Files
wwtools/mxaccesscli/docs/usage.md
T
Joseph Doherty 9de8660688 mxaccesscli: route write through Advise vs AdviseSupervisory by user
WriteCommand now picks the LMXProxyServer advise variant based on
whether credentials were supplied:

  --username given  -> Advise            (operator action; the write
                                          is attributed to the
                                          authenticated Galaxy user
                                          in the alarm/event audit
                                          trail)
  no --username     -> AdviseSupervisory (supervisory action; the
                                          write is attributed to the
                                          hosting client itself, no
                                          Galaxy user claimed)

MxItem grows AdviseSupervisory() alongside Advise() and shares the
same UnAdvise / RemoveItem teardown.

Verified live with the trigger / ack-as-dohertj2 / clear sequence on
TestMachine_001.TestAlarm002. The Set (anonymous, supervisory) and
Clear (anonymous, supervisory) rows pair with the Acknowledged row
(authenticated, Advise) under one Alarm_ID. On this development
galaxy every action still maps to User_Name=DefaultUser regardless
of advise variant — that's a galaxy-security configuration trait,
not a CLI bug. The routing is in place and will differentiate
correctly on a strict galaxy with real user records.

docs/usage.md gains an "Advise variant" section explaining the rule
and the expected User_Name population on strict vs permissive
galaxies.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-03 22:10:25 -04:00

18 KiB
Raw Blame History

mxa — usage

Read, write, and subscribe to AVEVA System Platform tags via MxAccess. The CLI runs in-process: each invocation registers an LMXProxyServer, executes, and unregisters cleanly. Errors carry the underlying MxStatusCategory so an agent can decide whether the failure is transient (Pending), configurational, or operational.

Common notes

  • Tag references are full attribute paths: <ObjectName>.<AttributeName> (e.g. TestMachine_001.Speed). For Galaxy: references, follow the convention used in InTouch / Object Viewer.
  • --client <name> sets the client name passed to MxAccess Register(). Defaults to mxa. Most install logs key on this string.
  • Timeouts are per-call. They control how long the CLI waits for a OnDataChange (read) or OnWriteComplete (write). The default is 5 seconds.
  • First-event latency. LMX has to resolve the reference and bind to the hosting engine on each fresh client connection. Empirically the first OnDataChange arrives 3-8 seconds after Advise(). Set timeouts and subscribe --seconds accordingly: a 3-second read may legitimately time out on first contact, then succeed on the next try because LMX has cached the binding.
  • Subsequent events are fast. Once a tag is bound, value-change updates propagate within ~100 ms.
  • Exit codes: 0 on success, 1 if any operation timed out or returned a non-Ok / non-Pending MxStatusCategory, 2 on argument-validation errors.

mxa info

Print the loaded ArchestrA.MxAccess assembly identity, supported --type values, and the full MxStatusCategory enum. No tag access.

mxa info

mxa read <tag> [<tag>...]

Reads one or more tags by briefly subscribing and capturing the first OnDataChange per tag.

Option Default Notes
-t, --timeout <seconds> 5 Per-tag timeout. Tags that don't deliver a DataChange within the window are reported with error: timeout.
--client <name> mxa Passed to Register().
--llm-json off Emit the JSON envelope.

Examples:

mxa read TestMachine_001.Speed
mxa read TestMachine_001.Speed Reactor1.Level -t 3
mxa read TestMachine_001.Speed Reactor1.Level --llm-json

LLM-JSON envelope:

{
  "query":   { "command": "read", "tags": ["TestMachine_001.Speed"], "timeout_s": 5.0, "client": "mxa" },
  "ok":      true,
  "results": [
    {
      "tag":       "TestMachine_001.Speed",
      "ok":        true,
      "value":     1234.5,
      "quality":   192,
      "timestamp": "2026-05-03T19:42:18.001",
      "statuses":  [
        { "Success": 0, "Category": "MxCategoryOk", "DetectedBy": "MxSourceRespondingAutomationObject", "Detail": 0 }
      ]
    }
  ]
}

mxa write <tag> <value>

Writes one value to one tag and waits for OnWriteComplete.

