- Source: Bus monitoring
Bus monitoring is a term used in flight testing when capturing data from avionics buses and networks in data acquisition telemetry systems.
Types of monitors
Typically a bus monitor must listen-only on the bus and intercept a copy of the messages on the bus. In general a bus monitor never transmits on the monitored bus. Once the bus monitor has intercepted a message, the message is made available to the rest of the data acquisition system for subsequent recording and/or analysis.
There are three classes of bus monitor:
Parser bus monitor
Snarfer bus monitor
Packetizer bus monitor
Parser bus monitor
Parser bus monitoring is also known as coherent monitoring or IRIG-106 Chapter 4 monitoring. Parser bus monitors are suited to applications where the bus is highly active and only a few specific parameters of interest must be extracted.
The parser bus monitor uses protocol tracking to identify and classify messages on the bus. From the identified messages of interest, specific parameters can be extracted from the captured messages. In order to ensure that coherency is achieved whereby all extracted parameters are from the same message instance, the parameters must be triple buffered with stale and skipped indicators. Optionally time tags can be added to each parsed message.
Snarfer bus monitor
Snarfer bus monitoring is also known as FIFO or IRIG-106 Chapter 8 monitoring. Snarfer bus monitors are suited to applications where all messages and traffic on the bus must be captured for processing, analysis, and recording.
A snarfer bus monitor captures all messages on the bus, tags them with a timestamp and content identifiers (for example Command or Status in the case of MIL-STD-1553 buses), and puts them into a FIFO.
Packetizer bus monitor
Packetizer bus monitors are designed for networked data acquisition systems where the acquired data from the avionics buses is captured and re-packetized in Ethernet frames for transmission to an analysis computer or network recorder.
The packetizer bus monitor captures selected messages of interest (parsed) or all messages on the bus (snarfed) and packages the message in the payload of a UDP/IP packet. The application layer contains bus identifiers, sequence numbers and timestamps. The most popular application layer protocols used for networked data acquisition systems include the Airbus IENA format and the iNET (integrated Network Enhanced Telemetry) TmNS (Telemetry Network System) format.
Commonly monitored buses
Commonly monitored avionics buses include
ARINC Standard buses such as ARINC-429, ARINC 573, ARINC 717
ARINC 629 also known as Multi-transmitter Data Bus
ARINC 664 also known as Deterministic Ethernet
ARINC 825 Controller Area Network (CAN)
Common Airborne Instrumentation Systems (CAIS)
Cross Channel Data Link (CCDL) / Motor Controller Data Link (MCDL)
Ethernet
Fibre Channel
Firewire, IEEE 1394
IRIG-106 PCM
MIL-STD-1553
RS-232/RS-422/RS-485
STANAG-3910
Time-Triggered Protocol (TTP)
References
External links
IRIG
XidML
ETEP - Airborne Data acquisition systems
Curtiss-Wright Controls Avionics & Electronics
iNET
Ballard Technology Aircraft Interface Devices with monitoring capabilities
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