VXI MXI Express Series User Manual National Instruments 373683a
User Manual: VXI-MXI-Express Series
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VXI-MXI -Express TM VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual NI VXI-8360T NI VXI-8360LT VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual April 2012 373683A-01 Support Worldwide Technical Support and Product Information ni.com Worldwide Offices Visit ni.com/niglobal to access the branch office Web sites, which provide up-to-date contact information, support phone numbers, email addresses, and current events. National Instruments Corporate Headquarters 11500 North Mopac Expressway Austin, Texas 78759-3504 USA Tel: 512 683 0100 For further support information, refer to the Technical Support and Professional Services appendix. To comment on National Instruments documentation, refer to the National Instruments Web site at ni.com/info and enter the Info Code feedback. © 2012 National Instruments. All rights reserved. Important Information Warranty The NI VXI-8360T and NI VXI-8360LT controllers are warranted against defects in materials and workmanship for a period of one year from the date of shipment, as evidenced by receipts or other documentation. National Instruments will, at its option, repair or replace equipment that proves to be defective during the warranty period. This warranty includes parts and labor. The media on which you receive National Instruments software are warranted not to fail to execute programming instructions, due to defects in materials and workmanship, for a period of 90 days from date of shipment, as evidenced by receipts or other documentation. National Instruments will, at its option, repair or replace software media that do not execute programming instructions if National Instruments receives notice of such defects during the warranty period. National Instruments does not warrant that the operation of the software shall be uninterrupted or error free. A Return Material Authorization (RMA) number must be obtained from the factory and clearly marked on the outside of the package before any equipment will be accepted for warranty work. National Instruments will pay the shipping costs of returning to the owner parts which are covered by warranty. National Instruments believes that the information in this document is accurate. The document has been carefully reviewed for technical accuracy. In the event that technical or typographical errors exist, National Instruments reserves the right to make changes to subsequent editions of this document without prior notice to holders of this edition. The reader should consult National Instruments if errors are suspected. In no event shall National Instruments be liable for any damages arising out of or related to this document or the information contained in it. 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Electromagnetic Compatibility Guidelines This product was tested and complies with the regulatory requirements and limits for electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) as stated in the product specifications. These requirements and limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the product is operated in its intended operational electromagnetic environment. This product is intended for use in industrial locations. There is no guarantee that harmful interference will not occur in a particular installation, when the product is connected to a test object, or if the product is used in residential areas. To minimize the potential for the product to cause interference to radio and television reception or to experience unacceptable performance degradation, install and use this product in strict accordance with the instructions in the product documentation. Furthermore, any changes or modifications to the product not expressly approved by National Instruments could void your authority to operate it under your local regulatory rules. Caution To ensure the specified EMC performance, operate this product only with shielded cables and accessories. Contents About This Manual Products Covered ...........................................................................................................ix Conventions ...................................................................................................................ix Related Documentation..................................................................................................x Chapter 1 Introduction Description and Features ...............................................................................................1-1 NI VXI-8360T Front Panel Features...............................................................1-3 NI VXI-8360LT Front Panel Features ............................................................1-4 Functional Block Diagrams.............................................................................1-5 MXI-Express x1 Functional Overview..........................................................................1-6 Basic MXI-Express x1 Systems ......................................................................1-7 Larger MXI-Express x1 Systems ....................................................................1-8 Chapter 2 Installation and Configuration Equipment Needed.........................................................................................................2-1 Unpacking ......................................................................................................................2-2 Software Installation ......................................................................................................2-2 Hardware Installation and Configuration ......................................................................2-3 Installing Your NI VXI-8360T/LT Controller ................................................2-3 Installing Your MXI-Express x1 Host Adapter or Peripheral.........................2-4 Connecting Cables...........................................................................................2-4 Powering On/Off the MXI-Express System....................................................2-4 Software Configuration..................................................................................................2-5 Default Software Settings................................................................................2-7 Chapter 3 Developing Your Application National Instruments Application Software ..................................................................3-1 NI-VXI, NI-VISA, and Related Terms..........................................................................3-2 Programming for VXI....................................................................................................3-3 Optimizing Large VXIbus Transfers...............................................................3-4 NI-VXI API Notes...........................................................................................3-5 Compiler Symbols.............................................................................3-5 Compatibility Layer Options ............................................................3-5 © National Instruments vii VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Contents Device Interaction and Debugging Tools...................................................................... 3-6 NI I/O Trace .................................................................................................... 3-6 VISA Interactive Control (VISAIC) ............................................................... 3-7 VXI Interactive Control (VIC)........................................................................ 3-9 Appendix A Specifications Appendix B Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings Appendix C Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360T Appendix D Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360LT Appendix E How to Fix an Invalid EEPROM Configuration Appendix F VMEbus Capability Codes Appendix G Common Questions Appendix H Technical Support and Professional Services Glossary Index VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual viii ni.com About This Manual This manual contains instructions for installing and configuring the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller interface kit. It also discusses how to start developing your VXI/VME application. Products Covered Note The model numbers listed below are followed by their specific NI assembly numbers in parentheses. x denotes all letter revisions of the assembly. Ensure the specifications of interest match the NI assembly number that is printed on either the front or back side of the board. • NI VXI-8360T (198399x-02) • NI VXI-8360LT (152725x-01) Conventions The following conventions appear in this manual: » The » symbol leads you through nested menu items and dialog box options to a final action. The sequence File»Page Setup»Options directs you to pull down the File menu, select the Page Setup item, and select Options from the last dialog box. This icon denotes a note, which alerts you to important information. This icon denotes a caution, which advises you of precautions to take to avoid injury, data loss, or a system crash. When this symbol is marked on a product, refer to the Safety section in Appendix A, Specifications, for information about precautions to take. bold Bold text denotes items that you must select or click in the software, such as menu items and dialog box options. Bold text also denotes parameter names. italic Italic text denotes variables, emphasis, a cross-reference, or an introduction to a key concept. Italic text also denotes text that is a placeholder for a word or value that you must supply. © National Instruments ix VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual About This Manual monospace Text in this font denotes text or characters that you should enter from the keyboard, sections of code, programming examples, and syntax examples. This font is also used for the proper names of disk drives, paths, directories, programs, subprograms, subroutines, device names, functions, operations, variables, filenames, and extensions. VXI-MXI-Express Series controller This term refers to the NI VXI-8360T or NI VXI-8360LT. MXI-Express x1 host adapter This term refers to the NI PCIe-8361, NI PCIe-8362, NI ExpressCard-8360, and MXI-Express x1 host adapters. Related Documentation The following documents contain information that you might find helpful as you read this manual: • Your computer and/or chassis documentation • ANSI/IEEE Standard 1014-1987, IEEE Standard for a Versatile Backplane Bus: VMEbus • ANSI/IEEE Standard 1155-1998, IEEE VMEbus Extensions for Instrumentation: VXIbus • ANSI/VITA 1-1994, VME64 • VXI-6, VXIbus Mainframe Extender Specification, Rev. 2.0, VXIbus Consortium • NI-VISA Help • NI-VXI Help • Measurement & Automation Explorer Help for NI-VISA/NI-VXI • Set Up Your MXI-Express x1 System • MXI-Express x1 Series User Manual • PCI Specification, Revision 3.0 • PCI-PCI Bridge Architecture Specification, Revision 1.2 • PCI Express Specification, Revision 1.0a • PICMG CompactPCI 2.0 R3.0 specification • PICMG EXP.0 CompactPCI Express Specification R1.0 • PCMCIA ExpressCard Standard, Revision 1.0 • PCI Express Base Specification, Revision 1.1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual x ni.com Introduction Description and Features The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller is a C-size, VXIbus, Slot 0-capable device that can reside in any C-size or D-size VXI mainframe. Note D-size VXI mainframes have connections for a P3 connector. The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller, however, does not have this connector and cannot provide the necessary control for VXI devices that need P3 support. The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller links a PCI Express-based host computer to the VXIbus using the National Instruments MXI-Express x1 interface. The MXI-Express x1 link enables your computer to perform as though it were plugged directly into the VXI backplane, giving it the capabilities of an embedded computer. With MXI-Express x1, you can do the following: • Control a VXI backplane with a PCI Express or ExpressCard-based PC or laptop/mobile host adapter. • Physically separate the measurement or automation system from a host PC or laptop. • Combine VXI, PCI Express, CompactPCI, CompactPCI Express, PXI, PXI Express, and CompactRIO devices into the same system. Several different MXI-Express x1 interfaces are compatible with the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. Refer to the Set Up Your MXI-Express x1 System Guide included in this kit for information about connectivity support. The NI VXI-8360T incorporates functionality allowing the extension of the 8 TTL backplane triggers and CLK10 between multiple chassis through convenient front panel connectors. Refer to Appendix C, Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360T, for more information about using the TRIG/CLK ports on the NI VXI-8360T. © National Instruments 1-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 1 Introduction The NI VXI-8360LT allows the extension of the 8 TTL backplane triggers to two M-LVDS front panel trigger bus connectors that are mechanically and electrically compatible with the LXI-wired trigger bus specification when configured in a specific way. Refer to Appendix D, Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360LT, for more information about using the trigger bus ports on the NI VXI-8360T. Kits that include a MXI-Express interface board also include a 3 m MXI-Express x1 cable. 1 m and 7 m cables are also available and can be purchased separately. The kits also include the NI-VXI/NI-VISA CD, which installs the VXI device drivers, NI-VISA, MAX, Resman, and other useful utilities. This software also enables additional features of the NI VXI-8360T/LT, such as Variable Power On (VPO) support, that are not covered in this manual. Refer to the respective software release notes for more information. