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Apache PLC4X Logo

The Industrial IoT adapter

The ultimate goal of PLC4X is to create a set of libraries, that allow unified access to any type of PLC


Table of contents


About Apache PLC4X

Apache PLC4X is an effort to create a set of libraries for communicating with industrial grade programmable logic controllers (PLCs) in a uniform way. We are planning on shipping libraries for usage in:

  1. Java
  2. Go
  3. C (not ready for usage)
  4. Python (not ready for usage)
  5. C# (.Net) (not ready for usage - abandoned)

PLC4X also integrates with other Apache projects, such as:

And brings stand-alone (Java) utils like:

  • OPC-UA Server: Enables you to communicate with legacy devices using PLC4X with OPC-UA.
  • PLC4X Server: Enables you to communicate with a central PLC4X Server which then communicates with devices via PLC4X.

It also provides (Java) tools for usage inside an application:

  • Connection Cache: New implementation of our framework for re-using and sharing PLC-connections
  • Connection Pool: Old implementation of our framework for re-using and sharing PLC-connections
  • OPM: Object-Plc-Mapping: Allows binding PLC fields to properties in java POJOs similar to JPA
  • Scraper: Utility to do scheduled and repeated data collection.

Getting started

Depending on the programming language, the usage will differ, therefore please go to the Getting Started on the PLC4X website to look up the language of choice.

Java

NOTE: Currently the Java version which supports building of all parts of Apache PLC4X is at least Java 19 (We have tested all versions up to Java 21), however it's only the Java Tool UI, that requires this right now. All other modules need at least Java 11.

See the PLC4J user guide on the website to start using PLC4X in your Java application: https://plc4x.apache.org/users/getting-started/plc4j.html

Developers

Environment

Currently, the project is configured to require the following software:

  1. Java 11 JDK: For running Maven in general as well as compiling the Java and Scala modules JAVA_HOME configured to point to that.
  2. Git (even when working on the source distribution)
  3. (Optional, for running all tests) libpcap/Npcap for raw socket tests in Java or use of passive-mode drivers
  4. (Optional, for building the website) Graphviz : For generating the graphs in the documentation

WARNING: The code generation uses a utility which requires some additional VM settings. When running a build from the root, the settings in the .mvn/jvm.config are automatically applied. When building only a sub-module, it is important to set the vm args: --add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.api=ALL-UNNAMED --add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.file=ALL-UNNAMED --add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.parser=ALL-UNNAMED --add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.tree=ALL-UNNAMED --add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.util=ALL-UNNAMED. In Intellij for example set these in the IDE settings under: Preferences | Build, Execution, Deployment | Build Tools | Maven | Runner: JVM Options.

A more detailed description is available on our website:

https://plc4x.apache.org/developers/preparing/index.html

For building PLC4C we also need:

All requirements are retrieved by the build itself

For building PLC4Go we also need:

All requirements are retrieved by the build itself

For building PLC4Py we also need:

  1. Python 3.7 or higher
  2. Python pyenv

For building PLC4Net we also need:

  1. DotNet SDK 6.0

With this setup you will be able to build the Java part of PLC4X.

The when doing a full build, we automatically run a prerequisite check and fail the build with an explanation, if not all requirements are meet.

Building with Docker

If you don't want to bother setting up the environment on your normal system, and you have Docker installed, you can also build everything in a Docker container:

   docker compose up

This will build a local Docker container able to build all parts of PLC4X and will run a maven build of the local directory inside this container.

The default build will run a local release-build, so it can also be used to ensure reproducible builds when releasing.

Per default will it store files locally:

  • Downloaded maven artifacts will go to out/.repository
  • Deployed artifacts will go to out/.local-snapshots-dir

The reason for this is, that otherwise the artifacts would be packaged in with the source-release artifact, resulting in a 12GB or more zip archive. However, saving it in the main target directory would make the build delete the local repo every time a mvn clean is run. The out directory however is excluded per default from the assembly descriptor, and therefore it is not included in the source zim.

Getting Started

You must have at least Java 11 installed on your system and connectivity to Maven Central (for downloading external third party dependencies). Maven 3.6 is required to build, so be sure it's installed and available on your system.

NOTE: When using Java 21 currently the Apache Kafka integration module is excluded from the build as one of the plugins it requires has proven to be incompatible with this version.

NOTE: There is a convenience Maven-Wrapper installed in the repo, when used, this automatically downloads and installs Maven. If you want to use this, please use ./mvnw or mvnw instead of the normal mvn command.

NOTE: When running from sources-zip, the mvnw might not be executable on Mac or Linux. This can easily be fixed by running the following command in the directory.

$ chmod +x mvnw

NOTE: If you are working on a Windows system, please use mvnw.cmd instead of ./mvnw in the following build commands.

Build PLC4X Java jars and install them in your local maven repository

./mvnw install

You can now construct Java applications that use PLC4X. The PLC4X examples are a good place to start and are available inside the plc4j/examples directory.

The Go drivers can be built by enabling the with-go profile:

./mvnw -P with-go install 

The Java drivers can be built by enabling the with-java profile:

./mvnw -P with-java install 

The C# / .Net implementation is currently in a work in progress state. In order to be able to build the C# / .Net module, you currently need to activate the: with-dotnet profiles.

./mvnw -P with-dotnet install

The Python implementation is currently in a somewhat unclean state and still needs refactoring. In order to be able to build the Python module, you currently need to activate the: with-python profiles.

./mvnw -P with-python install

In order to build everything the following command should work:

./mvnw -P with-c,with-dotnet,with-go,with-java,with-python,enable-all-checks,update-generated-code install

Community

Join the PLC4X community by using one of the following channels. We'll be glad to help!

Mailing Lists

Subscribe to the following mailing lists:

See also: https://plc4x.apache.org/mailing-lists.html

Twitter

Get the latest PLC4X news on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ApachePlc4x

Contributing

There are multiple forms in which you can become involved with the PLC4X project.

These are, but are not limited to:

  • Providing information and insights
  • Testing PLC4X and providing feedback
  • Submitting Pull Requests
  • Filing Bug-Reports
  • Active communication on our mailing lists
  • Promoting the project (articles, blog posts, talks at conferences)
  • Documentation

We are a very friendly bunch so don’t be afraid to step forward. If you'd like to contribute to PLC4X, have a look at our contribution guide!

Licensing

Apache PLC4X is released under the Apache License Version 2.0.

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