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FACULTY OF ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC

Seminar Topic
ETHERNET/IP

Team members:
V Vn ng

41100839

V Vit Trng Quang

41102742

Tn Tht Nguyn Phong

41102555

V Vn Tin

41103620

CONTENT
1. Introduction to Ethernet/IP
2. Layers

A.Physical layer
B.Datalink layer
C.Network & Transport layer
D.The Upper layer

3. Applications
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INTRODUCTION

LAYERS

oEtherNet/IP is the

implementation of
CIP over TCP/IP
and Ethernet
(IEEE 802.3).

oThe EtherNet/IP
specification
defines :

THE PHYSICAL LAYER


EtherNet/IP uses standard IEEE 802.3
technology at the Physical and Data Link
Layers. This standard provides a specification for

physical media, defines a simple frame format for moving


packets of data between devices and supplies a set of
rules for determining how network devices respond when
two
devices
attempt
to
use
a
data
channel
simultaneously.

This is known as CSMA/CD


(Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision
Detection).

THE PHYSICAL LAYER


As a network with
an active
infrastructure,
EtherNet/IP is typically
configured using a
series of network
segments constructed
of point-to-point
connections in a star
configuration. The core
of this network
topology is an
interconnection of
Ethernet Layer 2 and
Layer 3 switches, can

THE PHYSICAL LAYER


Typically, a backbone of switches, in which each
switch isolates a machine or a major part of a
machine, is connected with 100Mbps-fiber optic
cables. The other ports of the switch can be
connected using twisted pair or fiber cables to the
control devices for that part of the machine or
manufacturing process.

EtherNet/IP networks can be either isolated (not


connected directly to the enterprise network) or nonisolated

THE DATALINK LAYER

IEEE's 802.3 specification is also the standard used for


transmitting packets of data from device to device on the
EtherNet/IP Data Link Layer. Ethernet employs a CSMA/CD
media access mechanism that determines how networked 8
devices share a common bus (i.e., cable), and how they
detect and respond to data collisions.

THE NETWORK LAYER


Is the lowest layer of TCP/IP,where IP
resides

Is also where the Address Resolution


Protocol (ARP) resides

When a device want to transmit


an IP datagram to other device:
+look up the ethernet address
+or use the internal ARP table
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THE NETWORK LAYER


Note that: Ethernet broadcast messages pass
through hubs and switches and bridges, but they do
not pass through routers

Ethernet addresses cannot be changed and IP


addresses may be changed

Ethernet address

Ip address

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THE TRANSPORT LAYER


There are three important binary properties
that serve as the basis for the classification
of transport layer protocols:

1. Connection-oriented vs. Connectionless


2. Stateful vs. Stateless
3. Reliable vs. Unreliable
Based on the above classification, we
have two protocol TCP and UDP looks like
complete opposites

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THE TRANSPORT LAYER

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THE UPPER LAYER

EtherNet/IP uses the Common Industrial


Protocol (CIP), a strictly object-oriented
protocol, at the upper layers. Each CIP object
has attributes (data), services (commands)
and behaviors (reactions to events).
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THE UPPER LAYER

Producer-consumer
communication model
"device types" & "device profiles

MAIN
FEATUR
ES

Seamless bridging and routing

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THE UPPER LAYER

CIP's producer-consumer communication


model

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THE UPPER LAYER


CIP also includes "device types" for which there
are "device profiles.
specify the set of CIP objects, configuration
options and I/O data formats.
promote a common application interface for a
given device type and interoperability in
networks comprised of devices from multiple
vendors.

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THE UPPER LAYER

Seamless bridging and routing is


perhaps the most significant
advantage for users of CIP Networks
for it is this mechanism that most
protects the user's investment for the
future.
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THE UPPER LAYER

Seamless bridging and


routing

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APPLICATIONS

Automatic transfer lines, paint shops, and assembly lines


Food processing/packaging
Sectional conveyors
Discrete-part machines
Applications requiring fast response times
Most of the high-speed applications that require high
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throughput and speed, high I/O count, distribution across
large geographic distances, and real-time performance.

TYPOLOGY

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REFERENCE
www.odva.org
The CIP Advantage Technology
Overview Series

CIP Motion over EtherNet/IP


http://www.ixxat.com/introduction_ethernet_
ip_en.html
http://www.icpdas.com/root/product/solutions
/industrial_communication/fieldbus/ethernet_i
p/ethernet_ip_intro.html
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THANK YOU FOR WATCHING

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