08-18-2016 09:01 PM
I recently purchased a new PC with Windows 10 for my home use. I have two GPIB-ENET Ethernet GPIB controllers that I use with Labview 2011 to run my test equipment. The whole reason I went with Ethernet was to remove any problems with NI not having driver support for an obsolete PC bus. I had been using these with Windows XP 32-bit. The problem now is that I seem to be unable to install the software for them under Windows 10. I tried XP compatibility mode and it comes up with some obsure error. To use them with Labview 2011, I had been using the 2.2.4.3500 version as the 2.2.8 that was included no longer supported it. Strange as its Ethernet.
The only way I have found that I can use them is to use Oracle VM VirtualBox and create a Windows XP image. I then install and run Labview under XP. Everything works find but I can't believe I need to go to this to get an Ethernet device that NI produced working.
Looks like $1200/ea for the 1G controllers. I really don't need that sort of BW on GPIB and can't see investing it all new hardware a second time for home use.
Does anyone else know of a way to get these working with Windows 10?
08-19-2016 02:44 PM
Hi Joe,
Are you using this one? If not, can you link us the product page?
08-19-2016 09:13 PM
Mine are the original and may be seen here:
https://sigrok.org/wiki/National_Instruments_GPIB-ENET
They have worked very well over the years.
08-22-2016 12:41 PM
Unforutnately the NI-488.2M driver for the GPIB-ENET is not tested for Windows 10 and likely unsupported. I think the VM is your best option here.
08-22-2016 07:40 PM
Is there a document on interfacing with the GPIB-ENET directly (using the Labview stack calls)?
08-23-2016 12:17 PM
It looks like the NI-488.2m driver is the gpibmngr.dll. You might be able to call it using a Call Library Function Node. The NI-488.2M Function Reference Manual explains each functions in detail
08-23-2016 10:51 PM
If you just post the command set for it, it will save me the time of having to sniff the bus to back it out. I have not looked yet but guessing it would not be too difficult to bypass everything and talk with it direct. My plan is to then just make a small library to mimic the orginal GPIB commands.
08-24-2016 04:07 PM
Hi Joe,
I'm not quite sure what you meant by commands. If you are talking about the commands that the GPIB instrument takes (the device that the GPIB-ENET is connected to), that is most likely device specific, please check its manual for that. Most GPIB instruments should have a command manual.
If you are talking about the functions you can use to call the commands, all the functions are in the 488.2M Function Reference Manual. I think it is a better resource.
08-24-2016 08:18 PM
I was asking about about the low level interface of the GPIB-ENET which is why I mentioned sniffing the Ethernet bus. I am pretty clear on the commands used to control my equipment. I would assume there was a document that the sofware developers used to write the interface originally. This is what I would be interested in.
08-25-2016 11:26 AM
Hi Joe,
Unfortunately that is not something we normally provide. If this is absoulatly nessasaary, please create a Service Request by calling in to 866-275-6964.