High Speed Lan Instrument Protocol


High Speed ​​Lan Instrument Protocol (HiSLIP) is a protocol based on TCP / IP for communication between computers and measuring and laboratory devices (eg meters, oscilloscopes, laboratory power supplies). From version 1.4 of the standard "LAN eXtensions for Instrumentation (LXI)" HiSLIP is a recommended way of connecting devices over a LAN.

History

HiSLIP was developed in 2011 by the IVI Foundation as a replacement and development of the VXI-11 standard. Relation to other standards

The standard is derived from the older VXI-11 standard. The VXI-11 was the first standard to transmit GPIB (IEEE-488) commands over a LAN. He used the Open Network Computing Remote Procedure Call, developed by SUN Microsystems. TCP / IP sessions are the basis for establishing a connection.

The standard does not define what information is sent between the measuring device and the computer. This is left to the higher order protocols. Use

Like VXI-11, HiSLIP is rarely used directly in laboratory applications. Instead, these applications refer to devices that are connected via ethernet using HiSLIP through libraries that implement the VISA API Virtual Instrument Software Architecture (VISA) or an even higher level library, such as IVI drivers. Each VISA API implementation includes HiSLIP support. Bibliography

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