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[modbus-tcp / s7] Reconnect after disconnection via ethernet #1781
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Hi Luca, first off all ... do you know about our connection-cache component? It sounds like this is exactly what you would have been looking for before you built your own ... https://plc4x.apache.org/users/tools/connection-cache.html And regarding the "pulling the plug" or other network or plc-releated outages ... admittedly this is one of the things we need to harden all of our drivers a bit more for. My main problem is: time ... I currently only have 4 hours per week to work on stuff like this. Perhaps someone else here will be able to jump in? |
How is it? For S7 the reconnection is parameterizable in the URL. You can even work with two connections (CPU + CP) and it should reconnect. Kind regards, |
Hi @glcj |
Hi @chrisdutz , For disconnection problems, we are thinking about how we can handle this type of inconvenience. Maybe with a second Camel route. These days I'm trying to understand how this type of problem can be solved and maybe I'll keep this issue updated. Luca |
Well ... we recently added a Listener interface to the PlcConnection ... ConnectionStateListener ... it's the idea to pass in such a listener and the core of PLC4X should call that if a connection disconnects. However, as I mentioned before ... I do think we need to test all of our drivers a bit more with such stuff. |
Hi, The S7 driver already implements the feature you mention and others, supported by the S7-300 or S7-400. It also implements support for the ConnectionListener interface as Chris points out, so you can know when the driver is disconnected/connected. Kind regards, |
Soooo ... not quite sure what should be done here... |
I wrote a Camel route that reads signals from a Phoenix I/O via modbus protocol every 500 milliseconds.
The I/o Phoenix is connected to my laptop via ethernet cable.
Initially the connection was opened and closed for each read instruction, but subsequently I moved to a managed pool of connections to reuse the same connection.
In this way I managed to reduce reading times and avoided saturating the PLC connections.
Before, opening and closing the connection, took me a total of 1 (max 2) seconds to read each reading.
With a managed pool of already open connections, I can read within the expected 500 ms.
The problem I'm facing now is that if the ethernet cable is disconnected, an Exception is thrown that I can't catch and subsequently the connection to that IP is no longer usable until the route is restarted.
Do you have any idea on how to catch the java.net.SocketException Connection reset?
This is the java.net.SocketException thrown:
2024-09-23T18:18:44.111+02:00 WARN 29312 --- [ntLoopGroup-3-1] i.netty.channel.DefaultChannelPipeline : An exceptionCaught() event was fired, and it reached at the tail of the pipeline. It usually means the last handler in the pipeline did not handle the exception. java.net.SocketException: Connection reset at java.base/sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl.throwConnectionReset(SocketChannelImpl.java:394) ~[na:na] at java.base/sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl.read(SocketChannelImpl.java:426) ~[na:na] at io.netty.buffer.PooledByteBuf.setBytes(PooledByteBuf.java:254) ~[netty-buffer-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.buffer.AbstractByteBuf.writeBytes(AbstractByteBuf.java:1132) ~[netty-buffer-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.channel.socket.nio.NioSocketChannel.doReadBytes(NioSocketChannel.java:357) ~[netty-transport-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.channel.nio.AbstractNioByteChannel$NioByteUnsafe.read(AbstractNioByteChannel.java:151) ~[netty-transport-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.channel.nio.NioEventLoop.processSelectedKey(NioEventLoop.java:788) ~[netty-transport-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.channel.nio.NioEventLoop.processSelectedKeysOptimized(NioEventLoop.java:724) ~[netty-transport-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.channel.nio.NioEventLoop.processSelectedKeys(NioEventLoop.java:650) ~[netty-transport-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.channel.nio.NioEventLoop.run(NioEventLoop.java:562) ~[netty-transport-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.util.concurrent.SingleThreadEventExecutor$4.run(SingleThreadEventExecutor.java:997) ~[netty-common-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.util.internal.ThreadExecutorMap$2.run(ThreadExecutorMap.java:74) ~[netty-common-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at io.netty.util.concurrent.FastThreadLocalRunnable.run(FastThreadLocalRunnable.java:30) ~[netty-common-4.1.97.Final.jar:4.1.97.Final] at java.base/java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:840) ~[na:na]
This is the Camel route:
This the tagReaderService.directRead method:
This is the plcPoolConnectionService.readValues invoked:
This is the getConnectionWrapper:
And here i create the connection:
TagGroupRouteBuilder.zip
Feel free to write to me for any information and if there are any points to explore further.
Thank you,
Luca
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