INTRODUCTION
IEEE-488 refers to the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Standard number 488.
This standard was first established in 1978, 13 years
after Hewlett-Packard (HP) of Palo Alto, CA, began
work to enable its broad range of instruments to
communicate with one another and with “host”
computers.
At the time of its development, IEEE-488 was
particularly well-suited for instrument applications when
compared with the alternatives. In essence, IEEE-488
comprises a “bus on a cable,” providing both a parallel
data transfer path on eight lines and eight dedicated
control lines. Given the demands of the times, its
nominal 1 Mbyte/sec maximum data transfer rate
seemed quite adequate; even today, IEEE-488 is
sufficiently powerful for many highly sophisticated and
demanding applications.
However, IEEE-488, as originally defined, left some
ambiguities in the specifics of controller-instrument
interaction and communication. While these open
issues were likely intended to give instrument and
controller designers some latitude, the result was
confusion and compatibility problems among
instruments from different manufacturers.
During the 1980’s, a new layer was added to the IEEE-
488 standard, IEEE-488.2. The original standard was
re-designated IEEE-488.1. IEEE-488.2 provides for a
minimum set of capabilities among “controllers” and
“devices,” as well as for more specific content and
structure of messages and communications protocols.
IEEE-488.2 is fully backward compatible with IEEE-
488.1; the use of a “488.2”-compliant controller affords
the ability to use the new protocols available with
“488.2” instruments while retaining the ability to
communicate with and control “488.1”-compliant
instruments and associated vendor idiosyncrasies.
Today, IEEE-488 is the most widely recognized and
used method for communication among scientific and
engineering instruments. Major stand-alone general
purpose instrument vendors include IEEE-488
interfaces in their products. Many vertical market
instrument makers also rely on IEEE-488 for data
communications and control.
IEEE-488 controllers support a variety of personal
computers, from the IBM PC/XT/AT and PS/2 and
compatibles to the multifaceted Macintosh family. Some
of these controllers are plug-in cards; others are
protocol converters ( e.g., SCSI-to-IEEE-488). All
provide at least IEEE-488.1 in compliance, and a
growing number adhere to “488.2.”
GENERAL INFORMATION
The IEEE-488 interface, sometimes called the General
Purpose Interface Bus (GPIB), is a general purpose
digital interface system that can be used to transfer
data between two or more devices. It is particularly wellsuited
for interconnecting computers and instruments.
Some of its key features are:
• Up to 15 devices may be connected to one bus
• Total bus length may be up to 20 m and the distance between devices may be up to 2 m
• Communication is digital (as opposed to analog) and messages are sent one byte (8 bits) at a time
• Message transactions are hardware handshaked
• Data rates may be up to 1 Mbyte/sec
Mechanical Specifications
CONNECTOR
The IEEE-488 connector is a 24-pin connector. Devices
on the IEEE-488 bus have female receptacles;
interconnecting cables have the mating male
connectors. Connecting cables will typically have male
and female receptacles wired in parallel at each
connecting head to allow parallel connection of cables
at a device and/or to allow daisychaining between
devices.
INTERCONNECTION CABLING
Any individual IEEE-488 bus is limited to 15 devices
including the controller. However, the IEEE-488
specification limits the total length of all cabling used to
interconnect devices on a common bus to 20 m, or 2 m
times the number of interconnected devices (up to 20 m).
Cable lengths between devices may vary, as long as
total cable length does not exceed these restrictions.
Devices may be interconnected in a star or linear
topology, or in a combination of the two, as long as the
distance limits are observed. For maximum data
transfer rates, the total cable length should be reduced
to 15 m, with the average interdevice cable 1 m or less.
Electrical Specifications
BUS LINES
The IEEE-488 bus is a multidrop interface in which all
connected devices have access to the bus lines. The 24
bus lines group into four categories:
• Data Lines - Eight lines (DIO1 through DIO8) used to
transfer information (data and commands) between
devices on the bus, one byte at a time.
• Handshake Lines - Three lines used to handshake
the transfer of information across the data lines:
DAV: Data Valid
NDAC: Not Data Accepted
NRFD: Not Ready for Data
• Bus Management Lines - Five lines used for general
control and coordination of bus activities:
ATN: Attention
I FC: Interface Clear
REN: Remote Enable
SRQ: Service Request
EOI: End or Identify
• Ground Lines - Eight lines used for shielding and
signal returns:
One Shield
One General Signal Ground
Six logic ground lines paired off with ATN, SRQ, IFC, NDAC, NRFD and DAV
HANDSHAKING
The IEEE-488 bus uses three handshake lines in a
“We're ready - Here's the data - We've got it” sequence
to transfer information across the data bus. The
handshake protocol assures reliable data transfer at the
rate determined by the slowest Listener. The
handshake lines, like all other IEEE-488 lines, are
active low. DAV is controlled by the Active Talker.
