SYNOPSIS

int modbus_set_slave(modbus_t *ctx, int slave);

DESCRIPTION

The modbus_set_slave() function shall set the slave number in the libmodbus context.

The behavior depends of network and the role of the device:

RTU

Define the slave ID of the remote device to talk in master mode or set the internal slave ID in slave mode. According to the protocol, a Modbus device must only accept message holding its slave number or the special broadcast number.

TCP

The slave number is only required in TCP if the message must reach a device on a serial network. Some not compliant devices or software (such as modpoll) uses the slave ID as unit identifier, that’s incorrect (cf page 23 of Modbus Messaging Implementation Guide v1.0b) but without the slave value, the faulty remote device or software drops the requests! The special value MODBUS_TCP_SLAVE (0xFF) can be used in TCP mode to restore the default value.

The broadcast address is MODBUS_BROADCAST_ADDRESS. This special value must be use when you want all Modbus devices of the network receive the request.

RETURN VALUE

The function shall return 0 if successful. Otherwise it shall return -1 and set errno to one of the values defined below.

ERRORS

EINVAL

The slave number is invalid.

EXAMPLE

modbus_t *ctx;

ctx = modbus_new_rtu("/dev/ttyUSB0", 115200, 'N', 8, 1);
if (ctx == NULL) {
    fprintf(stderr, "Unable to create the libmodbus context\n");
    return -1;
}

rc = modbus_set_slave(ctx, YOUR_DEVICE_ID);
if (rc == -1) {
    fprintf(stderr, "Invalid slave ID\n");
    modbus_free(ctx);
    return -1;
}

if (modbus_connect(ctx) == -1) {
    fprintf(stderr, "Connection failed: %s\n", modbus_strerror(errno));
    modbus_free(ctx);
    return -1;
}

SEE ALSO

AUTHORS

The libmodbus documentation was written by Stéphane Raimbault <[email protected]>