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 1-2 ni.com Chapter 1 Introduction NI VXI-8360T Front Panel Features Front Panel Features • Eight front panel status LEDs – • • FAILED—Indicates the NI VXI-8360T failed power on diagnostics. – SYSFAIL—Indicates the VMEbus SYSFAIL line has been asserted by a device on the backplane. – ONLINE—Indicates the board is detected by the NI-VXI/VISA driver. – ACCESS—Indicates a VXI bus master is accessing the NI VXI-8360T. – CB—Indicates the circuit breaker has tripped from an over current condition on the +5.0 VDC rail of the NI VXI-8360T. – ACT—Indicates bus activity on the MXI-Express link. – PWRGD—Indicates the on board power supplies are in regulation. – LINK—Indicates the MXI-Express link connecting the host computer to the NI VXI-8360T has been established. TRIG/CLK PORT A(B)—These ports allow the user to daisy-chain the 8 TTL triggers and/or CLK10 between multiple chassis. CABLE STATUS LED—Indicates if the cable connections to the TRG/CLK ports are correct. – © National Instruments • Off—Indicates no cables are connected to the TRIG/CLK PORT A(B) ports. – Blinking Red—Indicates incorrect trigger cable connection. – Solid Green—Indicates correct trigger cable connection. Three front panel SMB connectors for: • – Trigger input – Trigger output – CLK10 I/O One MXI-Express x1 connector 1-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 1 Introduction NI VXI-8360LT Front Panel Features Front Panel Features • Eight front panel status LEDs – • VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual FAILED—Indicates the NI VXI-8360LT failed power on diagnostics. – SYSFAIL—Indicates the VMEbus SYSFAIL line has been asserted by a device on the backplane. – ONLINE—Indicates the board is detected by the NI-VXI/VISA driver. – ACCESS—Indicates a VXI bus master is accessing the NI VXI-8360LT. – CB—Indicates the circuit breaker has tripped from an over current condition on the +5.0 VDC rail of the NI VXI-8360LT. – ACT—Indicates bus activity on the MXI-Express link. – PWRGD—Indicates the on board power supplies are in regulation. – LINK—Indicates the MXI-Express link connecting the host computer to the NI VXI-8360LT has been established. Two Trigger Bus Ports—These ports allow the user to daisy chain the 8 M-LVDS backplane triggers and/or CLK10 between multiple chassis. • Three front panel SMB connectors for: • – Trigger input – Trigger output – CLK10 I/O One MXI-Express x1 connector 1-4 ni.com Chapter 1 Introduction Functional Block Diagrams 2 Wired VXI Backplane Trigger and CLK10 Bus 3 P1 Connector 1 P1 MANTIS ASIC CLK10/ Backplane Triggers 4 MITE ASIC 1 Status LEDs 2 PCIe Gen 1 x1 PCIe-to PCI Bridge TRG/CLK Port A P2 Connector MXI-Express x1 Copper PXI/PCI P2 MANTIS ASIC 3 TRG/CLK Port B 4 SMB I/O 1 P1 MANTIS ASIC Wired VXI Backplane Trigger Bus 2 CLK10/ Backplane Triggers P1 Connector Figure 1-1. NI VXI-8360T (198399x-02) Functional Block Diagram 3 1 Status LEDs PCIe Gen 1 x1 2 PCIe-to PCI Bridge Trigger Bus Ports MITE ASIC P2 MANTIS ASIC 3 P2 Connector MXI-Express x1 Copper PXI/PCI SMB I/O Figure 1-2. NI VXI-8360LT (152725x-01) Functional Block Diagram © National Instruments 1-5 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 1 Introduction The NI VXI-8360T/LT is, by factory default, hardware configured to automatically detect if it is in Slot 0, and will supply a CLK10 sourced from an onboard oscillator. Refer to Appendix B, Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings, for additional hardware configuration options. MXI-Express x1 Functional Overview The NI VXI-8360T/LT controllers enable control of a VXI mainframe with a host computer using MXI-Express x1 technology. MXI-Express x1 is based on PCI Express technology. A MXI-Express x1 kit may use a combination of PCI Express switches or PCI Express-to-PCI bridges to enable control of a VXI chassis from a PC with an available PCI Express or ExpressCard slot. The link between the PC and the chassis is a x1 cabled MXI-Express link. This link is a dual-simplex communication channel comprised of a low-voltage, differentially driven signal pair. The link can transmit at a rate of 2.5 Gbps in each direction simultaneously. This port is not compatible with the cabled PCI Express specification developed by the PCI-SIG. The BIOS of some host machines may not support the extension of the PCI-Express fabric or PCI bus. Since this is the primary function of MXI-Express x1 products, those systems may not boot or function correctly. To address this issue, certain MXI-Express x1 products have additional functionality intended to hide all PCI or PCI-Express resources that are connected to the host machine allowing NI MXI-Express BIOS Compatibility Software to handle the enumeration process of these resources. In the cases where this software is required, there may be a dip switch on the MXI-Express x1 host adapter that needs to be toggled as instructed by the documentation for the software. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 1-6 ni.com Chapter 1 Introduction Basic MXI-Express x1 Systems Figure 1-3 is an example of a basic VXI system being controlled by a PCI-Express based host computer via a MXI-Express x1 link. 2 1 bus 3 4 1 2 Host Computer VXI Mainframe 3 4 NI VXI-8360T/LT Controller in Slot 0 MXI-Express x1 Cable Figure 1-3. Host System with NI VXI-8360T/LT Controller Refer to the MXI-Express x1 Series User Manual or the Set Up Your MXI-Express x1 System guide included in your kit for more information about MXI-Express x1 connectivity support for the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. © National Instruments 1-7 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 1 Introduction Larger MXI-Express x1 Systems By leveraging the PCI Express technology used in MXI-Express x1 products, you can connect more than a single chassis to a host controller. The NI PCIe-8362, for example, has two MXI-Express x1 ports. This allows for connecting two targets simultaneously, also known as a star configuration or star topology. Also, if multiple PCI or PCI Express slots are available in the host PC, additional chassis can be connected by installing additional NI MXI-Express x1 host boards to achieve the same star topology. You can also daisy-chain from a PXI or PXI Express chassis that is already controlled by an embedded controller, host PC, or laptop to a VXI mainframe using MXI-Express x1 products. bus Star Topology bus Daisy-Chain Topology Figure 1-4. Example MXI-Express x1 System Expansion Topologies Note The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller cannot be used to daisy-chain the MXI-Express x1 link from one VXI mainframe to another VXI mainframe. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 1-8 ni.com Installation and Configuration Equipment Needed ❑ A host computer with an available PCI Express slot1. ❑ A MXI-Express x1 host board that is appropriate for the host system slot. Refer to the connectivity tables in the Set Up Your MXI-Express x1 System guide to determine which MXI-Express x1 products are compatible with the NI VXI-8360T and NI VXI-8360LT. ❑ A VXIbus mainframe ❑ A NI VXI-8360T/LT controller ❑ MXI-Express x1 copper cable ❑ National Instruments NI-VXI driver software CD 1 Some x16 slots may not work correctly with MXI-Express adapters. © National Instruments 2-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 2 Installation and Configuration Unpacking Your MXI-Express x1 boards are shipped in antistatic packages to prevent electrostatic discharge (ESD) to the devices. ESD can damage several components on the device. Caution Never touch the exposed pins of connectors. Doing so may damage the device. To avoid such damage in handling the device, take the following precautions: • Ground yourself using a grounding strap or by holding a grounded object. • Touch the antistatic package to a metal part of the computer chassis before removing the device from the package. Remove the device from the package and inspect the device for loose components or any sign of damage. Notify NI if the device appears damaged in any way. Do not install a damaged device into a computer, laptop, PXI/CompactPCI, PXI Express/CompactPCI Express, CompactRIO, or VXI chassis. Store the device in the antistatic envelope when not in use. Software Installation Run setup.exe on the NI-VXI/VISA software CD included with your kit to install the software and for installation instructions. The CD will install the driver for the product as well as NI-VISA by default. With NI-VISA installed on your computer, you can run any VXIplug&play software that is compatible with the WINNT/GWINNT framework. This includes instrument drivers and executable soft front panel software included with VXIplug&play-compatible instruments from a variety of vendors. Caution To keep the manufacturer/model name tables or the VME device configuration from a previous installation, be sure to back them up before starting Setup. They are in the TBL subdirectory of your NI-VXI directory, usually Program Files\National Instruments\VXI. When the installation process completes, reboot the system for the changes to take effect. If you backed up the manufacturer and model name files, VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 2-2 ni.com Chapter 2 Installation and Configuration restore them to the TBL subdirectory of your NI-VXI directory before running MAX. Note If you save and restore the TBL files from an older version of NI-VXI, the software will use TBL files that do not have the latest updates from National Instruments and may not include recent hardware releases. If you added additional manufacturer or model names to your TBL files, we recommend merging those changes with the latest updates included with this version of NI-VXI, so that all your devices are properly identified. For more information about the NI-VXI API, refer to Chapter 3, Developing Your Application. Hardware Installation and Configuration Prior to installation of the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller, determine if any onboard jumper settings need to be changed. The NI VXI-8360T/LT controllers’ default configuration of onboard jumpers should be acceptable for most systems. Refer to Appendix B, Default Jumper Settings, only if your system uses the front-panel CLK10 and trigger SMB connectors. Caution To guard against electrostatic discharge, touch the antistatic plastic packages to a metal part of your computer or chassis before removing the boards from their packages. Your computer or chassis should be plugged in but powered off. Caution The protection provided by the NI VXI-8360T/LT device can be impaired if it is used in a manner not described in this document. Installing Your NI VXI-8360T/LT Controller © National Instruments 1. Power off the chassis. 2. Verify that the backplane connector is intact and that there are no bent or missing pins on the controller. 3. Insert the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller into the chassis in Slot 0, as shown in Figure 1-3. 4. Firmly press the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller into the mating connectors to ensure the module is fully inserted and seated in the connector. 5. Tighten the two ejector handle screws. 2-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 2 Installation and Configuration 6. Verify that any other VXI devices with system controller capability that are in the same chassis are not configured as system controller. 7. Ensure that no other VXI devices in your system are manually configured for the same logical address as your controller. Note Although the NI VXI-8360T/LT controllers are typically installed in Slot 0 of the VXI chassis, they may operate in other slots of the chassis. If you choose to install the controller in a slot other than Slot 0, the automatic detection circuitry on the controller will detect the slot and configure the controller appropriately, as long as the J2 jumper is set to Auto-detect. Having more than one device configured as system controller can damage the VXI system. For VXI systems that include VME devices, ensure that the VME devices are not configured in the upper 16 KB (starting from 0xC000) of the A16 address space. This region is reserved for VXI device configuration registers, which are used for initializing, configuring, and interacting with VXI devices. The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller also uses this region for this purpose. Caution Installing Your MXI-Express x1 Host Adapter or Peripheral Refer to the Setup Your MXI-Express x1 System guide included in the kit for hardware installation instructions. Connecting Cables Connect the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller to the MXI-Express x1 host adapter in the host computer, using the MXI-Express x1 cable as shown in Figure 1-3, Host System with NI VXI-8360T/LT Controller. For information about connecting trigger cables for the NI VXI-8360T, refer to Appendix C, Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360T. For information about connecting trigger cables for the NI VXI-8360LT, refer to Appendix D, Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360LT. For more information about MAX, refer to its online help by selecting the Help»Help Topics menu. Powering On/Off the MXI-Express System For instructions, refer to the Powering On the MXI-Express x1 System section and Powering Off the MXI-Express x1 System section of the Setup Your MXI-Express x1 System guide. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 2-4 ni.com Chapter 2 Installation and Configuration If using Variable Power On (VPO) refer to the NI-VXI Release Notes for more information about powering up/down the system. Software Configuration The configuration utilities in your software kit are Resource Manager (Resman) and Measurement & Automation Explorer (MAX). Resman configures all devices on the VXI backplane for operation and allocates memory for devices that request it. Resman must be executed every time the chassis or computer power is cycled, so that your application can access devices in the VXI chassis. Note You can also configure MAX to run Resman automatically at every computer startup by selecting the Run Auto VXI Resource Manager at Startup checkbox from the Tools» NI-VXI»VXI Options menu. MAX presents a graphical display of your entire test and measurement system to help you configure and check the status of various components, including the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. Complete the following steps to configure the VXI System. © National Instruments 1. Open MAX. 2. Select the VXI system that is controlled by the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller listed under Devices and Interfaces. 