Good morning everyone, I spent a HELLISH day yesterday trying to sort this problem out, and screwed up the registry on my own PC. So, any help would be GREATLY appreciated.
I am deploying a LV 8.20 executable for a client. The Executable has 3 Shared Variables, and I am using the 'deploy library' command during initialization to force my executable to act as an OPC server. From my local PC I can use the NI Server Explorer, and a couple of third-party OPC client apps to see that I am, indeed, publishing the data as an OPC server.
The problem comes when I try to use another PC on the LAN to act as an OPC server to 'see' the published data from the first PC.
Network Topology: Windows XP Pro boxes on a linksys wireless router. I can successfully connect PC to PC, and they are both (I am starting with two PCs) on the same workgroup, which happens to be 'MSHOME' here at my client site.
When I try to connect to the OPC server with a second PC, I get a message like 'Connection Refused, insure that both PCs are on the network, that remote administration is active, and that remote registry services are enabled.'
I have found quite a few forum posts with people asking the very same question that I am, but no one seemed to have a definitive answer to how to get two PCs to share OPC info on a LAN. Most of the posts I have found point you to posts for enabling DCOM on the PCs. I have followed all the instructions that I could find, changing registry settings, turning on and off different Windows services, setting permissions, etc. I have gone so far into these settings (without any really definitive process to follow) so far, that I have managed to render my PC unable to serve as an OPC server any longer. In fact, once I am done with this post I have to repair my OS.
All the documents and forum posts I can find are a little older, and refer to Win 98, ME, etc.
Has ANYONE gone through this process of getting a client PC to talk to a LV 8.20 SVE OPC Server through a LAN? The instructions and guidance I have found on the web were nothing short of diabolical.
Any help would be appreciated.
Wes
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Wes Ramm, Cyth UK
CLD, CPLI