Awlsim is a free Step 7 compatible Programmable Logic Controller, that supports the automation languages AWL/STL and FUP/FBD. Awlsim itself is written in Python.
The latest version of Awlsim can be downloaded at the official Awlsim site.
Github / issue tracking / pull requests
Awlsim is a free Step 7 compatible Programmable Logic Controller, that supports the automation languages AWL/STL and FUP/FBD. Awlsim itself is written in Python. The speed of execution ranges from several ten thousand AWL/STL instructions per second on slow embedded machines to a couple of million instructions per second on faster computers.
AWL/STL programs on PLCs are used for automation of industrial processes. However Awlsim is very flexible, so it can be used for other purposes beyond industrial applications, too. Awlsim aims to be compatible with the industry standard S7 software on the AWL/STL level.
Awlsim can emulate CPUs with two and four accumulator registers (S7-3xx and S7-4xx). Compatibility to S7 hardware is a task taken seriously by the Awlsim project. We want to be as close as possible to the real PLC hardware with our AWL/STL code execution. For this reason Awlsim ships an extensive selftest suite. Missing features and differences between Awlsim and Step 7 are documented in the COMPATIBILITY documentation and TODO documentation files.
See the quick start tutorial for a simple example on how to use Awlsim in simulator mode. In simulator mode Awlsim can be run on any desktop PC. No special hardware is required.
If you don't know where to start, you can find an example project in the examples
directory as EXAMPLE.awlpro
. You can easily run this example in simulation mode without the need for special hardware.
The latest development version of Awlsim can be fetched with git:
git clone https://git.bues.ch/git/awlsim.git cd awlsim
After cloning the main repository the git submodules must also be fetched. The following helper script can be used:
./maintenance/update-submodules
Awlsim depends on
These packages can be installed with pip:
pip3 install --upgrade PyQt5 pip3 install --upgrade cffi
If building and using Awlsim with Cython acceleration is desired, Cython must also be installed:
pip3 install --upgrade Cython
On Windows all Awlsim dependencies can be installed by double clicking the shipped installer script: maintenance\win-install-dependencies.cmd
For Debian Linux users the script maintenance/deb-dependencies-install.sh installs all required and optional runtime and build dependencies.
The Awlsim Git repository and source archive awlsim-x.yz.tar.bz2
contain lots of files and directories. Here is an overview of the main files and directories and their purpose:
User interface executables. The main user executable is awlsim-gui
.
. awlsim-client : Command line client tool. . awlsim-gui : Graphical user interface. This is the main user frontend. . awlsim-linuxcnc-hal : LinuxCNC HAL module executable. . awlsim-proupgrade : Command line tool to update .awlpro file formats. . awlsim-server : Command line server tool. . awlsim-symtab : Command line tool to parse symbol tables (.ASC). . awlsim-test : Command line tool for unit testing. . See tests/run.sh for execution of unit tests. . awlsim-win.cmd : Windows wrapper for awlsim-gui.
These files and directories contain useful information about Awlsim.
. doc/ : Main documentation. . doc/fup/ : Awlsim FUP language and editor documentation. . examples/ : Various example projects and feature demonstrations. . COMPATIBILITY.md|html : S7 compatibility documentation. . COPYING.txt : Main license. . DEVELOPMENT.md|html : How to enhance and develop Awlsim. . QUICK-START.md|html : Quick start tutorial. . README.md|html : Main README document. . TODO.md|html : TODO list.
The main modules implement most of Awlsim's functionality.
. awlsim/ : Main Awlsim Python-module directory. This is where the magic happens. . awlsim/awlcompiler : AWL compiler. . awlsim/awloptimizer : AWL optimizer. . awlsim/common : Common libraries, modules and helper functions. . awlsim/core : AWL interpreter core. This is where the AWL program is executed. . awlsim/core/instructions : Implementation of AWL instructions. . awlsim/core/systemblocks : Implementation of SFCs and SFBs. . awlsim/coreclient : Client library to connect to coreserver. . awlsim/coreserver : Server library to provide AWL interpreter core access via networking. . awlsim/fupcompiler : FUP compiler. . awlsim/gui : Graphical user interface implementation (Qt). . awlsim/library : AWL block (FC and FB) libraries. . awlsim/library/iec : Implementation of IEC FCs and FBs. . awlsim_loader/ : Import wrapper for the main Awlsim Python-module. . This is used to automatically load Cython optimized modules. . libs/ : External libraries used for running or testing Awlsim. . progs/ : External programs used in Awlsim. . submodules/ : Git submodules used for running Awlsim. . See man git-submodule for general help about Git submodules. . submodules/pyprofibus/ : PROFIBUS-DP implementation. . tests/ : Unit test cases. . tests/run.sh : Main interface to run unit tests. Please see --help
The hardware modules are the glue between the Awlsim core and the real world. The hardware modules are invoked before and after running the user cycle (OB 1).
. awlsimhw_debug/ : Hardware module for unit tests. Do not use in production. . awlsimhw_dummy/ : Dummy no-operation hardware module for testing, debugging or simulation. . awlsimhw_linuxcnc/ : LinuxCNC hardware support module. . awlsimhw_pixtend/ : PiXtend hardware support module. . awlsimhw_pyprofibus/ : PROFIBUS-DP hardware support module. . awlsimhw_pyprofibus.conf : Configuration file for awlsimhw_pyprofibus. . awlsimhw_rpigpio/ : Raspberry Pi GPIO hardware support module.