2-5 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 2 Installation and Configuration 3. Verify the configuration of your VXI system by right-clicking the device in the configuration tree, and selecting Properties or Hardware Configuration, as shown in Figure 2-1. Figure 2-1. Right-Clicking on a VXI System in MAX 4. Run Resman by either clicking the Run VXI Resource Manager button in the toolbar or right-clicking on the VXI system, as shown in Figure 2-1. If Resman encounters any issues during configuration, it will report errors in Max under the system listing. Note If you change any configuration settings, you will need to run Resman to apply the changes. Note You can also run Resman for all VXI systems at once in MAX by selecting Tools» NI-VXI»VXI Resource Manager. Note If you are using extenders such as MXI-2 to create a multichassis system, you may need to run Resman before configuring some of your devices. 5. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Verify the configuration, as needed, through the interactive control utility, VISAIC (Start»Programs» National Instruments»VISA» VISA Interactive Control), as described in Chapter 3, Developing Your Application. 2-6 ni.com Chapter 2 Installation and Configuration Default Software Settings The following tables list the default software settings in Measurement & Automation Explorer (MAX) for the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. Table 2-1. MAX Device Tab Default Settings Editor Field Default Setting Device class Message-based Number of handlers 1 Table 2-2. MAX Shared Memory Tab Default Settings Editor Field Default Setting Don’t share memory — A24/A32 write posting Enabled Table 2-3. MAX VXI Bus Tab Default Settings Editor Field © National Instruments Default Setting Bus timeout value 500 μs VXI retry generation Enabled Automatic retries Enabled VXI transfer limit 256 A24/A32 write posting Enabled Requester mode Release on Request Request level 3 Operate as fair requester Enabled Bus arbitration mode Prioritized Arbiter timeout Disabled 2-7 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 2 Installation and Configuration Table 2-4. MAX PCI Tab Default Settings Editor Field Default Setting Low-level register access API support Enabled User window size 512 KB DMA setting Enable DMA on this controller Table 2-5. MAX SMB Tab Default Settings Editor Field Default Setting CLK10 50 Ω termination Disabled Invert CLK10 polarity Enabled TRIG IN 50 Ω termination Disabled VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 2-8 ni.com Developing Your Application This chapter discusses the software utilities you can use to start developing applications that use NI-VXI. Be sure to check the release notes for the latest application development notes and changes. Your software features several system development utilities including MAX, Resman, NI I/O Trace, VISA Interactive Control (VISAIC), and optionally VXI Interactive Control (VIC). You can also access online help and a variety of examples to learn how to use NI-VXI for certain tasks. Each component assists you with one of four development steps: configuration, device interaction, programming, and debugging. You can access the utilities, help files, and release notes through the Windows Start menu by opening the National Instruments»VXI or National Instruments»VISA program groups. National Instruments Application Software In addition to the NI-VISA/NI-VXI software, you can use the National Instruments LabVIEW, Measurement Studio, and LabWindows™/CVI™ application programs and instrument drivers to ease your programming task. These standardized programs match the modular virtual instrument capability of VXI and can reduce your VXI/VME software development time. These programs are fully VXIplug&play compliant and feature extensive libraries of VXI instrument drivers written to take full advantage of direct VXI control. LabVIEW, Measurement Studio, and LabWindows/CVI include all the tools needed for instrument control, data acquisition, analysis, and presentation. LabVIEW is an easy-to-use, graphical programming environment you can use to acquire data from thousands of different instruments, including IEEE 488.2 devices, VXI devices, serial devices, PLCs, and plug-in data acquisition boards. After you have acquired raw data, you can convert it into meaningful results using the powerful data analysis routines in LabVIEW. LabVIEW also comes with hundreds of instrument drivers, which dramatically reduce software development time, because you do not need to spend time programming the low-level control of each instrument. © National Instruments 3-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 3 Developing Your Application Measurement Studio allows you to choose from standard environments such as Microsoft Visual Basic, Visual C++, and Visual Studio .NET to create your application, using tools specific for each language. With Measurement Studio, you can write programs quickly and easily and modify them as your needs change. LabWindows/CVI is an interactive ANSI C programming environment designed for building virtual instrument applications. LabWindows/CVI delivers a drag-and-drop editor for building user interfaces, a complete ANSI C environment for building your test program logic, and a collection of automated code generation tools, as well as utilities for building automated test systems, monitoring applications, or laboratory experiments. To use any of these application programs, install them before installing the NI-VISA/NI-VXI software. LabVIEW, Measurement Studio, and LabWindows/CVI integrate the VXI and VISA libraries required to support your NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. You also get hundreds of complete instrument drivers, which are modular, source-code programs that handle the communication with your instrument to speed your application development. NI-VXI, NI-VISA, and Related Terms Before you develop your application, it is important to understand the difference between NI-VXI, NI-VISA, and similar terms. • NI-VXI/NI-VISA CD is the software package that ships with National Instruments VXI and VME controllers. This software CD includes Measurement & Automation Explorer (MAX), NI-VISA, NI I/O Trace, Resource Manager (Resman), VXI device drivers, and other utilities for configuring and controlling your VXI or VME system. • NI-VISA is the native API for communicating with VXI/VME devices. NI-VISA is the National Instruments implementation of the VISA I/O standard, which is a common interface to many types of instruments (such as VXI, GPIB, PXI, Serial, TCP/IP, and so on). NI-VXI is optimized for use through NI-VISA, and NI recommends using NI-VISA to develop all new VXI/VME applications. • The NI-VXI API is an optional development environment that was developed before NI-VISA. Although NI-VXI still supports the NI-VXI API, NI recommends using NI-VISA for all new VXI/VME applications. Refer to the NI-VXI API Notes section for more information regarding the NI-VXI API. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 3-2 ni.com Chapter 3 • Developing Your Application The NI-VXI compatibility layer allows older programs that use the NI-VXI API to communicate with VXI devices through VISA. Using this compatibility layer, older programs can run in NI-VXI 3.0 or later without being rewritten to use the VISA interface. This layer installs with NI-VXI by default. It should be completely transparent and provide a high level of performance; however, there may be some slight changes in behavior for certain applications. Programming for VXI NI-VISA and the NI-VXI API are the two National Instruments programming interfaces for accessing your VXI/VME instruments. With NI-VXI 3.0 or later, NI-VISA is the native API for communicating with a VXI or VME system, and NI recommends using it for all new applications. Older programs that use the NI-VXI API now use the NI-VXI-to-NI-VISA compatibility layer to communicate with the VXI devices. Both NI-VISA and the NI-VXI API include functions for register-level access to VXI instruments and messaging capability to message-based devices. You can also use either interface to service asynchronous events such as triggers, signals, and interrupts, and also assert them. Compatibility with the NI-VXI API is included for legacy applications only— NI recommends that you write all new VXI/VME applications in VISA. The best way to learn NI-VISA programming is by reviewing the example programs your software includes. The examples directory contains working VISA programs that illustrate many different types of applications. You can find these examples in the Windows Start menu under Programs» National Instruments»VISA»Examples. If you are just getting started, you should learn how to access registers with high-level calls and send messages with word-serial functions. The NI-VISA examples for these tasks are HighReg.c and RdWrt.c. Refer to the other examples as you try more advanced techniques. Consult the NI-VISA online help for additional information about these topics. Table 3-1 summarizes the topics the example programs address. All NI-VISA files are found through the Windows Start menu under Programs»National Instruments»VISA»Examples, in the subdirectories listed below. © National Instruments 3-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 3 Developing Your Application Table 3-1. NI-VISA/NI-VXI Examples Coverage NI-VISA Example NI-VXI Example (Optional) Message-Based Access C\General\RdWrt.c VXIws.c High-Level Register Access C\VXI-VME\HighReg.c VXIhigh.c Low-Level Register Access C\VXI-VME\LowReg.c VXIlow.c Interrupt Handling C\VXI-VME\AsyncIntr.c and WaitIntr.c VXIint.c Trigger Handling C\VXI-VME\WaitTrig.c VXItrig.c Note MAX includes configuration options that affect low-level functions and shared memory, as well as trigger mappings and other attributes of your VXI system. Refer to the MAX online help for information regarding these options. Optimizing Large VXIbus Transfers For best performance, keep the following in mind when using viMove() or VXImove(): • Make sure your buffers are 32-bit aligned. • Transfer 32-bit data whenever possible. • Use VXI block access privileges to significantly improve performance to devices that can accept block transfers, and likewise use D64 access privileges for devices that can accept the VME64 64-bit data transfer protocol. • To optimize move performance on virtual memory systems such as the Windows operating system, lock the user buffer in memory yourself so the move operation does not need to lock the buffer. • To optimize move performance on paged memory systems such as the Windows operating system, use a contiguous buffer so the move operation does not need to build a scatter-gather list for the user buffer. Note viMemAlloc() or VXImemAlloc() returns 32-bit aligned, page-locked, continuous buffers that work efficiently with the move operations. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 3-4 ni.com Chapter 3 Developing Your Application NI-VXI API Notes The following notes apply only if you are using the NI-VXI API. National Instruments recommends that all new VXI/VME applications use the NI-VISA API, but you can still develop with the older NI-VXI API for compatibility with legacy code. Compiler Symbols You may need to define certain compiler symbols so that the NI-VXI library can work properly with your program. The required symbol indicates your operating system platform; for example, VXINT designates the application as a Windows 2000/NT/XP/Me/98 application. Note LabWindows/CVI automatically defines the correct symbol. You do not need to define VXINT when using LabWindows/CVI. The additional symbol BINARY_COMPATIBLE is optional. It ensures that the resulting application is binary compatible with other National Instruments VXI controllers using the same operating system. This symbol may cause a slight performance degradation when you use low-level VXIbus access functions on some controllers. You can define these symbols using #define statements in your source code or using the appropriate option in your compiler (typically either –D or /D). If you use #define statements, they must appear in your code before the line that includes the NI-VXI API header nivxi.h. Compatibility Layer Options Although NI-VXI supports multiple VXI controllers through NI-VISA, the NI-VXI API supports only a single controller. To specify which controller the emulation layer should use, run MAX. Select Tools»NI-VXI» VXI Options. Select the VXI system that will support the emulation layer. In NI-VXI 3.0 or later, when you enable for triggers or interrupts, only the local controller is enabled. In the NI-VXI API functions for enabling triggers and interrupts, the controller parameter is ignored. If you need to enable a remote controller for triggers, use the MAX frame resource to map the trigger back to the local controller. Refer to the NI-VISA Help for additional information. The interrupt and trigger routing in the NI-VXI 3.0 or later low-level drivers is somewhat different from the default routing in previous versions of NI-VXI. Therefore, the compatibility layer may behave differently than © National Instruments 3-5 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 3 Developing Your Application the original NI-VXI API with regard to these settings. In particular, if you are receiving triggers on an external controller, you may need to modify the trigger configuration on your extender module using MAX. Consult the manual for your extender module for details. In general, interrupts are routed automatically based on the interrupt configuration the resource manager detects. Whether the changed routing behavior affects your program is application dependent. Because VISA is an instrument-centric API, certain functions from the more controller-centric NI-VXI API do not match perfectly with a VISA counterpart. When an application enables an event with the NI-VXI API compatibility layer, each logical address is enabled for that event separately. For example, if the application enables an interrupt level, VISA will enable the interrupt on each logical address, one at a time, until all the devices are enabled. This means that some interrupts could be lost from devices with higher numbered logical addresses. MAX provides an option for users to pick which logical address is enabled first. Select Tools» NI-VXI»VXI Options. Set Prioritized Signal LA to the logical address of the device that generates the events. This prevents possible loss of events from that device. Device Interaction and Debugging Tools NI I/O Trace and VISAIC are useful utilities for identifying the causes of problems in your application, and are installed by default with your NI-VXI installation. NI I/O Trace NI I/O Trace tracks the calls your application makes to National Instruments drivers, including NI-VISA, NI-VXI, and NI-488. NI I/O Trace highlights functions that return errors, so during development you can quickly spot which functions failed during a program’s execution. NI I/O Trace can log the calls your program makes to these drivers so you can check them for errors at your convenience, or use the NI I/O Trace log as a reference when discussing the problem with National Instruments technical support. Figure 3-1 shows an example of an error returned from a call to viMemAllocEx. