Azbil AZ-1SHM Smart HART® Modem

Manufacture: Azbil Corporation
Model: AZ-1SHM

Service personnel absolutely need this tool. It puts useful fieldwork functions for HART communication right into the HART modem.

Features

Quick check of HART communication status

  • Azbil equipped model AZ-1SHM with a loop power checker and HART communication checker. These tools help you quickly find the root cause of HART communication problems.
  • We supply a Support Tool (a Windows application) with model AZ-1SHM. This tool displays HART communication waveforms and specific details. You can use this protocol monitor to deeply analyze various problems.

Support for wireless connection

  • Model AZ-1SHM connects to various host PCs using USB or Bluetooth. Bluetooth lets you work safely in harsh environments. You do not have to worry about communication cables.

* You can only use wireless connections in certified countries. Please check the certification page of each country on this site for compliance details.

Supplying power to the field device

  • Model AZ-1SHM supplies power directly to the field device. You can easily check and set parameters. You can do this even if the device lacks power during construction or maintenance.

Support for Azbil’s SFN (DE) communication

  • You can adjust and set up SFN devices quickly. Just combine this tool with Azbil’s Field Communication Software, model CFS100.

* You cannot use wireless connections when running the model CFS100 software.

OSS license

Open Source Software License List

[English]

The smart HART modem model AZ-1SHM includes third-party open source software (OSS). We list this software below. The specific OSS license conditions override any other product terms. You must follow these licenses when using this product.

A. Support Tool

This table shows licenses for OSS included in the Support Tool of this product.

Package nameVersionLicense
1isemail2010-10-18BSD
2Math.NET Numerics4.7.0MIT/X11
3OxyPlot1.0.0MIT
4SharpZipLib1.1.0MIT

B. Firmware

This table shows licenses for OSS included in the firmware of this product.

Package nameVersionLicense
1Arduino-ESP321.0.4LGPL 2.1

The firmware includes OSS components under the GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE (LGPL) Version 2.1. You can request the source code via email. Send your request to support-shm@azbil.com. Title the email “OSS Request”. Please include your name, company name, country, and email address.

We charge a separate shipping fee. We only use your personal data to send the source code. Sending this email means you consent to this data usage. Please read our Privacy Policy for more details.

You must comply with the Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act of Japan. You must also follow US Export Administration Regulations and other export laws. Do not export the source code without proper government permission.

We describe the license terms of each OSS below.

A1. isemail

Copyright© 2008-2010, Dominic Sayers
Test schema documentation Copyright © 2010, Daniel Marschall
All rights reserved.

You may redistribute and use this software. You may use source and binary forms. You may modify it. However, you must meet these specific conditions:

– You must keep the copyright notice in source code redistributions. Include this list of conditions and the disclaimer.
– You must reproduce the copyright notice in binary redistributions. Include this list of conditions and the disclaimer in the documentation.
– You cannot use Dominic Sayers’s name to promote derived products. You cannot use contributor names either. You need specific written permission first.

WE PROVIDE THIS SOFTWARE “AS IS”. WE DISCLAIM ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES. THIS INCLUDES WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. WE ARE NOT LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT OR INDIRECT DAMAGES. WE ARE NOT LIABLE FOR INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES. WE ARE NOT LIABLE FOR LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS. WE ARE NOT LIABLE FOR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION. THIS APPLIES TO CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT.

package com.dominicsayers.isemail

Author Dominic Sayers

dominic@sayers.cc
Translated from PHP into Java by Daniel Marschall
copyright 2008-2010 Dominic Sayers; Java-Translation 2010 by Daniel Marschall
php BSD License
http://www.dominicsayers.com/isemail
version 2010-10-18. Java-Translation of isemail.php:r68.

A2. Math.NET Numerics

Copyright© 2002-2020 Math.NET

We grant permission, free of charge, to anyone obtaining a copy of this software. You receive the software and associated files. You may deal in the Software without restriction. You may use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and sell copies. You may permit persons receiving the Software to do the same. You must meet the following conditions:

You must include the above copyright notice in all copies. You must include this permission notice in all copies or substantial portions.

WE PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE “AS IS”. WE OFFER NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. WE DISCLAIM EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES. THIS INCLUDES WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS ARE NOT LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM OR DAMAGES.

