Re-initialize the data during running the program

Any function in the Labview that can help me to re-initialize the data during running the program?
Thanks!
Regards,
Ivan

Ivan,
I am not sure if I understand your question. You can reinitialize your board and load different board parameters at any time as a part of your program. This will stop actions on the board and then start over with any movements. Use Initialize Controller.flx VI to do this.
A. Talley
Applications Engineering
National Instruments

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    Before you start your R/3 System, you determine how many work processes it will have, and what their types will be. The dispatcher starts the work processes and only assigns them tasks that correspond to their type. This means that you can distribute work process types to optimize the use of the resources on your application servers.
    The following diagram shows again the structure of an application server, but this time, includes the various possible work process types:
    The various work processes are described briefly below. Other parts of this documentation describe the individual components of the application server and the R/3 System in more detail.
    Dialog Work Process
    Dialog work processes deal with requests from an active user to execute dialog steps.
    Update Work Process
    Update work processes execute database update requests. Update requests are part of an SAP LUW that bundle the database operations resulting from the dialog in a database LUW for processing in the background.
    Background Work Process
    Background work processes process programs that can be executed without user interaction (background jobs).
    Enqueue Work Process
    The enqueue work process administers a lock table in the shared memory area. The lock table contains the logical database locks for the R/3 System and is an important part of the SAP LUW concept. In an R/3 System, you may only have one lock table. You may therefore also only have one application server with enqueue work processes.
    Spool Work Process
    The spool work process passes sequential datasets to a printer or to optical archiving. Each application server may contain several spool work process.
    The services offered by an application server are determined by the types of its work processes. One application server may, of course, have more than one function. For example, it may be both a dialog server and the enqueue server, if it has several dialog work processes and an enqueue work process.
    You can use the system administration functions to switch a work process between dialog and background modes while the system is still running. This allows you, for example, to switch an R/3 System between day and night operation, where you have more dialog than background work processes during the day, and the other way around during the night.
    ABAP Application Server
    R/3 programs run on application servers. They are an important component of the R/3 System. The following sections describe application servers in more detail.
    Structure of an ABAP Application Server
    The application layer of an R/3 System is made up of the application servers and the message server. Application programs in an R/3 System are run on application servers. The application servers communicate with the presentation components, the database, and also with each other, using the message server.
    The following diagram shows the structure of an application server:
    The individual components are:
    Work Processes
    An application server contains work processes, which are components that can run an application. Work processes are components that are able to execute an application (that is, one dialog step each). Each work process is linked to a memory area containing the context of the application being run. The context contains the current data for the application program. This needs to be available in each dialog step. Further information about the different types of work process is contained later on in this documentation.
    Dispatcher
    Each application server contains a dispatcher. The dispatcher is the link between the work processes and the users logged onto the application server. Its task is to receive requests for dialog steps from the SAP GUI and direct them to a free work process. In the same way, it directs screen output resulting from the dialog step back to the appropriate user.
    Gateway
    Each application server contains a gateway. This is the interface for the R/3 communication protocols (RFC, CPI/C). It can communicate with other application servers in the same R/3 System, with other R/3 Systems, with R/2 Systems, or with non-SAP systems.
    The application server structure as described here aids the performance and scalability of the entire R/3 System. The fixed number of work processes and dispatching of dialog steps leads to optimal memory use, since it means that certain components and the memory areas of a work process are application-independent and reusable. The fact that the individual work processes work independently makes them suitable for a multi-processor architecture. The methods used in the dispatcher to distribute tasks to work processes are discussed more closely in the section Dispatching Dialog Steps.
    Shared Memory
    All of the work processes on an application server use a common main memory area called shared memory to save contexts or to buffer constant data locally.
    The resources that all work processes use (such as programs and table contents) are contained in shared memory. Memory management in the R/3 System ensures that the work processes always address the correct context, that is the data relevant to the current state of the program that is running. A mapping process projects the required context for a dialog step from shared memory into the address of the relevant work process. This reduces the actual copying to a minimum.
