Real-time DataLogger - Tutorial videos

Available from 2019.6 – some features came in with later firmware releases

cookie

Note: Tutorial videos are embedded from the Phoenix Contact Technical Support YouTube channel.  With playing an embedded YouTube video in this platform, you accept the YouTube Terms & Conditions.
Even showing the video previews on this page depends on your personal settings in the Cookie consent dialog. To watch YouTube videos, you have to allow cookies for marketing purposes which will remain on your device. The data gained through these cookies will be used by YouTube to provide video suggestions and advertisements based on your browsing habits, and may be made available to other parties.

Check and change your cookie consent

Getting used to DataLogger functions

Frank Walde tells all you need to know for starters about the DataLogger. 

As a newbie, please don't skip this introduction so we can get deeper into it in the following two videos without losing you.

Configuring for "Record on time"

In this video, we are setting up a program that logs data from a set of ports into an SQLite database, so we can access those logs from our host computer. Prerequisites here:

DataLogger with OPC UA Historical Data Access

Now it's getting historical! Recruiting the embedded OPC UA® server of the PLCnext Technology Runtime, we will set up our data ports to historicize all values.

We will be using the UaExpert client from Unified Automation in this session, so make sure you have that installed already.

Configuring for "Record on change"

In this video, we are configuring a DataLogger session with a small program to only record changes of the variable values. This is done by means of a .config file which we're editing to our needs.
Prerequisites: Download the DataLogger Service configuration file from the PLCnext repository on GitHub

DataLogger configuration with PLCnext Engineer 

Starting with firmware 2020.6 and PLCnext Engineer 2020.6, you can now set up and configure a DataLogger session by means of the PLCnext Engineer interface. Frank shows the procedure for a typical use case involving variables to be read out via OPC UA®.

After that, we will recruit the embedded OPC UA® server of the PLCnext Technology Runtime, set up our data ports to historicize all values.

We will be using the UaExpert client from Unified Automation in this session, so make sure you have that installed already.

 

 


• Published/reviewed: 2024-10-30   ☀  Revision 074 •