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 3-6 ni.com Chapter 3 Developing Your Application Figure 3-1. NI I/O Trace VISA Interactive Control (VISAIC) You can interact with your VXI/VME devices using the VISA Interactive Control (VISAIC) utility. VISAIC allows you to control your VXI/VME devices without using LabVIEW, Measurement Studio, LabWindows/CVI, or another programming language. You can also control your devices in MAX by right-clicking a device name and selecting Open VISA Session. Try the following in VISAIC: In the tree view, navigate using your mouse to the VISA resource for your controller—probably VXI0::0::INSTR, representing the VXI system 0, logical address 0 instrument resource, as shown in Figure 3-2. © National Instruments 3-7 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Chapter 3 Developing Your Application Figure 3-2. Select Your Controller in VISAIC Open the selected resource and navigate to Input/Output and select the In tab. In this tab, you can read registers on your device, such as the VXI device configuration registers. Execute the In operation with Width set to 16-bits and other parameters set to default values. The In Value field shows the I/O operation result, such as 0x8ff6. The Return Data field shows the function status, such as No Error for VI_SUCCESS, as shown in Figure 3-3. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 3-8 ni.com Chapter 3 Developing Your Application Figure 3-3. Successful In Access in the VISAIC Input/Output Tab (This Window May Look Slightly Different for LabVIEW Users) If the data value ends in FF6, you have successfully read the National Instruments manufacturer ID from your VXI/VME controller’s ID register. You may now want to read the configuration registers from other VXI devices in your system by opening the devices in VISAIC. Try reading a register from each device listed in the MAX view of your VXI system. This way, you can verify that your VXI controller can access each device in your VXI system successfully. You can also access VXI and VME devices configured in A16, A24, or A32 space by opening the VXI MEMACC resource, which is VISA’s representation of VXI memory. For more information about VISAIC operations and commands, refer to the online help in the Help menu and the context-sensitive help (such as What’s This?), available by clicking Help and mousing over any panel. VXI Interactive Control (VIC) You can also use VXI Interactive Control Program (VIC) to control your VXI/VME devices and develop and debug VXI application programs. You can launch VISAIC (or VIC) from the Tools menu in MAX or from the VISA or VXI subgroups in Start»Programs»National Instruments. © National Instruments 3-9 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Specifications This appendix lists the system specifications for the following products only: • NI VXI-8360T (198399x-02) • NI VXI-8360LT (152725x-01) Note The model numbers listed above are followed by their specific NI assembly numbers in parentheses. x denotes all letter revisions of the assembly. Ensure the specifications of interest match the NI assembly number that is printed on either the front or back side of the board. For specifications on other MXI-Express x1 products that can connect to the NI VXI-8360T and NI VXI-8360LT, refer to the MXI-Express x1 Series User Manual. © National Instruments A-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix A Specifications NI VXI-8360T (198399x-02) Note These specifications are typical at 25 °C, unless otherwise stated, and are subject to change without notice. Power Requirements Current Voltage Typical (DC) Dynamic +5 V 1.600 A 1.600 A +12 V 0.020 A 0.020 A –5.2 V 0.177 A 0.125 A –2 V 0.060 A 0.125 A Physical Size .........................................................C size, C-1 Dimensions ............................................. 23.3 × 34.0 cm (9.2 × 13.4 in.) Weight ....................................................1.3 kg (46.8 oz) Slot requirements ....................................Single VXI C-size slot Compatibility ..........................................Fully compatible with VXI specification VXI keying class ....................................Class 1 TTL MTBF .....................................................Contact factory VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual A-2 ni.com Appendix A Specifications Front Panel I/O Connectors EXT CLK SMB Connector Output drive ........................................... 50 Ω source terminated output driver Voltage level ................................................... 0.1 to 4.9 V into open circuit (typical) 0.1 to 2.5 V into 50 Ω (typical) Absolute maximum DC current ............. ±50 mA Output coupling...................................... DC TRIG IN SMB Connector Input buffer ............................................ TTL compatible Input coupling ........................................ DC TRIG OUT SMB Connector Output drive ........................................... 50 Ω line driver Voltage level............................................... 2.0 V minimum into 50 Ω (typical) Output coupling...................................... DC 2 1 TRIG IN 2 1 TRIG OUT 2 1 EXT CLK (CLK10) Figure A-1. Front Panel SMB Connectors © National Instruments A-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix A Specifications Table A-1. SMB Connector Pinout Pin Signal Name 1 SIGNALCONDUCTOR Trigger/CLK GND Ground 2 (Shield) Signal Description MXI-Express x1 Connector MXI-Express x1 Connector A1 B1 B9 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual A9 A-4 Pin Number Signal Description A1 PERn0 A2 PERp0 A3 RSVD A4 SB_RTN A5 CREFCLK– A6 CREFCLK+ A7 PWR_RTN A8 CPERST# A9 GND B1 GND B2 RSVD B3 CWAKE# B4 CPRSNT# B5 GND B6 PWR B7 CPWRON B8 PETn0 B9 PETp0 ni.com Appendix A Specifications Two TRIG/CLK PORTs Connector type ....................................... Cabled MXI-Express x41 Maximum trigger bus length.................. 19 m of cables Maximum number of devices on bus..... 62 Environmental Maximum altitude .................................. 2,000 m Pollution Degree .................................... 2 Indoor use only. Operating Environment Ambient temperature range.................... 0 to 55 °C (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-1 and IEC-60068-2-2: meets MIL-PRF-28800F Class 3 low temperature limit and MIL-PRF-28800F Class 2 high temperature limit.) Relative humidity range ......................... 10% to 90% (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-56.) Storage Environment Ambient temperature range.................... –40 to 85 °C (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-1 and IEC-60068-2-2; meets MIL-PRF-28800F Class 3 limits.) Relative humidity range ......................... 5% to 95% (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-56.) EMI ........................................................ FCC Class A verified, EC verified 1 2 Not to be used for MXI-Express communication. Additional devices sharing the bus may function, but is not supported by National Instruments. © National Instruments A-5 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix A Specifications Shock and Vibration Operational shock ...................................30 g peak, half-sine, 11 ms pulse (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-27; meets MIL-PRF-28800F Class 2 limits.) Random vibration Operating .........................................5 to 500 Hz, 0.3 grms Nonoperating ...................................5 to 500 Hz, 2.4 grms (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-64. Nonoperating test profile exceeds the requirements of MIL-PRF-28800F, Class 3.) Safety This product meets the requirements of the following standards of safety for electrical equipment for measurement, control, and laboratory use: • IEC 61010-1, EN 61010-1 • UL 61010-1, CSA 61010-1 Note For UL and other safety certifications, refer to the product label or the Online Product Certification section. Electromagnetic Compatibility This product meets the requirements of the following EMC standards for electrical equipment for measurement, control, and laboratory use: • EN 61326-1 (IEC 61326-1): Class A emissions; Basic immunity • EN 55011 (CISPR 11): Group 1, Class A emissions • AS/NZS CISPR 11: Group 1, Class A emissions • FCC 47 CFR Part 15B: Class A emissions • ICES-001: Class A emissions Note In the United States (per FCC 47 CFR), Class A equipment is intended for use in commercial, light-industrial, and heavy-industrial locations. In Europe, Canada, Australia and New Zealand (per CISPR 11) Class A equipment is intended for use only in heavy-industrial locations. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual A-6 ni.com Appendix A Specifications Note Group 1 equipment (per CISPR 11) is any industrial, scientific, or medical equipment that does not intentionally generates radio frequency energy for the treatment of material or inspection/analysis purposes.. Note For EMC declarations and certifications, and additional information, refer to the Online Product Certification section. CE Compliance This product meets the essential requirements of applicable European Directives as follows: • 2006/95/EC; Low-Voltage Directive (safety) • 2004/108/EC; Electromagnetic Compatibility Directive (EMC) Online Product Certification To obtain product certifications and the Declaration of Conformity (DoC) for this product, visit ni.com/certification, search by model number or product line, and click the appropriate link in the Certification column. Environmental Management NI is committed to designing and manufacturing products in an environmentally responsible manner. NI recognizes that eliminating certain hazardous substances from our products is beneficial to the environment and to NI customers. For additional environmental information, refer to the NI and the Environment Web page at ni.com/environment. This page contains the environmental regulations and directives with which NI complies, as well as other environmental information not included in this document. © National Instruments A-7 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix A Specifications Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) EU Customers At the end of the product life cycle, all products must be sent to a WEEE recycling center. For more information about WEEE recycling centers, National Instruments WEEE initiatives, and compliance with WEEE Directive 2002/96/EC on Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment, visit ni.com/environment/weee. ⬉ᄤֵᙃѻક∵ᶧࠊㅵ⧚ࡲ⊩ ˄Ё RoHS˅ Ёᅶ᠋ National Instruments ヺড়Ё⬉ᄤֵᙃѻકЁ䰤ࠊՓ⫼ᶤѯ᳝ᆇ⠽䋼ᣛҸ (RoHS)DŽ ݇Ѣ National Instruments Ё RoHS ড়㾘ᗻֵᙃˈ䇋ⱏᔩ ni.com/environment/rohs_chinaDŽ (For information about China RoHS compliance, go to ni.com/environment/rohs_china.) Cleaning If you need to clean the module, use a soft, nonmetallic brush. Make sure that the module is completely dry and free from contaminants before returning it to service. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual A-8 ni.com Appendix A Specifications NI VXI-8360LT (152725x-01) Note These specifications are typical at 25 °C, unless otherwise stated, and are subject to change without notice. Power Requirements 1 Voltage Current Typical (DC) +5 V 1.750 A1 +12 V 0.020 A –5.2 V 0.177 A –2 V 0.060 A An additional 0.079 A may be drawn when a combined 100 mA is sourced from the 3.3 V pins of the trigger bus port connectors. Physical Size......................................................... C size, C-1 Dimensions............................................. 23.3 × 34.0 cm (9.2 × 13.4 in.) Weight.................................................... 1.3 kg (47.2 oz) Slot requirements ................................... Single VXI C-size slot Compatibility ......................................... Fully compatible with VXI specification VXI keying class.................................... Class 1 TTL MTBF..................................................... 322,638 hours © National Instruments A-9 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix A Specifications Front Panel I/O Connectors EXT CLK SMB Connector Output drive ............................................50 Ω source terminated output driver Voltage level....................................................0.1 to 4.9 V into open circuit (typical) 0.1 to 2.5 V into 50 Ω (typical) Absolute maximum DC current..............