    Local buffering of data in the shared memory of the application server reduces the number of database reads required. This reduces access times for application programs considerably. For optimal use of the buffer, you can concentrate individual applications (financial accounting, logistics, human resources) into separate application server groups.
    Database Connection
    When you start up an R/3 System, each application server registers its work processes with the database layer, and receives a single dedicated channel for each. While the system is running, each work process is a user (client) of the database system (server). You cannot change the work process registration while the system is running. Neither can you reassign a database channel from one work process to another. For this reason, a work process can only make database changes within a single database logical unit of work (LUW). A database LUW is an inseparable sequence of database operations. This has important consequences for the programming model explained below.
    Dispatching Dialog Steps
    The number of users logged onto an application server is often many times greater than the number of available work processes. Furthermore, it is not restricted by the R/3 system architecture. Furthermore, each user can run several applications at once. The dispatcher has the important task of distributing all dialog steps among the work processes on the application server.
    The following diagram is an example of how this might happen:
    1. The dispatcher receives the request to execute a dialog step from user 1 and directs it to work process 1, which happens to be free. The work process addresses the context of the application program (in shared memory) and executes the dialog step. It then becomes free again.
    2. The dispatcher receives the request to execute a dialog step from user 2 and directs it to work process 1, which is now free again. The work process executes the dialog step as in step 1.
    3. While work process 1 is still working, the dispatcher receives a further request from user 1 and directs it to work process 2, which is free.
    4. After work processes 1 and 2 have finished processing their dialog steps, the dispatcher receives another request from user 1 and directs it to work process 1, which is free again.
    5. While work process 1 is still working, the dispatcher receives a further request from user 2 and directs it to work process 2, which is free.
    From this example, we can see that:
    • A dialog step from a program is assigned to a single work process for execution.
    • The individual dialog steps of a program can be executed on different work processes, and the program context must be addressed for each new work process.
    • A work process can execute dialog steps of different programs from different users.
    The example does not show that the dispatcher tries to distribute the requests to the work processes such that the same work process is used as often as possible for the successive dialog steps in an application. This is useful, since it saves the program context having to be addressed each time a dialog step is executed.
    Dispatching and the Programming Model
    The separation of application and presentation layer made it necessary to split up application programs into dialog steps. This, and the fact that dialog steps are dispatched to individual work processes, has had important consequences for the programming model.
    As mentioned above, a work process can only make database changes within a single database logical unit of work (LUW). A database LUW is an inseparable sequence of database operations. The contents of the database must be consistent at its beginning and end. The beginning and end of a database LUW are defined by a commit command to the database system (database commit). During a database LUW, that is, between two database commits, the database system itself ensures consistency within the database. In other words, it takes over tasks such as locking database entries while they are being edited, or restoring the old data (rollback) if a step terminates in an error.
    A typical SAP application program extends over several screens and the corresponding dialog steps. The user requests database changes on the individual screens that should lead to the database being consistent once the screens have all been processed. However, the individual dialog steps run on different work processes, and a single work process can process dialog steps from other applications. It is clear that two or more independent applications whose dialog steps happen to be processed on the same work process cannot be allowed to work with the same database LUW.
    Consequently, a work process must open a separate database LUW for each dialog step. The work process sends a commit command (database commit) to the database at the end of each dialog step in which it makes database changes. These commit commands are called implicit database commits, since they are not explicitly written into the application program.
    These implicit database commits mean that a database LUW can be kept open for a maximum of one dialog step. This leads to a considerable reduction in database load, serialization, and deadlocks, and enables a large number of users to use the same system.
    However, the question now arises of how this method (1 dialog step = 1 database LUW) can be reconciled with the demand to make commits and rollbacks dependent on the logical flow of the application program instead of the technical distribution of dialog steps. Database update requests that depend on one another form logical units in the program that extend over more than one dialog step. The database changes associated with these logical units must be executed together and must also be able to be undone together.
    The SAP programming model contains a series of bundling techniques that allow you to group database updates together in logical units. The section of an R/3 application program that bundles a set of logically-associated database operations is called an SAP LUW. Unlike a database LUW, a SAP LUW includes all of the dialog steps in a logical unit, including the database update.
    Happy Reading...
    shibu

