Modbus Master-Slave Principle
Overview
The Modbus protocol exchanges information using a request-reply mechanism between a master (client) and a slave (server). The master-slave principle is a model for a communication protocol in which one device (the master) controls one or more other devices (the slaves). In a standard Modbus network, there is 1 master and up to 31 slaves.
A detailed description of the Modbus protocol is available at www.modbus.org.
Characteristics of the Master-Slave Principle
The master-slave principle is characterized as follows:
-
Only one master is connected to the network at a time.
-
Only the master can initiate communication and send requests to the slaves.
-
The master can address each slave individually using its specific address or all slaves simultaneously using address 0.
-
The slaves can only send replies to the master.
-
The slaves cannot initiate communication, either to the master or to other slaves.
Master-Slave Communication Modes
The Modbus protocol can exchange information using two communication modes:
-
unicast mode
-
broadcast mode
Unicast Mode
In unicast mode, the master addresses a slave using the specific address of the slave. The slave processes the request and replies to the master.
- 1
-
Request
- 2
-
Process
- 3
-
Reply
Broadcast Mode
The master can also address all slaves using address 0. This type of exchange is called broadcasting. The slaves do not reply to broadcasting messages.
Response Time
The response time Tr is the time required by a slave to respond to a request sent by the master:
Values with the Modbus protocol:
-
Typical value < 10 ms for 90% of the exchanges
-
Maximum value is around 700 ms, so it is recommended to implement a 1 second time out after sending a Modbus request.
Data Exchange
The Modbus protocol uses two types of data:
-
Single bit
-
Register (16 bits)
EasyPact MVS circuit breakers support registers only.
Each register has a register number and has a 16-bit address.
The messages exchanged with the Modbus protocol contain the address of the data to be processed.
Registers and Addresses
The address of register number n is n-1. The tables detailed in the following parts of this document provide both register numbers (in decimal format) and corresponding addresses (in hexadecimal format). For example, the address of register number 12000 is 0x2EDF (11999).
Frames
All the frames exchanged with the Modbus protocol have a maximum size of 110 bytes and are composed of four fields:
Field |
Definition |
Size |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
Slave number |
1 byte |
Destination of the request
|
2 |
Function codes |
1 byte or 2 bytes |
Refer to function codes description (refer to Modbus Functions) |
3 |
Data |
n registers |
Request or reply data |
4 |
Check |
2 bytes |
CRC16 (to check transmission errors) |