Files
wwtools/mbproxy
Joseph Doherty b3b8313e9c mbproxy: Wave 6 — wire ProxyCounters.AddBytes (bytes counters were always 0)
The 10-min stress test (1.46 M PDUs through the proxy) revealed that
status.json's bytes.upstreamIn / bytes.upstreamOut counters always read 0
because ProxyCounters.AddBytes was defined but never called from anywhere.
Same shape as the original review's W2.22 finding (counter wired in DTO +
HTML but no increment site), missed for the bytes counters specifically.

Wired five increment sites in PlcMultiplexer:

  OnUpstreamFrameAsync (request side, parsed frame)
    AddBytes(up: frame.Length, down: 0) — counted ONCE per parsed frame
    regardless of subsequent routing (cache hit, coalesce, backend
    round-trip, exception).

  RunBackendReaderAsync fan-out (response side, after TrySendResponse=true)
    AddBytes(up: 0, down: outFrame.Length) per delivered party. With
    coalescing, one backend response fans out to N parties and produces
    N × frame.Length bytes leaving the proxy upstream-side. Drops
    (TrySendResponse=false) increment ResponseDropForFullUpstream
    instead.

  Cache hit path
    AddBytes(up: 0, down: hitFrame.Length) for the BuildCacheHitFrame
    response (no backend round-trip but still bytes leaving the proxy).

  Saturation cleanup (W1.2 path, both branches)
    AddBytes(up: 0, down: excFrame.Length) per delivered exception 0x04.

  Non-coalescing-path saturation
    AddBytes(up: 0, down: excFrame.Length) for the single exception 0x04.

  Watchdog timeout exception delivery
    AddBytes(up: 0, down: excFrame.Length) per delivered exception 0x0B.

Backend-side bytes (proxy ↔ PLC) are NOT counted by these counters — the
field name is `BytesUpstreamIn/Out` which is upstream-only by contract.

Tests: 387 pass / 0 fail.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-14 09:30:48 -04:00
..

mbproxy

A .NET 10 Windows Service that sits inline as a Modbus TCP proxy in front of a fleet of AutomationDirect DirectLOGIC DL205/DL260 controllers, rewriting BCD-encoded registers bidirectionally so upstream clients can read and write them as plain integers. The proxy also offers an opt-in per-tag response cache (default OFF) for FC03/FC04 reads with bounded operator-configured staleness — see docs/Architecture/ResponseCache.md before enabling it.

32-bit BCD wire format is "two base-10000 digits in CDAB", not standard CDAB binary Int32. A 32-bit BCD tag at address A decodes as decimal = high * 10_000 + low where low is the register at A and high is the register at A+1. Each word independently must be 09999. Standard Modbus clients (NModbus, FluentModbus, Wonderware DAServer) that interpret CDAB as straight binary Int32 will silently corrupt any value > 9999 on writes and read garbage on reads. Configure your client to send/receive each register as a separate base-10000 BCD digit pair, not as a single binary Int32. Full details in docs/Features/BcdRewriting.md.

Hard constraints / prerequisites

  • Windows 10 / Server 2019 or later, 64-bit. No Linux or Docker support — the service uses Microsoft.Extensions.Hosting.WindowsServices and the Windows Event Log.
  • Modbus TCP backends reachable from the proxy host on port 502 (or the port configured per PLC). The H2-ECOM100 module caps simultaneous connections at 4 per PLC — a fifth upstream client will fail to connect.
  • Admin rights to install the service (install.ps1 requires elevation).
  • No COM dependency — this is a pure .NET 10 socket-level proxy (unlike the .NET Framework 4.8 / x86 siblings in this repo).
  • Python 3.10+ on the test machine to run the pymodbus-backed E2E simulator (not needed to run the service in production).

Layout

src/Mbproxy/          Main C# project (net10.0, Microsoft.NET.Sdk.Worker)
tests/Mbproxy.Tests/  xUnit v3 test project (314 unit + 48 E2E tests)
install/              PowerShell install/uninstall scripts and config template
docs/                 Architecture, features, operations, reference, and testing docs
DL260/                DL205/DL260 reference material and pymodbus simulator profile

Resource index

Task Go to
End-to-end architectural design (entry point — routes into focused docs below) docs/design.md
Phase-by-phase implementation plan and history docs/plan/README.md
Install, upgrade, uninstall, log file locations, first-install smoke checklist docs/operations.md
Dashboard KPI catalog docs/kpi.md
DL205/DL260 Modbus quirks (BCD, CDAB, octal V-memory, FC limits) DL260/dl205.md
pymodbus simulator profile (register seeds for E2E tests) DL260/dl205.json
Agent-oriented coding guide (architecture bullets, device quirks, phase context) CLAUDE.md

Detailed documentation

The docs/ tree is organized by topic. Start with docs/design.md for the canonical end-to-end design; jump to the focused pages below when you need depth on one area.

Architecture

Features

Operations

Reference

Testing

  • Testing/Simulator.md — pymodbus DL205 fixture, skip policy, and the load-bearing pymodbus 3.13 framer quirk.

Build and run

Build (Debug, multi-file — fast for iteration):

dotnet build Mbproxy.slnx -c Debug

Publish (Release, single-file self-contained, win-x64):

dotnet publish src/Mbproxy/Mbproxy.csproj -c Release -r win-x64 --self-contained true -o C:\build\mbproxy-publish

The published output is a single Mbproxy.exe (~100 MB). The self-contained publish bundles the full .NET 10 + ASP.NET Core runtime. No .NET installation is required on the target machine.

Run tests:

dotnet test Mbproxy.slnx -c Debug                    # all tests
dotnet test Mbproxy.slnx -c Debug --filter Category=Unit   # unit tests only (no Python required)
dotnet test Mbproxy.slnx -c Debug --filter Category=E2E    # E2E tests (require Python + pymodbus)

Run interactively (without installing as a service):

cd src/Mbproxy
dotnet run --configuration Debug

Edit src/Mbproxy/appsettings.json to configure PLCs before running. The admin status page will be at http://localhost:8080/ by default.

Install

Full detail is in docs/operations.md. Quick path:

# 1. Publish
dotnet publish src/Mbproxy/Mbproxy.csproj -c Release -r win-x64 --self-contained true -o C:\build\mbproxy-publish

# 2. Install (elevated PowerShell)
.\install\install.ps1 -PublishOutput C:\build\mbproxy-publish -Start

# 3. Edit the config that was placed at %ProgramData%\mbproxy\appsettings.json

# 4. Verify
Invoke-WebRequest http://localhost:8080/ -UseBasicParsing

Maintenance

Documentation doctrine for this repo: ../DOCS-GUIDE.md.

  • This README routes to deep docs — it does not duplicate them.
  • Design decisions: docs/design.md is the source of truth.
  • When the service's public surface or task→tool mapping changes, update this README and the root ../CLAUDE.md index row.