  • Any idea what this errorr means? the data type of the reference does not match the data type of the variable

    I am using Veristand 2014, Scan Engine and EtherCat Custom Device.  I have not had this error before, but I was trying to deploy my System Definition File (run) to the Target (cRio 9024 with 6 modules) and it failed. It wouldn't even try to communicate with the target. I get the 'connection refused' error.  
    I created a new Veristand project
    I added the Scan Engine and EtherCat custom device.
    I changed the IP address and auto-detected my modules
    i noticed tat Veristand didn't find one of my modules that was there earlier. (this week)
     So, i went to NiMax to make sure software was installed and even reinstalled Scan Engine and Veristand just to make sure.
    Now, it finds the module, but when i go to deploy it getsto the last step of deploying the code to the target, and then it fails.
    Any thoughts?
    Start Date: 4/10/2015 11:48 AM
    • Loading System Definition file: C:\Users\Public\Documents\National Instruments\NI VeriStand 2014\Projects\testChassis\testChassis.nivssdf
    • Initializing TCP subsystem...
    • Starting TCP Loops...
    • Connection established with target Controller.
    • Preparing to synchronize with targets...
    • Querying the active System Definition file from the targets...
    • Stopping TCP loops.
    Waiting for TCP loops to shut down...
    • TCP loops shut down successfully.
    • Unloading System Definition file...
    • Connection with target Controller has been lost.
    • Start Date: 4/10/2015 11:48 AM
    • Loading System Definition file: C:\Users\Public\Documents\National Instruments\NI VeriStand 2014\Projects\testChassis\testChassis.nivssdf
    • Preparing to deploy the System Definition to the targets...
    • Compiling the System Definition file...
    • Initializing TCP subsystem...
    • Starting TCP Loops...
    • Connection established with target Controller.
    • Sending reset command to all targets...
    • Preparing to deploy files to the targets...
    • Starting download for target Controller...
    • Opening FTP session to IP 10.12.0.48...
    • Processing Action on Deploy VIs...
    • Setting target scan rate to 10000 (uSec)... Done.
    • Gathering target dependency files...
    • Downloading testChassis.nivssdf [92 kB] (file 1 of 4)
    • Downloading testChassis_Controller.nivsdat [204 kB] (file 2 of 4)
    • Downloading CalibrationData.nivscal [0 kB] (file 3 of 4)
    • Downloading testChassis_Controller.nivsparam [0 kB] (file 4 of 4)
    • Closing FTP session...
    • Files successfully deployed to the targets.
    • Starting deployment group 1...
    The VeriStand Gateway encountered an error while deploying the System Definition file.
    Details:
    Error -66212 occurred at Project Window.lvlibroject Window.vi >> Project Window.lvlib:Command Loop.vi >> NI_VS Workspace ExecutionAPI.lvlib:NI VeriStand - Connect to System.vi
    Possible reason(s):
    LabVIEW: The data type of the reference does not match the data type of the variable.
    =========================
    NI VeriStand: NI VeriStand Engine.lvlib:VeriStand Engine Wrapper (RT).vi >> NI VeriStand Engine.lvlib:VeriStand Engine.vi >> NI VeriStand Engine.lvlib:VeriStand Engine State Machine.vi >> NI VeriStand Engine.lvlib:Initialize Inline Custom Devices.vi >> Custom Devices Storage.lvlib:Initialize Device (HW Interface).vi
    • Sending reset command to all targets...
    • Stopping TCP loops.
    Waiting for TCP loops to shut down...
    • TCP loops shut down successfully.
    • Unloading System Definition file...
    • Connection with target Controller has been lost.

    Can you deploy if you only have the two 9401 modules in the chassis (no other modules) and in the sysdef?  I meant to ask if you could attach your system definition file to the forum post so we can see it as well (sorry for the confusion).  
    Are you using any of the specialty configurations for the 9401 modules? (ex: counter, PWM, quadrature, etc)
    You will probably want to post this on the support page for the Scan Engine/EtherCAT Custom Device: https://decibel.ni.com/content/thread/8671  
    Custom devices aren't officially supported by NI, so technical questions and issues are handled on the above page.
    Kevin W.
    Applications Engineer
    National Instruments

  • Where is the data saved in the srtucture for a particular tcode

    Where is the data saved in the srtucture for a particular tcode.
    For eg in MM01 there is a field with RMMG1
    where dioes the data get saved from this field as in backend it shows the stucture and the structure can hold data only at runtime,
    Please help me
    Thanks in advance
    chinnu

    Hi,
    The strcuture : RMMG1 holds data at run time only that to it can hold only one record at a time.
    so we use this structure to hold data at run time and then we insert those values into database tables for that program.
    Here you can the values stored and processed in the program in the tables : MARA (for matnr ,mbrsh,mtart..),MARC (for Plant ),MARD( for storage location : lgort )...etc.
    so if you want to fecth some data means first you have to choose right table to fetch information by passing values in the selection screen.
    Regds
    Sivaparvathi
    Please reward points if helpful...

