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Application Server

State Alarms

  • Last UpdatedApr 22, 2022
  • 2 minute read

A state alarm set on an attribute of Boolean data type corresponds to a discrete tag with two possible states. When you create a state alarm, you configure whether the active alarm state corresponds to the TRUE or FALSE state of the attribute.

Dropdown menu showing state alarm categories

You can set an alarm category. Valid categories are:

Category

Description

Discrete

A discrete value event or alarm, such as a change of state.

Value LoLo

A continuous value is significantly below the acceptable range.

Value Lo

A continuous value is below or is approaching the low acceptable range.

Value Hi

A continuous value is above or approaching above the high acceptable range.

Value HiHi

A continuous value is significantly above the acceptable range.

DeviationMinor

A value has a minor deviation (plus or minus) from the target or setpoint.

DeviationMajor

A value has a major deviation (plus or minus) from the target or setpoint.

ROC Lo

The rate of change for a value is too slow.

ROC Hi

The rate of change for a value is too fast.

SPC

A value deviates from the SPC target/range.

Process

An alarm or event associated with the physical process/plant has occurred.

System

An alarm or event associated with the automation system has occurred.

Batch

An alarm or event associated with a batch process has occurred.

Software

An alarm or event associated with a software operation or logic (such as divide by zero in script) has occurred.

You can set an alarm message and Priority for a state alarm. The time deadband sets the length of time that an attribute value must continuously remain in an alarm or unalarmed state. The time deadband filters out rapid, transitory value spikes.

The timestamp when a state alarm becomes active or inactive is the most current timestamp of the corresponding input value. If there is no timestamp associated with the alarmed value, the AppEngine timestamp is used instead.

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