Protocol Description: The Request
Protocol Description: The Request
Protocol Description: The Request
The Request
The function code in the request tells the addressed slave device what kind of action to
perform. The data bytes contains any additional information that the slave will need to
perform the function. For example, function code 03 will request the slave to read
holding registers and respond with their contents. The data field must contain the
information telling the slave which register to start at and how many registers to read.
The error check field provides a method for the slave to validate the integrity of the
message contents.
The Response
If the slave makes a normal response, the function code in the response is an echo of
the function code in the request. The data bytes contain the data collected by the slave,
such as register values or status. If an error occurs, the function code is modified to
indicate that the response is an error response, and the data bytes contain a code that
describes the error. The error check field allows the master to confirm that the message
contents are valid.
ASCII Mode
When controllers are setup to communicate on a Modbus network using ASCII
(American Standard Code for Information Interchange) mode, each eight-bit byte in a
message is sent as two ASCII characters. The main advantage of this mode is that it
allows time intervals of up to one second to occur between characters without causing
an error.
Coding System
Hexadecimal ASCII printable characters 0 ... 9, A ... F
Bits per Byte
1 start bit
7 data bits, least significant bit sent first
1 bit for even / odd parity-no bit for no parity
1 stop bit if parity is used-2 bits if no parity
Error Checking
Longitudinal Redundancy Check (LRC)
RTU Mode
When controllers are setup to communicate on a Modbus network using RTU (Remote
Terminal Unit) mode, each eight-bit byte in a message contains two four-bit
hexadecimal characters. The main advantage of this mode is that its greater character
density allows better data throughput than ASCII for the same baud rate. Each
message must be transmitted in a continuous stream.
Coding System
Eight-bit binary, hexadecimal 0 ... 9, A ... F
Two hexadecimal characters contained in each eight-bit field of the message
Bits per Byte
1 start bit
8 data bits, least significant bit sent first
1 bit for even / odd parity-no bit for no parity
1 stop bit if parity is used-2 bits if no parity
Error Check Field
Cyclical Redundancy Check (CRC)
In ASCII mode, messages start with a colon ( : ) character (ASCII 3A hex), and end
with a carriage return-line feed (CRLF) pair (ASCII 0D and 0A hex).
The allowable characters transmitted for all other fields are hexadecimal 0 ... 9, A ... F.
Networked devices monitor the network bus continuously for the colon character. When
one is received, each device decodes the next field (the address field) to find out if it is
the addressed device.
Intervals of up to one second can elapse between characters within the message. If a
greater interval occurs, the receiving device assumes an error has occurred. A typical
message frame is shown below.
RTU Framing
In RTU mode, messages start with a silent interval of at least 3.5 character times. This
is most easily implemented as a multiple of character times at the baud rate that is
being used on the network (shown as T1-T2-T3-T4 in the figure below). The first field
then transmitted is the device address.
The allowable characters transmitted for all fields are hexadecimal 0 ... 9, A ... F.
Networked devices monitor the network bus continuously, including during the silent
intervals. When the first field (the address field) is received, each device decodes it to
find out if it is the addressed device.
Following the last transmitted character, a similar interval of at least 3.5 character
times marks the end of the message. A new message can begin after this interval.
The entire message frame must be transmitted as a continuous stream. If a silent
interval of more than 1.5 character times occurs before completion of the frame, the
receiving device flushes the incomplete message and assumes that the next byte will be
the address field of a new message.
Similarly, if a new message begins earlier than 3.5 character times following a previous
message, the receiving device will consider it a continuation of the previous message.
This will set an error, as the value in the final CRC field will not be valid for the
combined messages. A typical message frame is shown below.
Address Field
The address field of a message frame contains two characters (ASCII) or eight bits
(RTU). The individual slave devices are assigned addresses in the range of 1 ... 247.
Function Field
The Function Code field tells the addressed slave what function to perform.
The following functions are supported by Modbus poll
ASCII
When ASCII mode is used for character framing, the error-checking field contains two
ASCII characters. The error check characters are the result of a Longitudinal
Redundancy Check (LRC) calculation that is performed on the message contents,
exclusive of the beginning colon and terminating CRLF characters.
The LRC characters are appended to the message as the last field preceding the CRLF
characters.
