July 2019, Industrial Ethernet Book

Page 27

Technology

The end of the Fieldbus Wars? “THE TIME OF THE FIELDBUS WARS IS OVER. Finally, there will be the one universal communication standard supported by everyone. All devices will be interoperable and third-party manufacturers can configure them without trouble: conformance tested and certified. The new standard will be stable immediately. Hence, there won’t be any versioning problems – at least, all versions will be completely downward compatible. Performance won’t be an issue, either, since the new technology is much quicker than all existing ones. The implementation of the devices will be easy to realize just by using standard chips since one relies on IT standards consistently. This is also why costs will be reduced. IT know-how won’t be necessary for the start-up engineer and cyber security won’t be a challenge anymore, too, because the process data will be encrypted and each sensor will have a certificate, which updates itself automatically on a regular basis. The fieldbus organizations will be obsolete – there’ll only be one single standard. And do not forget, by the end of 2019 the necessary products will be available and plants can be realized with the new standard. All that is possible because of the OPC Foundation with its new Field Level Communications (FLC) initiative.” This is, approximately, the current dream that is being promoted as reality by the marketing departments of some protagonists. Finally, all of the world’s big players in automation are part of one initiative. What could be better than that?

Speaking frankly

I think it’s time to pour some cold water on this matter! Let’s begin with the current members of the FLC Steering Committee. Together the 23 firms have a great market share in the automation market, but they definitely have different interests. From my point of view, there are four groups. The first group comprises the losers of the last fieldbus war. Their own industrial Ethernet solutions weren’t accepted, so they are currently searching for a successor. The second group thinks that OPC UA is a suitable technology for the communication between 7.2019

controls but favors another bus system below the control – and will surely not give up that system for OPC FLC. The third group wants to sell components and chips to the others.By the way, their members naturally have very low interest in a growing system based on standard IT components. And the fourth group is probably the largest: I call this the FOMO (“Fear Of Missing Out”) group, and its members think, ‘What if there’s something meaningful happening without us? Let’s join them, just in case…’ But who belongs to which group? The members of the first group naturally shout the loudest for the initiative. Here, history shows that not every howling wolf leads to realization or even market penetration. So far, Beckhoff and KUKA have said most clearly that they’ll sustainably support OPC as a relevant and open communication standard, but, of course, will continue to use EtherCAT below the controller for IO and motion control. It seems that Siemens, Rockwell and Mitsubishi plan to take a similar route. I can absolutely not imagine that those companies would turn their system architecture upside down and sacrifice their industrial Ethernet technologies PROFINET, EtherNet/IP and CC-Link IE on the altar of FLC. From the user’s point of view, that’s good. The technological competition between the systems is essential to drive the technologies.

Speaking of performance

The fairytale that OPC UA with TSN is 18x faster than all existing systems doesn’t become more true by just repeating it over and over. We asked one of the few automation experts from the IEEE 802.1 TSN task force to recalculate it. In all machine control scenarios, even a single 100 Mbit/s EtherCAT segment reaches shorter communication times than Gigabit Ethernet networks upgraded with TSN elements. Namely, independent from the used protocol and under the optimistic (and non-standard) assumption that TSN comes with cut-through switching. Dividing the EtherCAT segment, 100 Mbit/s EtherCAT beats every Gbit/s TSN system by far. Which user would prefer a Gigabit physical layer for drives, I/Os and sensors if he/she can have better (or only sufficient) performance on a 100Mbit/s basis? For this reason, the TSN approach of the EtherCAT

i n d u str i a l e th e r n e t b o o k

SOURCE: ETG

A heckling from Martin Rostan, Executive Director, EtherCAT Technology Group. This article provides a strong opinion on the state of the Fieldbus Wars by a veteran in this industry, but does not necessarily reflect the views of the Industrial Ethernet Book and its staff.

Martin Rostan has worked in industry communication for 27 years. For 14 years he has served as Executive Director of the EtherCAT Technology Group. His strongly stated opinion is that he thinks that the currently much described expectations from OPC UA and TSN are inflated. Plus, the system will be available only in a few years. Let us know your thoughts on this technology: editor@iebmedia.com. Technology Group (ETG) as well as EtherCAT G technology, which will be brought into ETG by Beckhoff in September 2019, combine a Gbit/s backbone with 100 Mbit/s EtherCAT field devices, which remain unchanged. Additionally, with TSN we have to expect a new level of complexity. Right now, the OPC TSN approach is building on seven IEEE 802.1 standards and has already produced seven additional relevant standards, and others will follow. The IEEE 802.1 Q standard alone has a count of 2,000 pages. OPC UA itself contains 14 standards with three newly added extensions. We may not forget that devices must be tested for their conformance to all those standards comprehensively. Compared to that, the current fieldbus standards are almost lean. No wonder that, differently from the fieldbuses, there are no experts to be found who know about the whole architecture. This leads us to stability and versioning. I think it’s fancy to suggest implementing OPC FLC ‘step by step’; Missing technology modules could just be ‘reloaded’ in the field.

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