  • Regarding the dates to retrieve the required records.

    Hi,
           In the selection screen, i have radiobuttons for reporting period like ALL, PAST, FUTURE, TODAY,OTHERKEYDATE ,e.tc.
    My report should run for the date which i have selected on the selection screen.
    For today, we can write the condition as
                          Begda < = sy-datum and enda > = sy-datum.
    But i have to write in general for everydate which i selected.
    I am writing report for OM. i am not using PCH LDB.
    if i use LDB , i can write Begda < = pnp-enda and endda >= pnp-enda.
    But iam not using the LDB PCH.
    how to write query to retreive the required date.

    hi,
    let us say your radio buttons have the name as follows:
    P_ALL  -> for all
    P_TODAY -. for only today
    P_PAST -. for all dates in past from today.(not including today)
    P_FUTURE -> for all dates in FUTURE from today( not including today)
    P_OTHERKEYDATE -> for any other date that  user enters.
    *Logic:
    if P_ALL = 'X'.
    code is as such the program runs for all records irrespective of dates.
    elseif  P_TODAY = 'X'.
    p_date = sy-datum. " this p_date is a variable used to hold today's date.
    now code it so that it runs only for the records having date = p_date.
    elseif P_PAST = 'X'.
    *write code to pick all the dates which are in past , I don't know what you have as begin and end dates and what they for, use the begin and end dates to calculate past dates and run the code only for those past dates.
    elseif P_FUTURE = 'X'.
    *do as done in past,for future dates.
    else p_date = otherkeydate "hope this is entered by user somewhere on the screen.
    *run the code for only that p_date.
    endif.
    <REMOVED BY MODERATOR>
    deepti.
    Edited by: Alvaro Tejada Galindo on Feb 5, 2008 4:54 PM

  • Let all channels(with same data structure)run one program

    Hello,
    I want to let all channels with same data structure run one program,how can i program it?
    Thanks!

    Hi charleen,
    You're going to need to provide more details for us to help you.  In general "channels" do not "run" programs.  You can, however, run a program which loops over channels, checks their properties, and decides whether to include them in the overall analysis.  What do you mean by "data structure"?
    What do you want to actually happen in the "program"?
    Brad Turpin
    DIAdem Product Support Engineer
    National Instruments

  • How to get ONLY the data shown in the plot area (Chart)

    My chart history length are 120000, often I don't need to save the whole
    buffer, just the data shown in the plot area?
    Richard Pettersen

    Hi Richard,
    you haven't said which version of LabVIEW you're using, so I've assumed 6.1, although this should be fine for older versions too.
    I put down a chart with a scrollbar, so I could go through the old data, and put an indicator attached to the x-scale->Range->minimum and x-scale->Range->maximum. These followed the displayed elements in the chart as I scrolled through the data. You can therefore link in the chart history (history data property of the chart) with a array subset to retrieve the appropriate portion.
    Be aware though. The minimum and maximum that the chart is showing on the x-scale may not be a part of the history data. E.g. if I set the history length to 1000 points, and produce on the first run, 1000 points, then my minimum and maximum are a
    t say 899 and 999. I then produce a second set of data, 1000 points long, and my min and max move to 1899 and 1999. As my history data is only 1000 long, I can scroll back to 1000 OK, but my min and max used as indexes don't relate anymore. The array of data is from 0 to 999, but my indexes can run from 1000 to 1999. So I have to add in a check that sees how much data is available before attempting to index, and then it's down to the flow of the program to try to work out where the data actually is (I'll leave that one to you - you'll need to keep track of the history data compared to the maximum (shown just after a point is added though this then makes a mess of your data! - possible to keep a track of new minimum when adding new data : the maximum (which will show once new data goes on) minus the history length gives the minimum that can be scrolled to - subtract this from all max's and min's to get real offset into the data - history length can be got from the history data and an a
    rray size sub .vi)
    Obviously there's no problem if you're clearing the graph everytime you either plot new data, or reach maximum capacity on the history data as the indexes return to zero.
    Hope that helps
    S.
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