A3. OxyPlot

The MIT License

Copyright© 2014 OxyPlot contributors

We grant permission, free of charge, to anyone obtaining a copy of this software. You receive the software and associated files. You may deal in the Software without restriction. You may use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and sell copies. You may permit persons receiving the Software to do the same. You must meet the following conditions:

You must include the above copyright notice in all copies. You must include this permission notice in all copies or substantial portions.

WE PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE “AS IS”. WE OFFER NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. WE DISCLAIM EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES. THIS INCLUDES WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS ARE NOT LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM OR DAMAGES.

A4. SharpZipLib

Copyright© 2000-2018 SharpZipLib Contributors

We grant permission, free of charge, to anyone obtaining a copy of this software. You receive the software and associated files. You may deal in the Software without restriction. You may use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and sell copies. You may permit persons receiving the Software to do the same. You must meet the following conditions:

You must include the above copyright notice in all copies. You must include this permission notice in all copies or substantial portions.

WE PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE “AS IS”. WE OFFER NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. WE DISCLAIM EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES. THIS INCLUDES WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS ARE NOT LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM OR DAMAGES.

B1. Arduino-ESP32

GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE

Version 2.1, February 1999
Copyright© 1991, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA

Everyone may copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document. You cannot change it.

[This is the first released version of the Lesser GPL. It also counts as the successor of the GNU Library Public License, version 2. Hence we use the version number 2.1.]

Preamble

Understanding Free Software

Most software licenses aim to restrict your freedom. They stop you from sharing and changing the software. In contrast, the GNU General Public Licenses guarantee your freedom. We want you to share and change free software. This ensures the software remains free for all users.

This Lesser General Public License applies to specific software packages. It usually applies to libraries. The Free Software Foundation and other authors use it. You can use it too. We suggest you consider your strategy first. Choose between this license and the ordinary General Public License based on your needs.

Free software refers to freedom of use, not price. We designed our General Public Licenses to secure your freedoms. You can distribute copies of free software. You can charge for this service. You receive source code or can get it easily. You can change the software and use pieces in new programs. We inform you of these rights clearly.

Protecting Your Rights

We make restrictions to protect your rights. Distributors cannot deny you these rights. They cannot ask you to surrender these rights. These restrictions create specific responsibilities for you. You must follow them when distributing or modifying copies.

For example, you might distribute copies of the library. You must give the recipients all your rights. You must ensure they receive the source code. You might link other code with the library. If so, you must provide complete object files to recipients. This lets them relink files after modifying and recompiling the library. You must show them these terms.

We protect your rights using two steps. First, we copyright the library. Second, we offer you this license. This gives you legal permission to copy, distribute, or modify the library.

We want to protect each distributor. We state clearly that the free library has no warranty. Someone else might modify and pass on the library. Recipients must know they lack the original version. This protects the original author’s reputation from new problems.

Software Patents and Linking

Software patents constantly threaten free programs. Companies might restrict users by obtaining a restrictive patent license. We insist on consistent patent licenses. Any patent license must support the full freedom of use.

The ordinary GNU General Public License covers most GNU software. This Lesser license applies to designated libraries. It permits linking these libraries into non-free programs. Linking a program with a library creates a combined work. The ordinary license permits this only if the combination remains free. The Lesser license permits laxer criteria for linking.

We call this the “Lesser” license because it protects user freedom less. It provides fewer advantages over competing non-free programs. We use the ordinary license for most libraries. However, the Lesser license provides advantages in special circumstances.

Sometimes we must encourage widespread use of a library. We want it to become a standard. Non-free programs must use the library to achieve this. Other times, a free library competes with non-free libraries. Limiting the free library offers little gain. In these cases, we use the Lesser license.

Maintaining User Freedom

The Lesser license still ensures important freedoms. Users of linked programs can still modify the Library. They can run the program using their modified version. The precise terms follow below. Pay close attention to the terms. Notice the difference between a “work based on the library” and a “work that uses the library”.

TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION

1. Definitions and Scope

0. This License Agreement applies to any software library or program containing a specific notice. The copyright holder must state you can distribute it under this License. We address each licensee as “you”.

A “library” means a collection of software functions or data. Developers link these to form executables.

The “Library” refers to any such software library distributed under these terms. A “work based on the Library” means the Library or any derivative work. It includes works containing the Library or a portion of it. It includes modified or translated works.

“Source code” means the preferred form for making modifications. Complete source code includes all modules, interface definition files, and compilation scripts.

This License only covers copying, distribution, and modification. Running a program using the Library is not restricted. Output is covered only if its contents constitute a derivative work.

