Extron Electronics GSS 100 User Guide User Manual

Page 30

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Command/Response Table for SIS Commands (continued)

Command

ASCII Command

(Host to Unit)

Response

(Unit to Host)

Additional description

Event (script) control

Read event buffer memory

EX1)

,

X1!

,

X1@

,

X1#

E

}

X1$]

Read the contents of a specific section of a memory
buffer for event number

X1)

.

Read event status

EX1)

E

}

X1%]

Show the status of event

X1)

. The following

X1%

information fields are displayed: event_type, event_
state, event_paused, error_status, RcvBuff_startptr,
cvBuff_endptr, UsrBuff_startptr, and UsrBuff_endpt.

Write event to memory
buffer

EX1)

,

X1!

,

X1@

,

X1^

,

X1#

E

}

Write event

X1)

to buffer

X1!

, offset by

X1@

. Include

data

X1^

, size

X1#

.

Ewr

X1)

,

X1^]

Read string from event
buffer memory

EX1)

,

X1!

,

X1@

,

X1&

FE

}

Read string from event

X1)

, buffer

X1!

, offset by

X1@

,

X1&

bytes.

<string>

]

Write string to event buffer
memory

EX1^

,

X1)

,

X1!

,

X1@

FE

}

Write data string

X1^

from event

X1)

, buffer

X1!

,

offset by

X1@

.

Ewr

X1)

,

X1^]

Start events

E

1AE

}

Ego

]

Initiate all programmed events.

Stop events

E

0AE

}

Est

]

Stop all programmed events.

Show # of running events

E

AE

}

Enmnn

]

nn is the number of events running.

View, information, part number, and firmware requests

Information request

I

Chn

X@

•Vmt

X@

•Exe

X(

•Typ

X1*]

Example:

I

Chn0•Vmt0•Exe1•Typ0

]

Pass-through input is not displayed, video output is not
muted, panel is partially locked, no sync signal is
detected on the pass-through input.

Request user memory usage

4I

X1)

•Bytes•Used•out•of•17344•KBytes

]

Example:

4I

1149184•Bytes•Used•out•of•17344•KBytes

]

This device has approximately 5850 kBytes of user
memory available (17344 kBytes – 11491 kBytes) for
additional stored images and HTML pages.

Request for part number

N

60-684-01

]

Display the GSS 100 part number.

Query firmware version

Q

X1!]

Firmware version x.xx.

Resets

Erase all files

E

Zfff

}

Zpf

]

Erase user-supplied files. Does not reset IP settings.

Master reset

E

Zxxx

}

Zpx

]

Resets all user settings to their default values. Does
not reset IP settings or delete loaded image files.

Absolute reset

E

Zqqq

}

Zpq

]

Resets all device settings to their factory defaults. Erases
all loaded files. The firmware version remains unchanged.

Absolute reset, retaining IP

E

ZY

}

Zpy

]

Similar to absolute reset (

E

Zqqq

}

), except that

IP settings (IP address, subnet mask, gateway
address, unit name, DHCP setting, and port mapping
[Telnet/web/Direct Access] are excluded). Preserves
communications with the device and is recommended
after a firmware update.

NOTE:

X@

= On or off status:

0 = off

1 = on

Pass-through status:

0 = pass-thu

1 = no pass-thru

X(

= Front panel lock modes

0 = unlock

1 = partial lock

2 = complete lock

X1*

= Pass-through sync status

0 = No sync detected

2 = H sync detected

1 = V sync detected

3 = HV (composite) sync detected

X1(

= Bytes of memory used

nnnnnnn (bytes)

X2)

= Firmware version

n.nn

X1)

= Event number

00 through 99

X1!

= Event buffer

0 = Receive

1 = User

2 = NVRAM

X1@

= Even buffer offset

00 through maximum buffer size

X1#

= Event data size (case sensitive)

b = bit

S = short (16 bits)

B = byte

L = long (32 bits)

X1^

= Event data to write

X1&

= Number of bytes to read

X1%

= Event status fields

See the complete list in the

EX1)

E

}

command, above

X1$

= ASCII digits representing the numeric value of the data element read from the event buffer

GSS 100 Graphic Still Store • Programming Guide

24

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