Option Default Notes
--type <kind> inferred Force the .NET type used for the boxed value. One of bool, byte, short, int, long, float, double, string, datetime.
-t, --timeout <seconds> 5 How long to wait for OnWriteComplete.
--user-id <int> 0 Pre-resolved authenticated user id passed straight to Write(). Use only when you already have a userId. 0 = unauthenticated.
-u, --username <name> (none) Galaxy / OS username. Combined with --domain (if set) into <domain>\<username> and resolved to a userId via AuthenticateUser before Write(). See Authentication.
--domain <name> (none) Domain or hostname for OS-authenticated galaxies. Combined with --username as <domain>\<username>. Omit for galaxy-authenticated logins.
-p, --password <pwd> (none) Password for --username. Redacted (***) in the LLM-JSON query echo.
--client <name> mxa Passed to Register().
--llm-json off Emit the JSON envelope. Includes authenticated and auth_user_id fields when --username was supplied.

Type inference rules (when --type is not set): true/false/yes/no/on/off/1/0 → bool; pure integer → int (then long); decimals → double; everything else → string.

Examples:

mxa write TestMachine_001.Setpoint 42.5 --type double
mxa write TestMachine_001.RunFlag true
mxa write TestMachine_001.Label   "Hello world"
mxa write Reactor1.Setpoint       100 --type int -t 10 --llm-json

The same JSON envelope shape as read, with results[0] containing { tag, ok, error?, statuses }. No value/quality/timestamp on the write result — consult a follow-up mxa read to confirm.

Authentication

Most galaxies require an authenticated userId to write attributes whose security classification is anything stricter than Free Access (i.e. Operate, Tune, Configure, Secured Write, Verified Write — see ../../aot/dev-guide/appendix-e-security-classifications.md).

The write command resolves credentials to a userId by calling LMXProxyServer.AuthenticateUser(verifyUser, password). The verifyUser string is composed from --username and --domain:

Galaxy mode Pass Composes to
osAuthenticationMode (Windows / domain users) --username dohertj --domain DESKTOP-6JL3KKO DESKTOP-6JL3KKO\dohertj
galaxyAuthenticationMode (galaxy-internal users) --username dohertj (no --domain) dohertj
Mixed / AAD UPN --username dohertj@example.com dohertj@example.com

Example:

mxa write TestMachine_001.Setpoint 75.5 --type double `
    --username dohertj --domain DESKTOP-6JL3KKO --password Sonamu89 `
    --llm-json

A successful authentication populates two new fields in the JSON envelope's results[]:

{
  "tag":           "TestMachine_001.Setpoint",
  "ok":            true,
  "authenticated": true,
  "auth_user_id":  17,        // returned by AuthenticateUser; 0 means failure
  "statuses":      [{"Category":"MxCategoryOk", ...}]
}

The human output appends (as <verify-user>, userId=N) to the success line so the right credentials are visible in interactive use.

Password handling

--password is redacted to *** in the LLM-JSON query echo and never logged in cleartext. It travels in-process from CliFx's argument parser straight into AuthenticateUser and is not persisted anywhere by the CLI.

Failure modes

What you sent What you get
Correct credentials, strict-mode galaxy authenticated=true, auth_user_id > 0, write proceeds.
Bad password, strict-mode galaxy auth_user_id == 0 → CLI exits 1 with "error": "authentication-failed". No write attempted.
Bad password, permissive-mode galaxy The proxy returns a non-zero auth_user_id regardless. The CLI cannot tell this apart from a successful auth — it's the galaxy admin's responsibility to configure security strictly enough to reject.
--username without --password Sends an empty password. Some galaxies allow this; most don't.

⚠️ Verified behavior on the test galaxy used during development: AuthenticateUser returned userId=1 for both the correct password and intentionally bad credentials (incl. an unknown username). This is consistent with a galaxy configured in Free Access mode where security checks are effectively disabled — the CLI's auth path is wired correctly, the galaxy just isn't strict. To exercise real authentication, target a galaxy with galaxyAuthenticationMode enabled and attribute-level security classifications above Free Access.

Advise variant — operator vs supervisory

write picks how it subscribes to the destination attribute (the briefly-active subscription used for type resolution before the Write call) based on whether you supplied credentials:

--username supplied? Advise variant used Audit-trail intent
Yes LMXProxyServer.Advise Operator action — attribute the Write to the authenticated Galaxy user.
No (anonymous) LMXProxyServer.AdviseSupervisory Supervisory action — attribute the Write to the hosting client (no Galaxy user claimed).

This affects how System Platform records the action in the alarm/event subsystem and the Historian's Events table. On a strict galaxy with galaxyAuthenticationMode and real user records:

  • Authenticated + AdviseUser_Name = <galaxy user>, User_Account = <galaxy domain>\<user>.
  • Anonymous + AdviseSupervisoryUser_Name typically NULL or the supervisory client identity.

