Description
A write
operation transfers data from a master source device to a specified
slave destination device on the network. The operation uses a master
transaction path, and may require several cycles to complete. To program
an MBP_MSTR
block to perform
a write operation, use function code 1.
MBP_MSTR
to write to its own drop address. This action
causes the function block to generate an error in the CONTROL[2] register of the control
block.You can perform a write operation to a nonexistent slave register. The slave detects and logs the status, which can last for several cycles.
Network Implementation
The write operation can be performed on Modbus Plus, TCP/IP Ethernet, and SY/MAX Ethernet networks.
Control Block Usage for Modbus Plus
Register |
Meaning |
---|---|
CONTROL[1] |
1 = write data |
CONTROL[2] |
Indicates the error status. |
CONTROL[3] |
Number of addresses sent to the slave. |
CONTROL[4] |
Determines the %MW starting register in the slave to which the data is written, e.g. 1 = %MW1, 49 = %MW49. |
CONTROL[5] ... CONTROL[9] |
Routing register 1 is used to specify the address (routing path address 1 of 5) of the node during a network transfer. The last byte in the routing path that is not 0 is the destination node. |
Control Block Usage for TCP/IP Ethernet
Register |
Meaning |
---|---|
CONTROL[1] |
1 = write data |
CONTROL[2] |
Indicates the error status. |
CONTROL[3] |
Number of addresses sent to the slave. |
CONTROL[4] |
Determines the %MW start address of the slave to which the data is written. |
CONTROL[5] |
|
CONTROL[6] ... CONTROL[9] |
Each address contains 1 byte of the 32-bit IP address. |
Control Block Usage for SY/MAX Ethernet
Register |
Meaning |
---|---|
CONTROL[1] |
1 = write data |
CONTROL[2] |
Indicates the error status. |
CONTROL[3] |
Number of addresses sent to the slave. |
CONTROL[4] |
Determines the %MW starting register in the slave to which the data is written, e.g., 1 = %MW1, 49 = %MW49. |
CONTROL[5] |
|
CONTROL[6] ... CONTROL[9] |
terminator: FF hex |