. awlsim-server.service : Systemd unit for awlsim-server. . debian/ : Debian packaging support. . maintenance/ : Maintainer scripts. . misc/ : Miscellaneous scripts and files. . setup.py : Python package build script. This also builds the Cython modules.
Awlsim supports programming in an S7-FUP like language. See the FUP documentation for more information about Awlsim's implementation of FUP.
The following environment variables control Awlsim's basic behavior:
-
AWLSIM_GUI
=auto
Automatically select the best GUI framework (default)
=pyside
Use PySide as GUI framework.
=pyqt
Use PyQt as GUI framework. -
AWLSIM_CYTHON
=0
Do not attempt to use Cython core (default)
=1
Attempt to use Cython core, but fall back to Python
=2
Enforce Cython core -
AWLSIM_SCHED
=default
Do not change the scheduling policy. Keep the policy that was assigned to Awlsim by the operating system. (default)
=normal
Use the normal non-realtime OS scheduling.
=fifo
Use FIFO realtime scheduling (SCHED_FIFO
).
=rr
Use Round-robin realtime scheduling (SCHED_RR
).
=deadline
Use Deadline realtime scheduling (SCHED_DEADLINE
).
=realtime
Use a realtime scheduling algorithm that performs best in most situations. The actual algorithm selection might change between Awlsim releases.The suffix
-if-multicore
can be appended to the optionsfifo
,rr
,deadline
andrealtime
. That will trigger a fall back tonormal
, if the system is single-core (has only one CPU). -
AWLSIM_PRIO
=default
Do not change the priority (default).
=1-99
Set the scheduling priority. The meaning of the priority depends on the operating system and the selected scheduling algorithm. SeeAWLSIM_SCHED
. -
AWLSIM_AFFINITY
=0,2,...
Comma separated list of host CPU cores to run on. Default: all cores. -
AWLSIM_MLOCK
=0
Do not try to mlockall. See man 2 mlockall. (default).
=1
Try to mlockall all current and future memory. See man 2 mlockall.
=2
mlockall all current and future memory. Abort on failure. See man 2 mlockall. -
AWLSIM_PROFILE
=0
Disable profiling (default)
=1
Enable core cycle profiling
=2
Enable full core profiling (including startup) -
AWLSIM_COVERAGE
=DATAFILE
Enable code coverage tracing. -
AWLSIM_GCMODE
=realtime
Enable manual garbage collection, if realtime scheduling is enabled. (default)
=auto
Always use automatic garbage collection.
=manual
Always use manual garbage collection. -
AWLSIM_GCTHRES
=700,1,1
A comma separated string with up to 3 integers.
Each integer corresponding to the Python garbage collector generation 0 to 2 thresholds for manual garbage collection.
A threshold value of 0 disables garbage collection. (not recommended) -
AWLSIM_GCCYCLE
=64
The number of OB1 cycles it takes to trigger a manual garbage collection.
The following environment variables control Awlsim's build (setup.py) behavior:
-
AWLSIM_FULL_BUILD
=0
Do not include scripts that are not necessary on this platform. (default)
=1
Include all scripts; also those that aren't required on the platform. -
AWLSIM_CYTHON_BUILD
=0
Do not build any Cython modules. (default on non-Posix)
=1
Build Cython modules. (default on Posix) -
AWLSIM_CYTHON_PARALLEL
=0
Do not use parallel compilation for Cython modules.
=1
Invoke multiple compilers in parallel (faster on multicore). (default) -
AWLSIM_PROFILE
=0
Do not enable profiling support in compiled Cython modules. (default)
=1
Enable profiling support in compiled Cython modules. -
AWLSIM_DEBUG_BUILD
=0
Do not enable debugging support in compiled Cython modules. (default)
=1
Enable debugging support in compiled Cython modules.
Awlsim can be run from the source directory in interpreted Python mode without building it. Just cd
into the Awlsim source directory and execute the desired main executable (e.g. ./awlsim-gui
or ./awlsim-server
etc...).
The accelerated Cython libraries can be built with the standard Python ./setup.py build
command.
For convenience there also is a helper script ./maintenance/build.sh
, which will do everything right to build Awlsim. That can be used instead of calling setup.py directly.
There also is ./maintenance/build-noopt.sh
. That builds Cython modules without optimization. The build is much faster, but the resulting Cython libraries will be much slower. This is useful for development. Do not use this for production.
If you want to use PiLC, please also see the PiLC documentation.
Installing or upgrading Awlsim on a Debian based system is easy.
The debuild
can be used to build the .deb packages. Just run the following commands to build all Awlsim .deb packages:
cd path/to/awlsim # Go to Awlsim source directory sudo ./maintenance/deb-dependencies-install.sh # This installs all dependencies debuild -uc -us # Build all Awlsim .deb packages sudo ./maintenance/deb-install.sh .. # Install or upgrade all Awlsim .deb packages
The .deb files will be put into the parent directory of the Awlsim source directory.
If you get the following build failure during build:
/usr/include/features.h:xxx:xx: fatal error: sys/cdefs.h: No such file or directory
this can be fixed by re-installing the libc development package:
sudo apt install --reinstall libc-dev
Information about Awlsim development can be found in the Awlsim development documentation.
Copyright (C) Michael Büsch / et al.
Awlsim is Open Source Free Software licensed under the GNU General Public License v2+. That means it's available in full source code and you are encouraged to improve it and contribute your changes back to the community. Awlsim is free of charge, too.