On a permissive galaxy (the development config used here), every action maps to DefaultUser regardless of advise variant — the mechanism is wired correctly but can't be differentiated until galaxy security is configured with real users. See Authentication above.

Reusing an already-resolved userId

AuthenticateUser may be expensive (involves SQL Server lookup + Windows cred check). For batch scripts that issue many writes, call AuthenticateUser once via a manual call, capture the userId, then pass it directly via --user-id <N> to subsequent write invocations. This skips the per-call auth round-trip.

mxa subscribe <tag> [<tag>...]

Streams OnDataChange events for a duration.

Option Default Notes
-s, --seconds <seconds> 10 Wall-clock duration of the subscription.
--max <int> 1000 Hard cap on emitted events.
--client <name> mxa Passed to Register().
--llm-json off JSON Lines mode — one JSON object per line, no outer envelope.

Human output:

[INFO] Subscribed to 1 tag(s). Streaming for 30.0s. Ctrl-C to stop early.
[19:42:18.001] [OK ] TestMachine_001.Speed = 1234.5 (q=192)
[19:42:19.002] [OK ] TestMachine_001.Speed = 1245.7 (q=192)
...
[INFO] 30 event(s) emitted; subscription closed.

LLM-JSON output (one event per line, no surrounding [ ... ]):

{"tag":"TestMachine_001.Speed","ok":true,"value":1234.5,"quality":192,"timestamp":"2026-05-03T19:42:18.001","statuses":[{...}]}
{"tag":"TestMachine_001.Speed","ok":true,"value":1245.7,"quality":192,"timestamp":"2026-05-03T19:42:19.002","statuses":[{...}]}

JSON Lines lets a downstream consumer parse events incrementally rather than buffering the whole stream — the right shape for indefinite or long-running subscriptions.

Type support matrix

Verified end-to-end against the live ZB galaxy (System Platform 2017 Express, MxAccess 3.2.0.0). Each row records what the wire shape looks like in the JSON envelope.

MxDataType Read Write JSON shape Notes
MxBoolean JSON true / false --type bool accepts true/false/1/0/yes/no/on/off.
MxInteger (Int32) JSON number --type int. Up-cast to long if it overflows int.MaxValue.
MxFloat (single) ⚠️ JSON number Read verified on DevPlatform.CPULoad family. Write requires a writeable Float UDA — none in the test galaxy, but --type float is wired.
MxDouble JSON number No accessible Double instance in the test galaxy. Wiring is identical to Float; expected to work.
MxString JSON string Default inferred type for non-numeric values.
MxTime (DateTime) ⚠️ JSON string "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss" Read verified on DevPlatform.SystemStartupTime. Write via --type datetime accepts ISO-8601.
MxElapsedTime JSON number (seconds) No accessible instance in the test galaxy.
MxReferenceType JSON string (target object's Tagname) E.g. TestChildObject.Container"DevTestObject". Writing references is not exposed by the CLI.
MxQualifiedEnum (13) (likely string) No accessible instance.
MxQualifiedStruct (14) Access via dotted member names: <obj>.<struct>.<field>.
MxInternationalizedString (15) (likely string) No accessible instance.
MxBigString (16) JSON string No accessible instance.
Array (any type), bulk read/write via [] JSON array of element type Reference syntax <obj>.<arrayAttr>[]empty square brackets. Read returns the entire array as a single value. Write takes one positional value per element (mxa write '<obj>.<arr>[]' v1 v2 v3 ...). A bulk write resizes the array to the count provided (verified: 50 → 25 → 50 round-trip on MoveInPartNumbers).
Array (bare reference) The plain <obj>.<arrayAttr> (no brackets) returns MxCategoryCommunicationError, Detail=1003. Always use [] for bulk operations.
Array element by index scalar of element type Reference syntax <obj>.<arrayAttr>[<n>]. 1-based, runs from [1] to [NumElements]. [0] is invalid.

Legend: verified live, ⚠️ wiring present but no live instance to write, wiring present but no live instance found, not supported by MxAccess at this layer, not applicable.

To test write support for a type, use ../../grdb/ to find a deployed instance whose dynamic_attribute.mx_data_type matches and whose mx_attribute_category is in (2-11, 24) (Writeable_* family).

