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RTA's Blog

BACnet Data Representation

Posted on March 4, 2015July 27, 2023 by John Rinaldi
04
Mar

BA-data copyTo understand a standard what you have to do is to focus on the data representation. How a protocol represents data is key to its functionality. Once you understand the data representation, then it’s simply a matter of figuring out how that data is moved from Point A to Point B over whatever physical layer it uses.

In BACnet, the basic construct to organize data is an Object. An Object is really key to the operation of BACnet. Objects contain the physical data – temperatures, counts, rates and everything else captured by our automated devices. Groups of Objects represent the devices themselves. A flow meter can be represented by a group of Analog Input Objects and some Binary Objects. Objects are really at the center of BACnet technology.

BACnet has eighteen different objects in its specification. That list includes the most common objects, objects you’ll find in most BACnet devices: the Analog Input Object, the Analog Output Object, the Binary Input Object, the Binary Output Object and the Binary Value Object. It also includes some objects you might never run into in an entire career, like the Notification Class Object and the Loop Object.

Every BACnet Object is composed of a set of properties. The properties of an Object describe the Object to the network. BACnet properties include items like identification strings, configuration information, status values and diagnostic status. It is only through an Object’s properties that an Object is monitored and controlled.

Properties are very valuable to BACnet users. They provide information called meta-data. Meta-data defines and explains a data point. For example, you may have a temperature value of 25. Without meta-data, you won’t know if the refrigeration system is properly cold (25 Fahrenheit) or if the building roof is really hot (25 Celsius). Properties (meta-data) help to explain the characteristics of a value, what we call “present value” in BACnet.

Properties can tell you things like the scale, where the sensor is located, what kind of sensor is being used, or what kind of device is doing the measuring. Properties can be either Read only or Read-Write. The BACnet specification details what level of access an external device has to a BACnet property.

Properties are either required or optional. Required properties are properties that must be included in the Object. Network queries to the Object can always find and read those properties in an Object because, be definition, they have to be present. Optional properties are properties that CAN be included in the Object. It’s the choice of the device vendor to include or exclude an optional property.

Three properties, Object-identifier, Object-name, and Object-type are required to be present in every BACnet Object. Every Object must have these three objects plus any other Objects that are required for that Object’s Object-type. The type of Object and the type of device in which that Object resides determine which properties are required.

An Analog Input Object, for example, has the three objects required of every BACnet object, five other required objects plus seventeen optional objects:

Object_Identifier Required Analog Input #1
Object_Name Required “AI 01”
Object_Type Required Analog Input
Present_Value Required 68.0
Status_Flags Required In_Alarm Fault Overridden Out_Of_Service flags
Event_State Required Normal (plus various problem-reporting states)
Out_Of_Service Required False
Units Required Degrees Fahrenheit
Update_Interval Optional 1.00 (seconds)
Reliability Optional No_Fault_Detected (plus various fault conditions)
Description Optional “Outside Air Temperature”
Device_Type Optional “10k Thermistor”
Min_Pres_Value Optional -100.0 minimum reliably read value
Max_Pres_Value Optional +300.0 maximum reliably read value
Resolution Optional 0.1
COV_Increment Optional Notify if Present_Value changes by increment: 0.5
Time_Delay Optional Seconds to wait before detecting out-of-range: 5
Notification_Class Optional Send COV notification to Notification Class Object: 2
High_Limit Optional +215.0 Upper normal range
Low_Limit Optional -45.0 Lower normal range
Deadband Optional 0.1
Limit_Enable Optional Enable High-limit-reporting Low-limit-reporting.
Event_Enable Optional Enable To_Offnormal   To_Fault To_Normal change reporting.
Acked_Transitions Optional Flags indicating received acknowledgments for above changes.
Notify_Type Optional Events or Alarms

I’ll have more on BACnet objects in next week’s article. John

This entry was posted in RTA's Blog and tagged Analog Input Object, Analog Output Object, BACnet, Binary Input Object, Binary Output Object, Binary Value Object, Loop Object, Metadata, Notification Class Object, Object, Properties.
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John Rinaldi

John Rinaldi is Chief Strategist, Business Development Manager and CEO of Real Time Automation (RTA). After escaping from Marquette University with a degree in Electrical Engineering, John worked in various jobs in the Automation Industry before once again fleeing back into the comfortable halls of academia. At the University of Connecticut, he once again talked his way into a degree, this time in Computer Science (MS CS). John is a recognized expert in industrial networks and the author of six books: Modbus: The Everyman’s Guide to Modbus, OPC UA – Unified Architecture: The Everyman’s Guide to OPC UA, EtherNet/IP: The Everyman’s Guide to EtherNet/IP, The Smart Product Manager’s Guide to Industrial Automation Connectivity, The Smart Product Manager’s Guide to Connectivity in the Packaging Industry, and his latest, The Everyman’s Guide to Properly Architecting EtherNet/IP Networks.

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