LRC Example Code
RTU
When RTU mode is used for character framing, the error-checking field contains a 16-
bit value implemented as two eight-bit bytes. The error check value is the result of a
Cyclical Redundancy Check calculation performed on the message contents.
The CRC field is appended to the message as the last field in the message. When this is
done, the low-order byte of the field is appended first, followed by the high-order byte.
The CRC high-order byte is the last byte to be sent in the message.
CRC Example Code
Request
The request message specifies the starting coil and quantity of coils to be read.
Example of a request to read 10...22 (Coil 11 to 23) from slave device address 4:
Response
The coil status response message is packed as one coil per bit of the data field. Status
is indicated as: 1 is the value ON, and 0 is the value OFF. The LSB of the first data byte
contains the coil addressed in the request. The other coils follow toward the high-order
end of this byte and from low order to high order in subsequent bytes. If the returned
coil quantity is not a multiple of eight, the remaining bits in the final data byte will be
padded with zeroes (toward the high-order end of the byte). The byte count field
specifies the quantity of complete bytes of data.
Request
The request message specifies the starting input and quantity of inputs to be read.
Example of a request to read 10...22 (input 10011 to 10023) from slave device address
4:
Response
The input status response message is packed as one input per bit of the data field.
Status is indicated as: 1 is the value ON, and 0 is the value OFF. The LSB of the first
data byte contains the input addressed in the request. The other inputs follow toward
the high-order end of this byte and from low order to high order in subsequent bytes. If
the returned input quantity is not a multiple of eight, the remaining bits in the final data
byte will be padded with zeroes (toward the high-order end of the byte). The byte count
field specifies the quantity of complete bytes of data.
Request
The request message specifies the starting register and quantity of registers to be read.
Example of a request to read 0...1 (register 40001 to 40002) from slave device 1:
Request
The request message specifies the starting register and quantity of registers to be read.
Example of a request to read 0...1 (register 30001 to 30002) from slave device 1:
Response
The register data in the response message are packed as two bytes per register, with
the binary contents right justified within each byte. For each register the first byte
contains the high-order bits, and the second contains the low-order bits.
Request
The request message specifies the coil reference to be written. Coils are addressed
starting at zero-coil 1 is addressed as 0.
The requested ON / OFF state is specified by a constant in the request data field. A
value of FF 00 hex requests the coil to be ON. A value of 00 00 requests it to be OFF.
All other values are illegal and will not affect the coil.
Response
The normal response is an echo of the request, returned after the coil state has been
written.
Example of a response to the request:
Request
The request message specifies the register reference to be Written. Registers are
addressed starting at zero-register 1 is addressed as 0.
The requested Write value is specified in the request data field. Here is an example of a
request to Write register 40002 to 00 03 hex in slave device 17.
Response
The normal response is an echo of the request, returned after the register contents
have been written.
The requested ON / OFF states are specified by contents of the request data field. A
logical 1 in a bit position of the field requests the corresponding coils to be ON. A logical
0 requests it to be OFF.
The request data contents are two bytes: CD 01 hex (1100 1101 0000 0001 binary).
The binary bits correspond to the coils in the following way:
Bit: 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Coil: 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 - - - - - - 29 28
The first byte transmitted (CD hex) addresses coils 27 ... 20, with the least significant
bit addressing the lowest coil (20) in this set.
The next byte transmitted (01 hex) addresses coils 29 and 28, with the least significant
bit addressing the lowest coil (28) in this set. Unused bits in the last data byte should
be zero-filled.
Request
The request message specifies the register references to be written. Registers are
addressed starting at zero-register 1 is addressed as 0.
The requested write values are specified in the request data field. Data is packed as two
bytes per register.
Response
The normal response returns the slave address, function code, starting address, and
quantity of registers written. Here is an example of a response to the request shown
above.
This function is an example how to calculate a LRC BYTE using the C language.
return (BYTE)(-nLRC);
} // End: LRC
This function is an example how to calculate a CRC word using the C language.
BYTE nTemp;
WORD wCRCWord = 0xFFFF;
while (wLength--)
{
nTemp = *nData++ ^ wCRCWord;
wCRCWord >>= 8;
wCRCWord ^= wCRCTable[nTemp];
}
return wCRCWord;
} // End: CRC16