Errors and statuses

Every result carries a statuses array — the elements of the COM MXSTATUS_PROXY[] MxAccess passes back. Field names match the C# struct exactly:

Field Type Meaning
Success int16 0 = Ok, non-zero = error code
Category enum MxCategoryOk, MxCategoryPending, MxCategoryWarning, MxCategoryCommunicationError, MxCategoryConfigurationError, MxCategoryOperationalError, MxCategorySecurityError, MxCategorySoftwareError, MxCategoryOtherError, MxStatusCategoryUnknown
DetectedBy enum MxSourceRequestingLmx, MxSourceRespondingLmx, MxSourceRequestingNmx, MxSourceRespondingNmx, MxSourceRequestingAutomationObject, MxSourceRespondingAutomationObject, MxSourceUnknown
Detail int16 Additional error-code detail

A result is considered ok only if every statuses element has Category in (MxCategoryOk, MxCategoryPending).

Common failure shapes:

  • Category: MxCategoryConfigurationError — usually a typo'd reference or the attribute doesn't exist on the deployed instance. Sanity-check via graccesscli object snapshot.
  • Category: MxCategoryCommunicationError — engine isn't running, object is OffScan, or LMX can't reach the platform hosting the object.
  • Category: MxCategorySecurityError — secured attribute, --user-id 0. Use WriteSecured semantics (not yet exposed by this CLI) or target a Writeable_USC_* attribute.
  • Timeout — most likely the tag is genuinely silent (no value updates) or the reference is wrong. With --llm-json you'll see "error": "timeout" and an empty statuses.

Reading arrays

MxAccess accepts two reference forms for arrays — pick by what you need:

Whole array — <obj>.<arrayAttr>[] (empty brackets)

mxa read 'MESReceiver_001.MoveInPartNumbers[]' --llm-json

Returns the full array as a single JSON value:

{
  "tag":   "MESReceiver_001.MoveInPartNumbers[]",
  "ok":    true,
  "value": ["", "11111", "", "", /* ... 50 elements total ... */],
  "quality": 192,
  "statuses": [{"Success":-1,"Category":"MxCategoryOk", ...}]
}

The array is fixed-length (sized at deploy time per the template's array_dimension). Empty string elements are unset slots, not gaps.

Single element — <obj>.<arrayAttr>[N]

mxa read 'MESReceiver_001.MoveInPartNumbers[2]' --llm-json

Indices are 1-based: [1] is the first element, [NumElements] is the last. [0] is invalid. Single-element reads are also writeable: mxa write '<obj>.<attr>[N]' <value>.

Whole array write — also via []

Pass one positional value per element after the tag. The CLI bundles them into a strongly-typed array (string[], int[], bool[], …) before writing.

# Write a 50-element string array
mxa write 'MESReceiver_001.MoveInPartNumbers[]' \
    "" "11111" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" \
    "" "" "" "" "" "15" "" "" "" "" \
    "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" \
    "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" \
    "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "" ""

# Write a typed array
mxa write 'SomeObj.SomeFloats[]' 1.0 2.5 3.14 --type float

⚠️ A bulk write resizes the array to the count provided. If the configured array_dimension is 50 and you supply 25 values, after the write mxa read '...[]' returns 25 elements, not 50. The trailing slots are deallocated, not zero-filled. Always supply the full element count when you want to preserve the array's logical size — fetch the current count via mxa read '...[]' --llm-json first, or read it from array_dimension in ../../grdb/queries/attributes.sql.

Mixing scalar / array forms is guarded: passing multiple values without [] exits 2 with a clear error message.

What does not work

mxa read 'MESReceiver_001.MoveInPartNumbers'   # bare ref, no brackets
# → MxCategoryCommunicationError, Detail=1003

The plain reference (no [], no [N]) is rejected by the proxy on both read and write. Always include the brackets — empty for whole-array, indexed for element.

Discovering array length

The CLI doesn't (yet) auto-discover element count. Two ways to find it:

  1. Read with [] and count the returned values (this is the runtime length, which may have been resized by a previous bulk write).
  2. Query the Galaxy Repository's ../../grdb/queries/attributes.sql — the array_dimension column reports the configured size from the template at deploy time.

Picking a tag for a smoke test

If the live galaxy is not familiar:

  1. Connect to the Galaxy Repository SQL — see ../../grdb/connectioninfo.md.
  2. Find a deployed instance with a writeable UDA — ../../grdb/queries/attributes.sql lists user-defined attributes with their data type. Filter on a Writeable_* security classification (see ../../aot/dev-guide/appendix-e-security-classifications.md).
  3. The reference for MxAccess is <InstanceName>.<AttributeName>.