2. Copying Source Code

1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the source code. You must conspicuously publish an appropriate copyright notice. You must include a disclaimer of warranty. Keep all License notices intact. Distribute a copy of this License with the Library.

You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy. You may also offer warranty protection for a fee.

3. Modifying the Library

2. You may modify your copies of the Library. This forms a work based on the Library. You may distribute such modifications under Section 1. You must also meet all these conditions:

a) The modified work must remain a software library.
b) You must prominently state that you changed the files and note the date.
c) You must license the entire work at no charge to all third parties under this License.
d) A modified facility might refer to an application-supplied function. You must ensure the facility still operates if the application lacks this function. It must perform whatever meaningful purpose remains.

These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. Independent sections do not fall under this License when distributed separately. However, you must follow this License when distributing them as part of the whole Library.

Mere aggregation of another work with the Library does not bring the other work under this License.

4. Choosing the Ordinary GPL

3. You may opt to apply the ordinary GNU General Public License instead of this License. You must alter all notices to refer to the ordinary License. Do not make any other changes to these notices.

This change is irreversible for that specific copy. The ordinary License applies to all subsequent copies and derivative works. This option helps when copying part of the Library into a standard program.

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You might offer access to copy object code from a designated place. You must offer equivalent access to copy the source code from the same place.

6. Works That Use the Library

5. A program might contain no derivatives of the Library. It might just compile or link with it. We call this a “work that uses the Library”. This work falls outside the scope of this License.

However, linking this work with the Library creates a derivative executable. This License covers that executable. Section 6 states terms for distributing such executables.

Sometimes an object file uses small macros or inline functions from a header file. The use of this object file remains unrestricted. Larger executables will still fall under Section 6.

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6. You may combine a “work that uses the Library” with the Library. You may distribute this new work under your chosen terms. However, your terms must permit modifications for the customer’s own use. They must also allow reverse engineering to debug these modifications.

You must give prominent notice that the work uses the Library. You must supply a copy of this License. You must include the Library copyright notice during execution. Also, you must do one of these things:

a) Accompany the work with the complete machine-readable source code for the Library. You must also include the complete machine-readable “work that uses the Library”. This lets users modify the Library and relink the executable.
b) Use a suitable shared library mechanism. This mechanism must use a copy of the library already present on the user’s computer. It must operate properly with user-installed modified libraries.
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Operating system components do not need to be distributed with the executable.

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8. You may not copy or distribute the Library except as expressly provided. Any attempt otherwise is void. It automatically terminates your rights. However, compliant third parties will not lose their licenses.

9. You do not have to accept this License. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or distribute the Library. Modifying or distributing the Library indicates your acceptance of this License.

9. Patents and Geographic Limits

10. Recipients automatically receive a license from the original licensor when you redistribute. You may not impose further restrictions. You are not responsible for enforcing third-party compliance.

11. A court judgment or patent infringement might impose new conditions. These do not excuse you from following this License. You must satisfy your obligations completely. If you cannot distribute while satisfying both, you may not distribute the Library at all.

12. The original copyright holder may add geographical distribution limitations. This applies if patents restrict the Library in certain countries. This License incorporates the limitation automatically.

13. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised versions of this License. You may choose to follow the current version or any later version. You may choose any version ever published if no version is specified.

10. No Warranty Conditions

14. Write to the author to ask for permission to incorporate parts of the Library into other free programs. We sometimes make exceptions for Free Software Foundation copyrights. We aim to preserve the free status of all derivatives.

NO WARRANTY

15. WE LICENSE THE LIBRARY FREE OF CHARGE. THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE LIBRARY. WE PROVIDE THE LIBRARY “AS IS” WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. WE DISCLAIM IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. YOU ASSUME THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE. YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY REPAIRS.

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END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS

Applying These Terms to New Libraries

You might develop a new library. We recommend making it free software. You can apply these terms easily. Attach the following notices to the library. Place them at the start of each source file.

one line to give the library’s name and an idea of what it does.
Copyright© year name of author

This library is free software. You can redistribute it or modify it under the GNU Lesser General Public License. See version 2.1 or any later version.

We distribute this library hoping it is useful. However, we provide it WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY. We disclaim implied warranties of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the License for details.

You should have received a copy of the License. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.

You should also get your employer to sign a “copyright disclaimer” if necessary. Here is a sample:

Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the library `Frob’ written by James Random Hacker.

signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990
Ty Coon, President of Vice
That’s all there is to it!

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