±50 mA Output coupling ......................................DC TRIG IN SMB Connector Input buffer .............................................TTL compatible Input coupling.........................................DC TRIG OUT SMB Connector Output drive ............................................50 Ω line driver Voltage level................................................2.0 V minimum into 50 Ω (typical) Output coupling ......................................DC 2 1 TRIG IN 2 1 TRIG OUT 2 1 EXT CLK (CLK10) Figure A-2. Front Panel SMB Connectors VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual A-10 ni.com Appendix A Specifications Table A-2. SMB Connector Pinout Pin 1 2 (Shield) Signal Name Signal Description SIGNALCONDUCTOR Trigger/CLK GND Ground MXI-Express x1 Connector MXI-Express x1 Connector A1 B1 B9 © National Instruments A9 A-11 Pin Number Signal Description A1 PERn0 A2 PERp0 A3 RSVD A4 SB_RTN A5 CREFCLK– A6 CREFCLK+ A7 PWR_RTN A8 CPERST# A9 GND B1 GND B2 RSVD B3 CWAKE# B4 CPRSNT# B5 GND B6 PWR B7 CPWRON B8 PETn0 B9 PETp0 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix A Specifications Two Trigger Bus Ports Physical interface......................................TIA/EIA899 M-LVDS compatible Bus transceiver...............................................Texas Instruments SN65MLVD080 Maximum trigger bus length ..................20 m of cables Maximum number of devices on bus .....61 1 Additional devices sharing the bus may function, but is not supported by National Instruments. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual A-12 ni.com Appendix A Trigger Bus Port 13 25 14 1 Specifications Pin Number Signal Description 1 +3.3 V 2 +3.3 V Return 3 LXI1p 4 LXI1n 5 GND 6 LXI3p 7 LXI3n 8 GND 9 LXI5p 10 LXI5n 11 RSVD 12 LXI7p 13 LXI7n 14 LXI0p 15 LXI0n 16 RSVD 17 LXI2p 18 LXI2n 19 GND 20 LXI4p 21 LXI4n 22 GND 23 LXI6p 24 LXI6n 25 RSVD Environmental Maximum altitude .................................. 2,000 m Pollution Degree .................................... 2 Indoor use only. © National Instruments A-13 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix A Specifications Operating Environment Ambient temperature range ....................0 to 55 °C (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-1 and IEC-60068-2-2: meets MIL-PRF-28800F Class 3 low temperature limit and MIL-PRF-28800F Class 2 high temperature limit.) Relative humidity range..........................10% to 90% (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-56.) Storage Environment Ambient temperature range ....................–40 to 85 °C (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-1 and IEC-60068-2-2; meets MIL-PRF-28800F Class 3 limits.) Relative humidity range..........................5% to 95% (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-56.) EMI .........................................................FCC Class A verified, EC verified Shock and Vibration Operational shock ...................................30 g peak, half-sine, 11 ms pulse (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-27; meets MIL-PRF-28800F Class 2 limits.) Random vibration Operating .........................................5 to 500 Hz, 0.3 grms Nonoperating ...................................5 to 500 Hz, 2.4 grms (Tested in accordance with IEC-60068-2-64. Nonoperating test profile exceeds the requirements of MIL-PRF-28800F, Class 3.) VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual A-14 ni.com Appendix A Specifications Safety This product meets the requirements of the following standards of safety for electrical equipment for measurement, control, and laboratory use: • IEC 61010-1, EN 61010-1 • UL 61010-1, CSA 61010-1 Note For UL and other safety certifications, refer to the product label or the Online Product Certification section. Electromagnetic Compatibility This product meets the requirements of the following EMC standards for electrical equipment for measurement, control, and laboratory use: • EN 61326-1 (IEC 61326-1): Class A emissions; Basic immunity • EN 55011 (CISPR 11): Group 1, Class A emissions • AS/NZS CISPR 11: Group 1, Class A emissions • FCC 47 CFR Part 15B: Class A emissions • ICES-001: Class A emissions Note In the United States (per FCC 47 CFR), Class A equipment is intended for use in commercial, light-industrial, and heavy-industrial locations. In Europe, Canada, Australia and New Zealand (per CISPR 11) Class A equipment is intended for use only in heavy-industrial locations. Note Group 1 equipment (per CISPR 11) is any industrial, scientific, or medical equipment that does not intentionally generates radio frequency energy for the treatment of material or inspection/analysis purposes.. Note For EMC declarations and certifications, and additional information, refer to the Online Product Certification section. © National Instruments A-15 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix A Specifications CE Compliance This product meets the essential requirements of applicable European Directives as follows: • 2006/95/EC; Low-Voltage Directive (safety) • 2004/108/EC; Electromagnetic Compatibility Directive (EMC) Online Product Certification To obtain product certifications and the Declaration of Conformity (DoC) for this product, visit ni.com/certification, search by model number or product line, and click the appropriate link in the Certification column. Environmental Management NI is committed to designing and manufacturing products in an environmentally responsible manner. NI recognizes that eliminating certain hazardous substances from our products is beneficial to the environment and to NI customers. For additional environmental information, refer to the NI and the Environment Web page at ni.com/environment. This page contains the environmental regulations and directives with which NI complies, as well as other environmental information not included in this document. Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) EU Customers At the end of the product life cycle, all products must be sent to a WEEE recycling center. For more information about WEEE recycling centers, National Instruments WEEE initiatives, and compliance with WEEE Directive 2002/96/EC on Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment, visit ni.com/environment/weee. ⬉ᄤֵᙃѻક∵ᶧࠊㅵ⧚ࡲ⊩ ˄Ё RoHS˅ Ёᅶ᠋ National Instruments ヺড়Ё⬉ᄤֵᙃѻકЁ䰤ࠊՓ⫼ᶤѯ᳝ᆇ⠽䋼ᣛҸ (RoHS)DŽ ݇Ѣ National Instruments Ё RoHS ড়㾘ᗻֵᙃˈ䇋ⱏᔩ ni.com/environment/rohs_chinaDŽ (For information about China RoHS compliance, go to ni.com/environment/rohs_china.) Cleaning If you need to clean the module, use a soft, nonmetallic brush. Make sure that the module is completely dry and free from contaminants before returning it to service. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual A-16 ni.com Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings This appendix describes the alternate hardware configuration settings for the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. The board is set at the factory for the most commonly used configuration. This information is intended for more advanced users. Do not attempt to reconfigure any jumpers unless you are familiar with its purpose. The following hardware configuration settings are user configurable. • Slot 0 detection • VXIbus CLK10 routing • SMB Trigger I/O • Backplane trigger I/O For the jumper locations and default settings, see Figure B-1, Default Jumper Settings. Note To gain access to the jumpers, remove the side panel cover that is fastened with screws. © National Instruments B-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix B Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings Default Jumper Settings W2—SMB CLK10 DIR 1-2—IN (DEFAULT) 2-3—OUT W3—EXT. SOURCE SELECT 1-2—SMB (DEFAULT) 2-3—TRIGGER CARD W4—CLK10 SOURCE SELECT 1-2—INTERNAL OSC (DEFAULT) 2-3—EXTERNAL SOURCE W7—TRIG CARD CLK10 DIR 1-2—OUT 2-3—IN (DEFAULT) W7 1 2 W5—MITE CONFIGURATION 1-2—FACTORY 2-3—USER (DEFAULT) W2 W3 W4 W5 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 2 4 6 1 3 5 J2 J2—SLOT 0 DETECT 1-2—NON-SLOT 0 3-4—AUTO DETECT (DEFAULT) 5-6—SLOT 0 1 2 3 W8 W8—MITE SELF CONFIG 1-2—DISABLE 2-3—ENABLE (DEFAULT) Figure B-1. VXI-MXI-Express Factory Default Jumper Settings VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual B-2 ni.com Appendix B Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings Slot 0 Detection The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller is configured at the factory to automatically detect if it is installed in Slot 0 of a VXI mainframe. With automatic System Controller slot detection the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller can be installed in any VXIbus slot. The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller can be manually configured for either System Controller or Non-System Controller operation. Use the three position jumper J2 as shown in Figure B-2 to select between automatic detection, System Controller, or Non-System Controller. 2 4 6 J2 1 3 5 a. Non-Slot 0/ Non-System Controller 2 4 6 2 4 6 J2 J2 1 3 5 1 3 5 b. Auto Detect (Default) c. Slot 0/ System Controller Figure B-2. Slot 0 Detection through the J2 Jumper Caution Do not install a device configured as the System Controller in any slot other than Slot 0. When installing into a slot other than Slot 0, first reconfigure it as either a Non-System Controller or for automatic detection. Failing to do so may result in damage to the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller and/or the backplane. When the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller is installed in Slot 0 of a VXI system it becomes the VXIbus System Controller. As the System Controller the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller has VXIbus Data Transfer Arbiter circuitry that accepts bus requests on all four VXIbus request levels, prioritizes the requests, and grants the bus to the highest priority requester. As the VXIbus System Controller the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller also drives the 16 MHz VXIbus system clock via an onboard 16 MHz oscillator. As required by the specification, when installed in Slot 0, the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller drives CLK10, a differential ECL output, to the VXIbus backplane. When the system is not installed in Slot 0 it will only receive the CLK10 signal. © National Instruments B-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix B Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings VXIbus CLK10 Routing When the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller is installed in Slot 0 of your mainframe, it supplies the VXIbus CLK10 signal. Three different sources for CLK10 are available with the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller: • The internal 10 MHz ±100 ppm CLK10 oscillator. This is the default CLK10 source. • The front panel EXT CLK SMB connector. When configured as an input the front panel SMB allows an external source to be used as the source for the VXIbus CLK10 signal. • (NI VXI-8360T Only) The front panel TRIG/CLK PORT A(B). CLK10 can be routed into the NI VXI-8360T from another NI VXI-8360T through the TRIG/CLK PORT A(B) on the front panel. Onboard jumpers are used to set this configuration. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual B-4 ni.com © National Instruments CLK10 Routing Options NI VXI-8360T Only External CLK 10 Source Select W7 To/From TRG/CLK PORT CLK 10 Source Select Trig Card CLK 10 Dir W3 External To/From Backplane B-5 To/From SMB W2 SMB CLK Dir Internal Figure B-3. CLK10 Routing Options Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual 10 MHz Oscillator ±100 ppm Appendix B W4 Product CLK10 Source EXT CLK Front Panel SMB W2 W3 W4 CLK10 Out Out In X Internal Off In In X Internal CLK10 Out Out Out X Internal Off In Out X Internal CLK10 Out Out X SMB External Off In X SMB External Input for CLK10 Out In Trigger Card External Out Out Trigger Card External In X Trigger Card External Off NI VXI-8360T/LT NI VXI-8360T Internal Oscillator CLK10 Out NI VXI-8360T/LT NI VXI-8360T EXT CLK SMB Input for CLK10 NI VXI-8360T/LT NI VXI-8360T Off Trigger Port NI VXI-8360T B-6 W7 NI VXI-8360T CLK10 Out Not recommended. Undefined operation. Table B-2. NI VXI-8360T/LT Non Slot O CLK10 Routing Options and Jumper Configurations Product CLK10 Source NI VXI-8360T/LT NI VXI-8360T/LT NI VXI-8360T NI VXI-8360T Backplane (from Slot 0 controller) EXT CLK Front Panel SMB TRG/CLK Ports W7 W2 W3 W4 CLK10 Out Off In Out X X Off Off In In X X CLK10 Out CLK10 Out Out Out X X Off CLK10 Out Out In X X Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings NI VXI-8360T TRG/CLK Ports Appendix B VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Table B-1. NI VXI-8360T/LT Slot O CLK10 Routing Options and Jumper Configurations ni.com Appendix B Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings Inverting CLK10 If the front panel SMB connector EXT CLK is configured as an output this software setting provides the capability to invert the clock output. This setting can be found in the hardware configuration panels in MAX as shown in Figure B-4. Figure B-4. Inverting the CLK10 Signal through MAX CLK10 Termination If the front panel SMB connector EXT CLK is configured as an input this software setting can enable 50 Ω parallel termination. This setting can be found in the hardware configuration panels in MAX, as shown in Figure B-4. Front Panel/SMB Trigger Input Termination Optional software enabled 50 Ω parallel termination is available for the front panel trigger input. This setting can be found in the hardware configuration panels in MAX, as shown in Figure B-4. Note Parallel termination is not necessary when the signal is driven by a 50 Ω source, such as a NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. © National Instruments B-7 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix B Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings Power-On Self Configuration The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller has an onboard EEPROM, which stores default register values for the VXI circuitry. These values are loaded when you power up the computer. The values read from the EEPROM program the PCI interface and the VXIbus registers so that the VXI interface is ready to respond to Resource Manager accesses within the required 5 seconds of SYSRST# deasserting. You can disable this power-on self-configuration (POSC) circuit by changing switch W8. Although this makes the VXI circuitry unusable, it is sometimes helpful in debugging address and interrupt conflicts with add-in boards. In general, however, you should leave W8 in its factory-default setting. Figure B-5 shows the possible configurations for W8. 