Reader small image

You're reading from  Hands-On Industrial Internet of Things

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2018
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781789537222
Edition1st Edition
Right arrow
Authors (2):
Giacomo Veneri
Giacomo Veneri
author image
Giacomo Veneri

Giacomo Veneri graduated in computer science from the University of Siena. He holds a PhD in neuroscience context with various scientific publications. He is Predix Cloud certified and an influencer, as well as SCRUM and Oracle Java certified. He has 18 years' experience as an IT architect and team leader. He has been an expert on IoT in the fields of oil and gas and transportation since 2013. He lives in Tuscany, where he loves cycling.
Read more about Giacomo Veneri

Antonio Capasso
Antonio Capasso
author image
Antonio Capasso

Antonio Capasso graduated in computer automation in 1999 and computer science in 2003 from the University of Naples. He has been working for twenty years on large and complex IT projects related to the industrial world in a variety of fields (automotive, pharma, food and beverage, and oil and gas), in a variety of roles (programmer, analyst, architect, and team leader) with different technologies and software. Since 2011, he has been involved in building and securing industrial IoT infrastructure. He currently lives in Tuscany, where he loves trekking and swimming.
Read more about Antonio Capasso

View More author details
Right arrow

Historian

In the previous sections, we saw how data acquisition in SCADA systems starts from the controllers (the PLCs or the DCSs) or RTUs gathering measurements from sensors and equipment through industrial protocols. The digital representations of these measures are usually called tags or datapoints. Each of these represents a single input or output signal that is monitored or controlled by the system and usually appear as value-timestamp pairs. After generation, the data can also be sent to other monitoring servers for analysis by humans or to the MES system for planning and maintenance. At the same time, data often feeds a specialized database for storing and managing times series. This specialized database is called Historian, or data Historian. Historians are not relational or NoSQL databases; they have fewer capabilities and features and a much simpler structure. However...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Hands-On Industrial Internet of Things
Published in: Nov 2018Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781789537222

Authors (2)

author image
Giacomo Veneri

Giacomo Veneri graduated in computer science from the University of Siena. He holds a PhD in neuroscience context with various scientific publications. He is Predix Cloud certified and an influencer, as well as SCRUM and Oracle Java certified. He has 18 years' experience as an IT architect and team leader. He has been an expert on IoT in the fields of oil and gas and transportation since 2013. He lives in Tuscany, where he loves cycling.
Read more about Giacomo Veneri

author image
Antonio Capasso

Antonio Capasso graduated in computer automation in 1999 and computer science in 2003 from the University of Naples. He has been working for twenty years on large and complex IT projects related to the industrial world in a variety of fields (automotive, pharma, food and beverage, and oil and gas), in a variety of roles (programmer, analyst, architect, and team leader) with different technologies and software. Since 2011, he has been involved in building and securing industrial IoT infrastructure. He currently lives in Tuscany, where he loves trekking and swimming.
Read more about Antonio Capasso