Before sending any data, the Talker verifies that NDAC
is asserted (low) which indicates that all Listeners have
accepted the previous data byte. The Talker then
places a byte onto the data lines and waits until NRFD
is unasserted (high), indicating that all Addressed
Listeners are ready to accept the information. When
NRFD and NDAC are in the proper state, the Talker
asserts DAV (active low) to indicate that the data on the
bus is valid. NRFD is used by the Listeners to inform
the Talker that they are ready to accept the new data.
The Talker must wait for each Listener to unassert this
line (high), which they do at their own rates when they
are ready for more data. This assures that all devices
accepting the information are ready to receive it. NDAC,
also controlled by the Listeners, indicates to the Talker
that each device addressed to listen has accepted the
information. Each device releases NDAC (high) at its
own rate, but NDAC does not go high until the slowest
Listener has accepted the data byte. This type of
handshaking permits multiple devices to receive data
from a single data transmitter on the bus. All active
receiving devices participate in the data handshaking
on a byte-by-byte basis and operate the NDAC and
NRFD lines in a “wired-or” scheme so that the slowest
active device determines the rate at which the data
transfers take place.
IEEE-488 FUNCTIONS
When information is placed on the data lines, it can
represent either a data byte or a command. If the
Attention bus management line (ATN) is asserted while
the data is transferred, then the data lines are carrying
a multiline command to be received by every bus
device. If ATN is not asserted, then a data byte is being
transferred, and only the Active Listeners receive that
byte.
The IEEE-488 bus also has a number of uniline
commands that are carried on a single bus
management line. For example, the Interface Clear
(IFC) line, when asserted, sends the Interface Clear
command to every bus device, causing each to reset its
IEEE-488 bus interface.
ADDRESSING
The IEEE-488 standard normally permits up to 15
devices to be configured within one system. Each of
these devices has a unique bus address, a number
from 0 to 30. Address limits can be circumvented
directly by the use of bus expanders or indirectly
through the use of an isolator or an extender.
A device becomes Addressed to Talk when it receives a
Talk Address Group (TAG) multiline command (a byte
transferred with ATN asserted) specifying its own
address from the Active Controller. Similarly, it
becomes Addressed to Listen when it receives a Listen
Address Group (LAG) multiline command. Other
address commands include My Talk Address (MTA)
and My Listen Address (MLA), which are the TAG and
LAG commands of the Active Controller. The secondary
Command Group (SCG) is used to refer to
subaddresses or subfunctions within a particular device.
This permits direct access and control of the
subdevices or subinstruments embedded within
complex devices or instruments.
THE SYSTEM CONTROLLER
The System Controller, usually a computer with an IEEE-
488 board installed, always retains ultimate control of the
bus. When the system is first powered up, the System
Controller is the Active Controller and controls all bus
transactions. The System Controller may Pass Control to
a device, making it the New Active Controller, which may
then Pass Control to yet another device. Even if it is not
the Active Controller, the System Controller maintains
exclusive control of the Interface Clear (IFC) and Remote
Enable (REN) bus management lines and can take
control of the bus whenever it desires.
IEEE-488.2
The IEEE-488.2 standard was developed to simplify the
basic process of communicating with instruments.
IEEE488.2 extends the 488 standard with code, format
and protocol standardization and serves to resolve
issues left open in 488.1.
IEEE-488.2 details preferred implementation of many of
the issues that were either optional or unspecified on the
first standard. IEEE-488.1 covers the key physical issues
(connector type, bus length, maximum number of
instruments, etc.), electrical issues (open collector TTL,
tristate) and low-level protocols (device addressing,
control passing and data handshaking/timing). Four basic
device functions (Talker, Listener, Controller and System
Controller) are specified, as are capability subsets for
each type of device.
A number of items not covered by 488.1 can cause
problems for the test engineer, particularly regarding
equipment compatibility and data corruption.
For example, 488.1 does not cover these specifications:
• Minimum Device Capability Requirements
No minimum set of requirements is mandated in IEEE-
488.1 for Talkers, Listeners, Controllers or System
Controllers. Hence, a device may implement all, or only
some, of the capability sets set forth in 488.1, giving
rise to systems containing devices with varying levels
of abilities.
The Controller, in such a situation, has no guarantee of
a basic communication subset among system devices.
This can lead to confusion for the system operator and
miscommunication between devices.
• Data Coding, Formats and Message Protocol
Under 488.1, the messages transferred between the
Controller and a device are entirely at the discretion of
the device manufacturer. The use of ASCII, binary or
some other form of data code and the choice of
terminators such as carriage-return or EOI is arbitrary.