1 2 3 1 2 3 W8 W8 a. Enable (default) b. Disable Figure B-5. Power-on Self Configuration Status VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual B-8 ni.com Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360T The NI VXI-8360T allows you to extend the 8 VXI backplane triggers and CLK10 through convenient front panel connectors. Each trigger and the CLK are independently configurable as either inputs to the frame or outputs from the frame. The wired VXI backplane trigger and CLK10 bus is connected in a daisy chain topology and can support up to 6 devices with a total of 19 m of cables. Cautions The wired VXI backplane trigger and CLK10 bus uses MXI-Express x4 cables and connectors, however these are not MXI-Express x4 ports. Do not connect the trigger ports to a MXI-Express x4 or PCI Express x4 device. The trigger bus may be able to support more devices and/or greater cable lengths, but these configurations have not been validated by National Instruments and are not currently supported. Connecting the Trigger Port Cables When connecting the cables between two devices on the wired VXI backplane trigger and CLK10 bus, always ensure you connect TRIG/CLK PORT A of one device to TRIG/CLK PORT B of the second device, or TRIG/CLK PORT B of one device to TRIG/CLK PORT A of the second device, as shown in Figure C-1. If the cables are not connected correctly, the Cable Status LED will blink red, and the trigger drivers in that system will be disabled. Note Trigger bus cables may be removed and inserted while power is on. End of bus termination is also required for proper operation. The VXI-8360T automatically detects its position on the wired VXI backplane trigger and CLK10 bus and it will enable its termination if it detects it is at the end of the bus © National Instruments C-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix C Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360T 1 6 5 4 2 To host controller 3 1 2 3 TRIG/CLK PORT A TRIG/CLK PORT B NI VXI-8360T Controller in Slot 0 4 5 6 MXI-Express x1 cable Trigger Cable VXI Mainframe Figure C-1. NI VXI-8360T Trigger Cabling Software Configuration Triggers are mapped into and out of your NI VXI-8360T through software using the following steps. 1. Open MAX. 2. Find your device under Devices and Interfaces. 3. Right click on your device and select Properties. 4. Click on the Signal Mappings Tab. 5. From each TTL Trigger select Into the Frame, Out of the Frame, or None. 6. Click OK and re-run the Resman for the changes to take effect. Note Do not map the same trigger out of the frame on more than one device on the trigger bus. This will cause the bus to be driven by more than one device. Protection circuitry prevents this from causing physical damage, however your setup will not function properly. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual C-2 ni.com Appendix C Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360T Configuring the Wired Trigger and Clock Bus Each of the 8 physical trigger channels is independently configurable and designed to be used in a point-to-multipoint topology where one device acts as the trigger driver and the remaining devices are listeners. To map a trigger from the VXI backplane to multiple chassis, configure the trigger to be mapped as Out of the Frame in MAX. This configures the trigger as a driver. The remaining devices on the wired VXI backplane trigger and CLK10 bus need to be configured as listeners by configuring their respective triggers as In to the Frame. To map CLK10 Out of the Frame set jumper W7 to connect pins 1-2. To map CLK10 In to the Frame set jumper W7 to connect pins 2-3. Refer to Appendix B, Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings, for more information about setting the hardware jumper. © National Instruments C-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360LT The NI VXI-8360LT allows you to extend the 8 TTL backplane triggers over a wired VXI backplane trigger bus through convenient front panel connectors. The wired VXI backplane trigger bus allows a simple way to have an event in one system trigger events in other VXI systems. The wired trigger bus physical interface is based off of the TIA/EIA-899 Multi-Point Low Voltage Differential Signaling (M-LVDS) standard. The physical interface allows the construction of large multi-drop systems and reliable triggering over long distance. Topologies up to 6 devices over 20 m of cable are supported. The wired VXI backplane trigger bus may be capable of supporting more devices over greater cable lengths but, these configurations have not been validated by National Instruments. The 8 triggers on the wired VXI backplane trigger bus correspond to the 8 TTL triggers on the VXI backplane (e.g., TTLTRG0* on the VXI backplane corresponds to Trigger Number 0 on the wired VXI backplane trigger bus). Each of the 8 physical trigger channels are independently configurable and can be used in one of two topologies: point-to-multipoint or multipoint-to-multipoint. Driven Mode Operation This is a point-to-multipoint configuration where one device on the trigger channel is configured as a driver and the remaining devices are configured as listeners. The device configured as the driver sets the state of the trigger channel and the other devices receive that state. If two or more devices are configured to drive the trigger channel the behavior of the bus is undefined. Wired-OR Mode Operation This is a multipoint-to-multipoint topology where multiple devices can assert a trigger channel to multiple listeners. For this topology, the trigger channel behaves in a wired-OR manner with all drivers tri-stated. A bias device is used to pull the trigger to a known, unasserted state and then the triggering device(s) drive(s) the bus to its asserted state. © National Instruments D-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix D Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360LT LXI Compatibility The physical and electrical interface of the wired VXI backplane trigger bus is compatible with the LXI wired trigger bus. The physical interface uses the standardized 25-pin micro-D type connector. The electrical interface uses the LXI-wired Trigger Bus cable and Terminator 2.0 specified Texas Instruments (SN65MLVD080) bus transceiver. The LXI wired trigger bus has a much broader triggering definition and can be considered as a superset of the VXI-8360LT’s wired VXI backplane trigger bus. The two trigger domains are compatible with a few constraints: 1. All LXI devices that share the wired VXI backplane trigger bus must be configured for active high assertion of triggers whether in Driven mode or Wired-OR mode. 2. The LXI specification states that each trigger channel shall be individually configurable as an input or output (or both). The NI VXI driver software allows a trigger be mapped In to the Frame (input) or Out of the Frame (output) but not both. This constrains a single trigger to be either a driver or a receiver. Connecting the Trigger Port Cables The physical pinout for the two trigger ports is identical so there are no special cable connection requirements between the ports. Note Trigger bus cables may be removed and inserted while power is on. End of bus termination is required for proper operation. Use two 50 Ω resistors in series across each trigger differential pair with the center tap decoupled to ground with a capacitor. Commercially available terminators are recommended. Configuring the Wired Trigger Bus The 8 triggers in the wired VXI backplane trigger bus are configured via hardware and software. Hardware switches located on the top edge of the NI VXI-8360LT control the operating mode of the trigger. The factory default switch settings for all 8 triggers are displayed in Figure D-1, Trigger Configuration Sticker (Located on the Side of the NI VXI-8360LT). VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual D-2 ni.com Appendix D Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360LT TR IG GER CO NFIGURATIO N 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 Switches shown in Receiver / Wired-Or position. 0123 4567 Trigger Number SOFTWARE HARDWARE Trigger set to: Receiver w/ Bias Device Into the frame Receiver Trigger set to: Driven Out of the frame Wired-Or Figure D-1. Trigger Configuration Sticker (Located on the Side of the NI VXI-8360LT) Software controls whether the trigger is routed In to the Frame or Out of the Frame. Triggers are mapped into and out of your NI VXI-8360LT though software using the following steps. © National Instruments 1. Open MAX. 2. Find your device under Devices and Interfaces. 3. Right click on your device and select Properties. 4. Click on the Signal Mappings Tab. 5. For each TTL Trigger select Into the Frame, Out of the Frame, or None. 6. Click OK and re-run the Resman for the changes to take effect. D-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix D Using the Trigger Ports on the NI VXI-8360LT For Driven Mode Triggers Complete the following steps to map a trigger from the VXI backplane to the wired VXI backplane trigger bus: Driving Device 1. In MAX configure the trigger to be mapped as Out of the Frame. 2. Set the trigger’s hardware switch to Driven. Listening Device 1. In MAX configure the respective trigger lines as Into the Frame. 2. Set the trigger’s hardware switch to Receiver. Note Do not select Receiver w/Bias Device in Driven mode. Doing so will produce undefined results. For Wired-Or Mode Triggers Complete the following steps to map a trigger from the VXI backplane to the wired VXI backplane trigger bus: Driving Device 1. In MAX configure the trigger to be mapped as Out of the Frame. 2. Set the trigger’s hardware switch to configure it as a Wired-OR. Listening Device 1. In MAX configure the trigger to be mapped as In to Frame. 2. Set the trigger’s hardware switch to select the type of receiver needed. If the device is going to bias the wired VXI backplane trigger bus, set the trigger’s hardware switch for Receiver w/BIAS Device. 3. If the device is going to be a receiver, set the trigger hardware switch to Receiver. Note Ensure only one receiving device is configured as the Receiver w/BIAS Device. Having more than one bias device on a trigger channel will produce undefined results. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual D-4 ni.com How to Fix an Invalid EEPROM Configuration The NI VXI-8360T/LT controller uses an EEPROM to store configuration settings required at power on. Certain EEPROM configurations could cause your computer to lock up while booting. Generally, the size and location of memory windows will cause this issue. Many PCI-based computers will not boot if a board in the system is requesting more memory space than the computer can allocate. If you encounter this situation you should reduce the size of the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller user memory window. The EEPROM can also become corrupt if the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller loses power while software is updating the EEPROM. To aid in EEPROM recovery the EEPROM is divided into two halves—one half is factory configured and the other half is user configurable. By default the VXI-MXI-Express boots from the user half of the EEPROM. Should the EEPROM become corrupt complete the following steps to restore the EEPROM to its factory settings: 1. Power off your computer. Caution To protect both yourself and the mainframe from electrical hazards, the mainframe should remain off until you finish changing the settings on the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. 2. Change jumper W5 to the position shown in Figure E-1 to restore the factory configuration. Refer to Figure B-1, VXI-MXI-Express Factory Default Jumper Settings, of Appendix B, Advanced Hardware Configuration Settings, for jumper locations. Figure E-1 shows the configuration settings for EEPROM operation. Use jumper W5 to control whether the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller boots off the factory-configured EEPROM settings or the user-modified settings. © National Instruments E-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix E How to Fix an Invalid EEPROM Configuration W5 1 2 3 W5 1 2 3 a. Boot from User Configuration (Default) b. Boot from Write Protected Factory Configuration Figure E-1. EEPROM Configuration 3. Power on the computer. The computer should boot this time because the factory-default configuration is being used to initialize the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. 4. Right-click on the VXI system in MAX and select the Hardware Configuration utility. 5. A dialog box will appear explaining that the Factory Override switch has been set, and the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller is running using factory default settings. Click OK to continue. 6. In the General tab under Quick Configuration select Default Configuration. 7. Click Yes in the pop up box if you are sure you want to restore the factory defaults. 8. Click OK in the hardware configuration panel to save the settings. 9. After saving the configuration, exit Windows and power off the computer. 10. Change jumper W5 back to the default position, as shown in Figure E-1. 11. Power on the computer. If the computer does not boot with this configuration, you will need to repeat these steps, modifying your configuration until a final configuration is reached. