Operation notes for a WiFi JACE

Operation of the WiFi-equipped JACE allows it to be accessed via a wireless 802.11 connection, for example. a station (fox) connection from Workbench, or a station-to-station fox connection, or a Workbench platform connection, or a browser connection, all from a host on that same network. You specify that network in the TCP/IP platform configuration of the JACE, under the “Interface 3” section of the platform TCP/IP Configuration view, or in the station’s equivalent TcpIpPlatformService view.

By default, the Interface 3 (bc0) adapter is not enabled—you need to enable it and then specify the appropriate network serviced by the target WiFi router/access point. Just as when enabling both Ethernet LAN ports on the JACE, the Interface 3 bc0 wireless adapter must specify a different network (subnet) than either LAN1 or (if enabled) LAN2.

NoteA JACE does not provide IP routing or bridging operation between different Interfaces (LAN ports, WiFi, GPRS, dialup).

Even if no permanent LAN1 connection is made to the WiFi-equipped JACE, it may be typical to leave it (Interface 1) enabled and configured to a known static IP address. This could help facilitate on-site NiagaraAX maintenance, for example, by connecting an Ethernet cable directly between its LAN1 port and an engineering workstation laptop, and then accessing it using this separate network.

Be aware that any QNX-based JACE has only a single IPv4 TCP/IP gateway and (potential) set of IPv4 DNS servers, which apply to all Eth/IP interfaces (en0, en1, bc0). If the WiFi network (Interface 3, bc0) is the primary operating network for the JACE, you should specify IP address values for the JACE’s IPv4 gateway and DNS servers accordingly. Often the IP address of the target Wifi router/access point is used as the “IPv4 Gateway”, and its DNS server addresses are reused in the JACE’s TCP/IP setup. Otherwise, outbound operations from the JACE’s station, e.g. IP-based discover operations, or WeatherService or other customized applications, may fail because a route or host was not found.

Finally, note these two differences between Interface 3 (bc0) and the two onboard LAN ports (en0, en1):