Also, the sequence of the sending of commands and
the reading of their responses is unspecified and varies
from instrument to instrument.
• Definition of the Status Byte
488.1 defines a status byte and one bit within, but the
meaning of the other seven bits is at the discretion of
the device designer. This forces the user to provide a
unique interpretation of each bit of the status byte.
Also, the relationship between the status byte and the
device's other internal status registers is unspecified.
DRIVER SOFTWARE FOR IBM PC
Great variety is found in the software required to
complete the interface between the user's program and
the IEEE instruments. Two fundamental techniques are
used: the DOS device driver and the subroutine library.
These are not mutually exclusive, as subroutine libraries
can be implemented via a DOS device driver.
DOS DEVICE DRIVER
A popular form of device driver used by several IEEE-
488 controller providers is the Terminate and Stay
Resident (TSR) DOS device driver approach. In this
method, the driver code is stored in memory as a TSR
and waits for access by an application program, much as
Borland’s Sidekick waits for user “hot key” input.
OMEGA’s 488 driver establishes a file I/O link with DOS,
just as DOS provides file I/O links for system devices
such as the keyboard/screen, printer or serial port.
These DOS I/O files may be accessed directly from
DOS, from programs with file I/O capability, including
spreadsheets such as Lotus 1-2-3 and Borland's Quattro,
and from most programming languages. These files
provide a direct link to the IEEE-488 bus using HP-style
English language commands. This style of Applications
Program Interface (API) is often referred to as Character
Command Language (CCL), as the IEEE commands are
sent as ASCII strings to the driver via the API’s file I/O
links through DOS.
Controlling Instruments from Any Language
Just as DOS and spreadsheets can access IEEE
instruments directly using the file I/O services provided
by DOS for device drivers, most programming languages
also can use file I/O to quickly and easily access the
IEEE-488 bus.
SUBROUTINE IEEE-488 DRIVER INTERFACE
An alternative means of controlling the IEEE-488
hardware is via subroutine calls from high level
languages. This method has the advantage of minimizing
the overhead of DOS device driver services and the
ASCII message (CCL) parser and interpreter.
Disadvantages include the loss of the convenience and
effectiveness of accessing the IEEE-488 bus from a wide
variety of applications programs, as well as from DOS.
Also, the use of subroutines, even those with easy-to-use
HP-style commands, typically requires compiling and
linking to run even simple test codes.
Some IEEE controller implementations on the IBM PC
give the user the choice of subroutine calls or CCL.
IEEE-488 SUBROUTINE CONTROL LIBRARIES
The logical complement to subroutine interfaces for a
TSR DOS device driver are subroutine libraries that
directly access the IEEE-488 hardware from a high-level
language with code that is compiled and linked directly
into the user’s program. This approach eliminates the
DOS device driver, integrating the IEEE-488 control
functions directly into the applications program code.
This method has the potential for the highest
performance, as it eliminates possible DOS effects on
the speed of commands and data.
MICROSOFT WINDOWS COMPATIBILITY
The growing popularity of the Windows 3.0 Graphical
User Interface (GUI) is rapidly spreading to test and
measurement applications. Until 1991, few tools were
available for the end user to build Windows applications.
Now, tools such as Microsoft's Visual Basic and
Borland’s C++ provide GUI development interfaces that
allow users to draw windows and fill them with buttons,
scroll bars and dialog boxes. Soon, these tools (and the
tools, libraries and utilities that follow) will be widely used
by developers of IEEE-488 test programs. IEEE-488
controller package vendors will adapt their offerings to be
compatible with Windows, so users will be able to apply
Windows solutions to their measurement problems. As
these new Windows-oriented drivers and packages
debut, there will undoubtedly be a broad range of
solutions offered to the end user. It is important to know
and understand what makes Windows and Windows
applications different from DOS, and what features an
IEEE-488 driver should have in order to make the most
of the Windows environment. Users should keep the
following issues in mind when reviewing new offerings:
• Is the software written as a Windows application, or is it
merely a port of DOS software?
Windows performs its own memory management
functions; typical DOS ports to Windows do not permit
Windows to dynamically allocate memory use, which can
lead to “Unrecoverable Application Errors.”
As Windows is an event-based system, it provides
extensive event handling facilities; Windows applications
should take advantage of them.
Windows has no equivalent of the TSR concept used
with DOS. Although some DOS TSR’s will function while
Windows is running, their operation can be erratic and
unpredictable.
• Will the driver support concurrent access of different
peripherals on a single interface by multiple Windows
applications? Windows’ pseudo muItitasking is one of
its reasons for being.
• Will the driver service multiple bus adaptor boards?
• Is the driver IEEE-488.2 compliant?
|