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual E-2 ni.com VMEbus Capability Codes Table F-1. VMEbus Capability Codes Capability Code Description A32, A24, A16 (master) VMEbus master A32, A24, and A16 addressing A32, A24, A16 (slave) VMEbus slave A32, A24, and A16 addressing D32, D16, D08(EO) (master) VMEbus master D32, D16, and D08 data sizes D32, D16, D08(EO) (slave) VMEbus slave D32, D16, and D08 data sizes BLT, MBLT (master) VMEbus master block and D64 transfers BLT, MBLT (slave) VMEbus slave block and D64 transfers RMW (master) VMEbus master read/modify/write transfers RMW (slave) VMEbus slave read/modify/write transfers RETRY (master) VMEbus master retry support RETRY (slave) VMEbus slave retry support FSD First slot detector SCON VMEbus System Controller PRI, RRS Prioritized or Round Robin Select arbiter ROR, FAIR Release on Request and FAIR bus requester IH(7–1) Interrupt handler for levels 7–1 I(7–1) Interrupt requester for levels 7–1 D32, D16, D08(O) (Interrupt Handler) VMEbus D32, D16, D08(O) interrupt handler D32, D16, D08(O) (Interrupter) VMEbus D32, D16, D08(O) interrupter ROAK, RORA Release on Acknowledge or Register Access interrupter BTO(x) VMEbus bus timer (programmable limit) © National Instruments F-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Common Questions What is the maximum length of the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller MXI-Express x1 copper cable? The maximum length for the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller MXI-Express x1 copper cable is 7 m. National Instruments offers 1 m, 3 m, and 7 m copper cables. I need more devices than can fit in one chassis. How can I expand my NI VXI-8360T/LT controller system? Many applications can be easily extended to multiple chassis by adding additional NI VXI-8360T/LT controllers to the host computer and using the trigger and clock sharing features of the NI VXI-8360T to synchronize events between chassis. In the event that VXI or VME bus mastering devices must communicate to devices in other chassis directly, National Instruments recommends that you use a VXI-MXI-2 interface, which implements the VXI-6 specification for mainframe extension. This extends full VXI functionality across multiple mainframes, including a common device address space, interframe triggering, interrupts, and bus mastering. Place a VXI-MXI-2 in the same mainframe with the Slot 0 NI VXI-8360T/LT controller, and another VXI-MXI-2 in Slot 0 of the next mainframe. You can then fill up this mainframe with additional devices. Refer to the MXI-2 Configuration Reference Manual available at ni.com for additional configuration instructions. How can I determine the serial number of the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller? This information is displayed in the title bar of the Hardware Configuration window in MAX. The serial number can also be found on the sticker applied to the side of the controller. © National Instruments G-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix G Common Questions What is Resman? Resman is the utility that performs the duties of a VXI Resource Manager as discussed in the VXIbus specification. When do I need to run Resman? Run Resman whenever you need to configure your VXI instruments (for example, when you power cycle either the host computer or the chassis). When you set a National Instruments controller to Logical Address 0, you will at some point need to run Resman to configure your VXI instruments. If your controller uses a different (nonzero) logical address and is a message-based device, you need to start Resman before running it on the Logical Address 0 computer. Which NI-VXI utility program must I use to configure the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller? Use Measurement & Automation Explorer (MAX) to configure the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller. MAX is in the National Instruments program group folder, and a shortcut is on your desktop. How do I handle VME devices? Although there is no way to automatically detect VME devices in a system, you can add them easily through the Add Device Wizard in MAX. Through this procedure, you can reserve resources for each of your VME devices and configure MAX to show VME devices on the screen with all your other devices. Which NI-VXI utility program must I use to perform startup Resource Manager operations? Use the Resman program to perform startup Resource Manager operations in Start»Programs»National Instruments»VXI. Resman uses the settings configured in MAX. It initializes your VXI/VMEbus system and makes the information it collects accessible through MAX. You can also run Resource Manager operations from MAX. Through MAX, you can also configure Resman to run automatically at Windows startup. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual G-2 ni.com Appendix G Common Questions What can I do to make sure that my system is up and running? The fastest method for testing the system is to run Resman. This program attempts to access memory in the upper A16 address space of each device in the system. If Resman does not report any problems, the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller communication system is operational. To test individual devices, you can use the VIC or VISAIC program to interactively issue NI-VXI functions or NI-VISA operations, respectively. You can use viIn() and viOut() with the NI-VISA API (or VXIin() or VXIinReg() and VXIout() or VXIoutReg() with the NI-VXI API) to test register-based devices by programming their registers. If you have any message-based devices, you can send and receive messages with the viRead() and viWrite() operations in the NI-VISA API (or WSrd() and WSwrt() functions in the NI-VXI API). Notice that VXIinReg() and VXIoutReg() are for VXI devices only, but you can use VXIin() and VXIout() for both VXI and VME. Finally, if you are using LabVIEW or LabWindows/CVI and you have instrument drivers for the devices in your chassis, you can use the interactive features of these programs to quickly test the functionality of the devices. What is the accuracy of the CLK10 signal? The CLK10 generated by the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller is ±100 ppm per the VXI specification. To use a more accurate reference for CLK10, connect the signal to the controller through the EXT CLK SMB input on the front panel. © National Instruments G-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Technical Support and Professional Services Log in to your National Instruments ni.com User Profile to get personalized access to your services. Visit the following sections of ni.com for technical support and professional services: • Support—Technical support at ni.com/support includes the following resources: – Self-Help Technical Resources—For answers and solutions, visit ni.com/support for software drivers and updates, a searchable KnowledgeBase, product manuals, step-by-step troubleshooting wizards, thousands of example programs, tutorials, application notes, instrument drivers, and so on. Registered users also receive access to the NI Discussion Forums at ni.com/forums. NI Applications Engineers make sure every question submitted online receives an answer. – Standard Service Program Membership—This program entitles members to direct access to NI Applications Engineers via phone and email for one-to-one technical support, as well as exclusive access to eLearning training modules at ni.com/ elearning. All customers automatically receive a one-year membership in the Standard Service Program (SSP) with the purchase of most software products and bundles including NI Developer Suite. NI also offers flexible extended contract options that guarantee your SSP benefits are available without interruption for as long as you need them. Visit ni.com/ssp for more information. For information about other technical support options in your area, visit ni.com/services, or contact your local office at ni.com/contact. © National Instruments • Training and Certification—Visit ni.com/training for training and certification program information. You can also register for instructor-led, hands-on courses at locations around the world. • System Integration—If you have time constraints, limited in-house technical resources, or other project challenges, National Instruments H-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Appendix H Technical Support and Professional Services Alliance Partner members can help. To learn more, call your local NI office or visit ni.com/alliance. • Declaration of Conformity (DoC)—A DoC is our claim of compliance with the Council of the European Communities using the manufacturer’s declaration of conformity. This system affords the user protection for electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and product safety. You can obtain the DoC for your product by visiting ni.com/certification. • Calibration Certificate—If your product supports calibration, you can obtain the calibration certificate for your product at ni.com/calibration. You also can visit the Worldwide Offices section of ni.com/niglobal to access the branch office Web sites, which provide up-to-date contact information, support phone numbers, email addresses, and current events. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual H-2 ni.com Glossary Symbol Prefix Value p pico 10 –12 n nano 10 –9 μ micro 10 – 6 m milli 10 –3 k kilo 10 3 M mega 10 6 G giga 10 9 T tera 10 12 Symbols ° degrees Ω ohms A A amperes address Character code that identifies a specific location (or series of locations) in memory. In VISA, it identifies a resource. address modifier One of six signals in the VMEbus specification used by VMEbus masters to indicate the address space in which a data transfer is to take place. address space A set of 2n memory locations differentiated from other such sets in VXI/VMEbus systems by six addressing lines known as address modifiers. n is the number of address lines required to uniquely specify a byte location in a given space. Valid numbers for n are 16, 24, 32, and 64. In VME/VXI, because there are six address modifiers, there are 64 possible address spaces. ANSI American National Standards Institute © National Instruments Glossary-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary API Application Programming Interface—the direct interface that an end user sees when creating an application. arbitration A process in which a potential bus master gains control over a particular bus. B B Byte—eight related bits of data, an 8-bit binary number. Also used to denote the amount of memory required to store one byte of data. backplane An assembly, typically a printed circuit board, with 96-pin connectors and signal paths that bus the connector pins. A C-size VXIbus system will have two sets of bused connectors called J1 and J2. A D-size VXIbus system will have three sets of bused connectors called J1, J2, and J3. BERR* bus error signal BIOS Basic Input/Output System. BIOS functions are the fundamental level of any PC or compatible computer. BIOS functions embody the basic operations needed for successful use of the computer’s hardware resources. block-mode transfer An uninterrupted transfer of data elements in which the master sources only the first address at the beginning of the cycle. The slave is then responsible for incrementing the address on subsequent transfers so that the next element is transferred to or from the proper storage location. A VME data transfer may have no more than 256 elements. bus The group of conductors that interconnect individual circuitry in a computer. Typically, a bus is the expansion vehicle to which I/O or other devices are connected. Examples of buses include the ISA bus, PCI bus, VXI bus, and VME bus. bus error An error that signals failed access to an address. Bus errors occur with low-level accesses to memory and usually involve hardware with bus mapping capabilities. For example, nonexistent memory, a nonexistent register, or an incorrect device access can cause a bus error. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary-2 ni.com Glossary bus master A device that is capable of requesting the Data Transfer Bus (DTB) for the purpose of accessing a slave device. byte order How bytes are arranged within a word or how words are arranged within a longword. Motorola ordering stores the most significant byte (MSB) or word first, followed by the least significant byte (LSB) or word. Intel ordering stores the LSB or word first, followed by the MSB or word. C C Celsius CLK10 A 10 MHz, ±100 ppm, individually buffered (to each module slot), differential ECL system clock that is sourced from Slot 0 of a VXIbus mainframe and distributed to Slots 1 through 12 on P2. It is distributed to each slot as a single-source, single-destination signal with a matched delay of under 8 ns. Commander A message-based device that is also a bus master and can control one or more Servants. configuration registers A set of registers through which the system can identify a module device type, model, manufacturer, address space, and memory requirements. To support automatic system and memory configuration, the VXI specification requires that all VXIbus devices have a set of such registers. D Data Transfer Bus DTB; one of four buses on the VMEbus backplane. The DTB is used by a bus master to transfer binary data between itself and a slave device. DMA Direct Memory Access—a method by which data is transferred between devices and internal memory without intervention of the central processing unit. DMA is the fastest method of transferring data to/from computer memory. DRAM Dynamic RAM (Random Access Memory)—storage that the computer must refresh at frequent intervals. © National Instruments Glossary-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary dynamic configuration A method of automatically assigning logical addresses to VXIbus devices at system startup or other configuration times. dynamically configured device A device that has its logical address assigned by the Resource Manager. A VXI device initially responds at Logical Address 255 when its MODID line is asserted. The Resource Manager subsequently assigns it a new logical address, to which the device responds until powered down. E ECL Emitter-Coupled Logic EEPROM Electronically Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory—ROM that can be erased with an electrical signal and reprogrammed. embedded controller An intelligent CPU (controller) interface plugged directly into the VXI backplane, giving it direct access to the VXIbus. It must have all of its required VXI interface capabilities built in. EMC electromagnetic compliance EMI electromagnetic interference external trigger A voltage pulse from an external source that triggers an event. F fair requester A VXIbus device that will not arbitrate for the VXIbus after releasing it until it detects the bus request signal inactive. This ensures that all requesting devices will be granted use of the bus. firmware Software embedded in the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller, contained on EEPROM and flash memory that can be updated with a special utility (part of MAX). In combination with the hardware, the firmware enables the NI VXI-8360T/LT controller to act as a translator between USB and VXI protocols. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary-4 ni.com Glossary G g (1) grams (2) a measure of acceleration equal to 9.8 m/s2 GPIB General Purpose Interface Bus (IEEE 488) gRMS A measure of random vibration. The root mean square of acceleration levels in a random vibration test profile. H hex Hexadecimal—the numbering system with base 16, using the digits 0 to 9 and letters A to F. Hz hertz; cycles per second I I/O Input/output—the techniques, media, and devices used to achieve communication between machines and users. IEC International Electrotechnical Commission. The IEC publishes internationally recognized standards. IEC 60068 contains information on environmental testing procedures and severities. IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers in. inches instrument driver A set of routines designed to control a specific instrument or family of instruments, and any necessary related files for LabWindows/CVI or LabVIEW. interrupt A means for a device to request service from another device; a computer signal indicating that the CPU should suspend its current task to service a designated activity. interrupt handler A VMEbus functional module that detects interrupt requests generated by interrupters and responds to those requests by requesting status and identify information. © National Instruments Glossary-5 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary interrupt level The relative priority at which a device can interrupt. IRQ* interrupt signal K K kilo—the prefix for 1,024, or 210, used with B (byte) in quantifying data or computer memory. k kilo—the standard metric prefix for 1,000, or 103, used with units of measure such as volts, hertz, and meters. L logical address An 8-bit number that uniquely identifies each VXIbus device in a system. It defines the A16 register address of a device, and indicates Commander and Servant relationships. M m meters M mega—(1) the standard metric prefix for 1 million or 106, when used with units of measure such as volts and hertz; (2) the prefix for 1,048,576, or 220, when used with B (byte) to quantify data or computer memory. master A functional part of a VME/VXIbus device that initiates data transfers on the backplane. A transfer can be either a read or a write. message-based device An intelligent device that implements the defined VXIbus registers and communication protocols. These devices are able to use Word Serial Protocol to communicate with one another through communication registers. MODID Module ID lines—used in VXI to geographically locate boards and to dynamically configure boards. MTBF Mean Time Between Failure VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary-6 ni.com Glossary MXI-3 A PCI Master/Slave system implementing the PCI-to-PCI Bridge register set. It couples two physically separate PCI buses with either a copper or fiber optic data link capable of 1.5 Gbits/s serial data rates. MXI-Express An extension of MXI based upon PCI Express. MXI-Express provides bandwidth of up to 110 MB/s. N NI-488.2 or NI-488.2M The National Instruments industry-standard software for controlling GPIB instruments. NI-DAQ The National Instruments industry-standard software for data acquisition instruments. NI-VISA The National Instruments implementation of the VISA standard; an interface-independent software that provides a unified programming interface for VXI, GPIB, and serial instruments. NI-VXI The National Instruments bus interface software for VME/VXIbus systems. Non-Slot 0 device A device configured for installation in any slot in a VXIbus mainframe other than Slot 0. Installing such a device into Slot 0 can damage the device, the VXIbus backplane, or both. P PCI Peripheral Component Interconnect. The PCI bus is a high-performance 32-bit or 64-bit bus with multiplexed address and data lines. PCI Express A serialized, highly scalable I/O interconnect standard that leverages existing PCI technology such as the software model and the load-store architecture. © National Instruments Glossary-7 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary R register-based device A Servant-only device that supports VXIbus configuration registers. Register-based devices are typically controlled by message-based devices via device-dependent register reads and writes. Resman The name of the National Instruments Resource Manager in NI-VXI bus interface software. See also Resource Manager. Resource Manager A message-based Commander located at Logical Address 0, which provides configuration management services such as address map configuration, Commander and Servant mappings, and self-test and diagnostic management. retry An acknowledge by a destination that signifies that the cycle did not complete and should be repeated. RMS Root mean squared. See also gRMS. S s seconds slave A functional part of a VME/VXIbus device that detects data transfer cycles initiated by a VMEbus master and responds to the transfers when the address specifies one of the device’s registers. Slot 0 device A device configured for installation in Slot 0 of a VXIbus mainframe. This device is unique in the VXIbus system in that it performs the VXI/VMEbus System Controller functions, including clock sourcing and arbitration for data transfers across the backplane. Installing such a device into any other slot can damage the device, the VXIbus backplane, or both. SMB Sub Miniature Type B connector that features a snap coupling for fast connection. statically configured device A device whose logical address cannot be set through software; that is, it is not dynamically configurable. SYSFAIL A VMEbus signal that is used by a device to indicate an internal failure. A failed device asserts this line. In VXI, a device that fails also clears its PASSed bit in its Status register. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary-8 ni.com Glossary T trigger Either TTL or ECL lines used for intermodule communication. TTL Transistor-Transistor Logic U USB Universal Serial Bus—a serial bus for connecting computers to keyboards, printers, and other peripheral devices. V V volts VIC VXI Interactive Control program, a part of the NI-VXI bus interface software. Used to program VXI devices and develop and debug VXI application programs. VISA Virtual Instrument Software Architecture. This is the general name given to VISA and its associated architecture. VISAIC VISA Interactive Control program, a part of the NI-VISA software. Used to program devices and develop and debug application programs. VITA VMEbus International Trade Association VME Versa Module Eurocard or IEEE 1014 VMEbus System Controller A device configured for installation in Slot 0 or a VXIbus mainframe or the first slot in a VMEbus chassis. This device is unique in the VMEbus system in that it performs the VMEbus System Controller functions, including clock sourcing and arbitration for data transfers across the backplane. Installing such a device into any other slot can damage the device, the VMEbus/VXIbus backplane, or both. VXIbus VMEbus Extensions for Instrumentation © National Instruments Glossary-9 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary W W watts Word Serial Protocol The simplest required communication protocol supported by message-based devices in a VXIbus system. It utilizes the A16 communication registers to transfer data using a simple polling handshake method. write posting A mechanism that signifies that a device will immediately give a successful acknowledge to a write transfer and place the transfer in a local buffer. The device can then independently complete the write cycle to the destination. VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Glossary-10 ni.com Index A slot 0 detection, B-5 slot 0 detection (figure), B-5 connecting cables, 2-4 conventions used in the manual, ix advanced hardware configuration settings, B-1 application development, 3-1 debugging, 3-6 NI-VXI API notes, 3-5 optimizing large VXIbus transfers, 3-4 programming for VXI, 3-3 D debugging tools, 3-6 Declaration of Conformity (NI resources), H-2 default settings jumper, B-2 software, 2-7 developing applications, 3-1 device tab default settings (table), 2-7 diagnostic tools (NI resources), H-1 documentation conventions used in manual, ix NI resources, H-1 related documentation, x drivers (NI resources), H-1 B basic, MXI-Express x1 systems, 1-7 block diagrams, 1-5 C cables, connecting, 2-4 cabling triggers between two controllers (figure), C-2 calibration certificate (NI resources), H-2 CE compliance, specifications, A-7, A-16 cleaning specifications, A-8, A-16 CLK10 routing, VXI bus, B-6 optional settings inverting CLK10, B-9 inverting CLK10 (figure), B-9 termination, B-9 CLK10 signal accuracy, G-3 inverting (figure), B-9 common questions, G-1 compatibility layer options, 3-5 compiler symbols, 3-5 configuration, 2-1 additional, star (figure), 1-8 advanced hardware settings, B-1 advanced options, B-1 NI VXI-8360T trigger ports, C-1, D-1 © National Instruments E EEPROM, B-10 configuration, E-1 fixing an invalid configuration, E-1 electromagnetic compatibility, A-6, A-15 environmental management, specifications, A-7, A-16 WEEE information, A-8, A-16 environmental specifications, A-5, A-13 examples (NI resources), H-1 EXT CLK specifications, A-3, A-10 F front panel features, 1-3, 1-4 I-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Index G M getting started, 2-1 Measurement & Automation Explorer device tab default settings (table), 2-7 PCI tab default settings (table), 2-8 shared memory tab default settings (table), 2-7 SMB tab default settings (table), 2-8 VXI bus tab default settings (table), 2-7 Measurement Studio, 3-2 MITE EEPROM, power on self configuration, B-10 MXI-Express x1 basic system, 1-7 block diagrams, 1-5 larger systems, 1-8 unpacking, 2-2 MXI-Express x1 system expansion topologies (figure), 1-8 H hardware advanced configuration settings, B-1 configuration, 2-3 default settings, B-2 description, 1-1 determining serial number, G-1 installation, 2-3 NI VXI-8360T trigger port settings, C-1, D-1 help, technical support, H-1 host system with NI VXI-8360T/LT controller (figure), 1-7 I N installation, 2-1 host adapter, 2-4 peripheral, 2-4 software, 2-2 instrument drivers (NI resources), H-1 introduction, 1-1 inverting the CLK10 signal (figure), B-9 National Instruments application software, 3-1 support and services, H-1 NI I/O Trace, figure, 3-7 NI support and services, H-1 NI-VISA, 3-2 examples (table), 3-4 NI-VXI, 3-2 compatibility layer, 3-3 examples (table), 3-4 utility programs using to configure NI VXI-8360T/LT controller, G-2 using to perform startup Resource Manager operations, G-2 NI-VXI API, 3-2 compatibility layer options, 3-5 compiler symbols, 3-5 notes, 3-5 K KnowledgeBase, H-1 L LabVIEW, 3-1 LabWindows/CVI, 3-2 larger MXI-Express x1 systems, 1-8 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual I-2 ni.com Index O software configuration, 2-5 installation, 2-2 verification, 2-5 software (NI resources), H-1 specifications CE compliance, A-7, A-16 cleaning, A-8, A-16 electromagnetic compatibility, A-6, A-15 environmental, A-5, A-13 operating environment, A-5, A-14 shock and vibration, A-6, A-14 storage environment, A-5, A-14 environmental management, A-7, A-16 WEEE information, A-8, A-16 EXT CLK, A-3, A-10 online product certification, A-7, A-16 physical, A-2, A-9 power requirement, A-2, A-9 safety, A-6, A-15 TRIG IN, A-3, A-10 TRIG OUT, A-3, A-10 storage environment specifications, A-5, A-14 support, technical, H-1 operating environment specifications, A-5, A-14 optimizing large VXIbus transfers, 3-4 overview, functional, PCI/PCIe/PXI/PXIe, 1-6 P PCI tab default settings (table), 2-8 physical specifications, A-2, A-9 POSC (power-on self-configuration), B-10 power requirement specifications, A-2, A-9 power-on self-configuration (POSC), B-10 programming examples (NI resources), H-1 programming for VXI, 3-3 R recycling hardware, A-8, A-16 Register I/O tab, successful viIn access in (figure), 3-9 related documentation, x Resman, G-2 running (figure), 2-6 using to ensure system is up and running, G-3 when to run, G-2 T technical support, H-1 termination resistance for CLK10, B-9 training and certification (NI resources), H-1 TRIG IN specifications, A-3, A-10 TRIG OUT specifications, A-3, A-10 trigger ports cabling, C-1, D-2 cabling (figure), C-2 connector signals (table), A-4, A-11 software configuration, C-2 troubleshooting (NI resources), H-1 S safety, specifications, A-6, A-15 selecting controller in VISAIC (figure), 3-8 serial number, determining, G-1 shared memory tab default settings (table), 2-7 shock and vibration specifications, A-6, A-14 slot 0 detection configuration, B-5 J2 jumper (figure), B-5 SMB tab default settings (table), 2-8 © National Instruments I-3 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual Index U default software settings, 2-7 determining serial number, G-1 determining which NI-VXI utility to use with, G-2 ensuring that system is up and running, G-3 equipment, 2-1 expanding system, G-1 front panel features, 1-3, 1-4 hardware, description, 1-1 installation, 2-1, 2-3 introduction, 1-1 software configuration and verification, 2-5 installation, 2-2 specifications, A-1 unpacking, 2-2 user-configurable settings, B-1 using, NI VXI-8360T trigger ports, C-1, D-1 V VISAIC selecting controller in (figure), 3-8 successful viIn access in Register I/O tab (figure), 3-9 VME devices, handling, G-2 VXI bus tab default settings (table), 2-7 VXI, programming for, 3-3 VXI-8360T trigger ports, C-1, D-1 VXIbus transfers, optimizing, 3-4 VXIbus, CLK10 routing, B-6 optional settings inverting CLK10, B-9 figure, B-9 termination, B-9 VXI-MXI-Express series controller application development, 3-1 common questions, G-1 configuration, 2-1 copper cable lengths, G-1 VXI-MXI-Express Series User Manual W Web resources, H-1 WEEE information, A-8, A-16 I-4 ni.com
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