Aug-10 3:26
earl the dead cat25-Aug-10 3:26 

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