// Shows how to configure the OPC UA .NET stack and SDK using its configuration file (XML). For more information, see
// https://kb.opclabs.com/OPC_UA_.NET_SDK_Configuration .
using System;
using OpcLabs.BaseLib.Instrumentation;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.Engine;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.OperationModel;
namespace UANetSdkConfiguration
{
class Program
{
static void Main()
{
// Set the source of OPC UA .NET SDK configuration to the "App.config" file only. In "old-style" Visual Studio
// projects (for .NET Framework only), during the build, Visual Studio copies the "App.config" file from the
// project to the output directory, and renames it to match the name of the executable. In this example, the
// "App.config" from the project becomes "UANetSdkConfiguration.exe.config" in the build output directory. The
// runtime looks for this file by appending ".config" to the name of the currently running executable.
//
// In "new-style" Visual Studio projects (mainly for .NET Core/.NET 5+), this automatic mechanism is not
// present. To get around it, simply include a properly named "App.config" file (in our case, it is
// "UANetSdkConfiguration.dll.config") in the project's root directory, and set "Copy to Output Directory" in
// its Properties to either "Copy always" or "Copy if newer". Notice the ".dll.config" file extension used
// under .NET Core/.NET 5+, as opposed to ".exe.config" under .NET Framework.
//
// The "App.config" mechanism is a standard configuration mechanism in .NET Framework. In our case, the
// "App.config" contains a references to *another* XML configuration file, whose format is specific to the OPC
// UA .NET SDK. This example calls this file "MyApplication.Config.xml", but it can have any name, as long as it
// matches the information provided in the (properly renamed) "App.config".
//
// The "MyApplication.Config.xml" file in this example specifies somewhat lower value for the MaxMessageSize
// transport quota than the default.
//
// If the "App.config" file does not specify the file path of the OPC UA .NET SDK configuration, the component
// tries to load it from a default file, residing in the same directory as the application's executable
// assembly, and with the same name, but with a file extension ".Config.xml". This means that for this project,
// it would be named UANetSdkConfiguration.Config.xml.
EasyUAClient.SharedParameters.EngineParameters.ConfigurationSources = UAConfigurationSources.AppConfig;
// Hook static events.
// Uncomment the statement below for troubleshooting.
//EasyUAClient.LogEntry += EasyUAClientOnLogEntry;
// Perform some OPC operations.
UAEndpointDescriptor endpointDescriptor =
"opc.tcp://opcua.demo-this.com:51210/UA/SampleServer";
// or "http://opcua.demo-this.com:51211/UA/SampleServer" (currently not supported)
// or "https://opcua.demo-this.com:51212/UA/SampleServer/"
// Instantiate the client object
var client = new EasyUAClient();
Console.WriteLine("Obtaining value of a node...");
try
{
object value = client.ReadValue(endpointDescriptor, "nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=10853");
// Display results
Console.WriteLine("value: {0}", value);
}
catch (UAException uaException)
{
Console.WriteLine("*** Failure: {0}", uaException.GetBaseException().Message);
}
Console.WriteLine();
Console.WriteLine("Press Enter to continue...");
Console.ReadLine();
}
// Event handler for the LogEntry event.
// Display the loggable entries related to UA .NET SDK configuration.
private static void EasyUAClientOnLogEntry(object sender, LogEntryEventArgs logEntryEventArgs)
{
if ((130 <= logEntryEventArgs.EventId) && (logEntryEventArgs.EventId <= 139))
Console.WriteLine(logEntryEventArgs);
}
}
}