Home : Products : Hach WIMS : Interfaces : Hach WIMS Indirect Server-Side Interface to Hach SC100/SC1000 : Documentation : Introduction : Overview of Indirect Interface Concepts
Q12559 - INFO: Overview of Indirect Interface Concepts

The main components that collaborate on getting source data from SCADA or LIMS systems into the Hach WIMS database are the: Collector, Dispatcher, and Interface
The reason there are these components is to provide flexibility, to be more robust, and to overcome disconnected system conditions.

 



  1. Source Data

    The source data is typically a database of SCADA or LIMS type data stored by some automated or manual system

  2. Collector

    The Collector is responsible for polling source data periodically and creating XML files in a specific format (i.e., OPSDATAXML file format) 

  3. Dispatcher

    The Dispatcher is optional and is used for dispatching XML data files from source computer systems to the Hach WIMS computer when these two are not the same network.  The Dispatcher transfers XML data files to the Hach WIMS computer system via File Transfer Protocol (FTP). If the source data is on the same computer as the Hach WIMS database, then this component is not needed.

  4. Interface

    The Interface reads in XML files created by the Collector, summarizes the data based on variable setup in Hach WIMS Client, and imports the data to the Hach WIMS database. The Interface must be able to connect to the Hach WIMS database.

  5. Hach WIMS Database

    End point for data storage. The Database needs to know how the interface is defined, allows you to uniquely name the interface, and provides place holders, called "variables", that hold the data imported from the interface.

  6. Hach WIMS Client

    The Hach WIMS Client is the part of the system that allows you to read data and generate reports. Hach WIMS Client reads data from Hach WIMS Database.

 

 

Related Articles
No Related Articles Available.

Article Attachments
No Attachments Available.

Related External Links
No Related Links Available.
Help us improve this article...
What did you think of this article?

poor 
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

 excellent
Tell us why you rated the content this way. (optional)
 
Approved Comments...
No user comments available for this article.
Created on 9/24/2009 12:56 PM.
Last Modified on 1/13/2012 11:49 AM.
Last Modified by No Author Name Available!.
Article has been viewed 27580 times.
Rated 8 out of 10 based on 2 votes.
Print Article
Email Article