Summary Mode for Raw Historic Traces

Summary Mode for raw historic traces is designed to help your system avoid the performance issues that can occur when traces have high numbers of values. It works by allowing you to define a Point Limit, which sets the maximum number of values that can be represented by a trace (for a Trend’s time range). If the Point Limit is exceeded, ClearSCADA automatically adjusts the trace so that it uses processed historic data instead of raw historic data. This results in a trace that shows a reasonable amount of values and is responsive (a high number of values on a trace can cause slow performance).

For example, if you set the Point Limit to 2000, it means the trace can show up to 2000 values on a single interval (that is, the trace can represent up to 2000 values shown on screen at any one time). If the trace has 2300 values to show, ClearSCADA automatically sets the trace to use processed historic data with an interval of Per Pixel. As a result, the Trend covers the same time range but shows fewer values on the trace. As the values on the trace are now processed, they are not the actual reported values; they are calculated values.

When ClearSCADA has to display a Trend in Summary Mode, it sets the trace to:

The processed historic data is used as the source data when the trace’s values exceed the Point Limit. If you reduce the interval so that the values are lower than the Point Limit, the trace will revert to using raw historic values again.

Further Information

Processed Historic Data on Trends

Add a Trace to a Trend

Point Limit Setting: see Configure a Trace

Processed Historic Data on Trends


Disclaimer

ClearSCADA 2017 R3