Running Drivers on Remote Systems
Although it is not the recommended usage pattern, ARDI can run remote drivers. These are drivers that run on systems other than the ARDI server itself.
These are most often used when…
- Your server is congested and is using too much network bandwidth or CPU.
- You are running a Linux-based ARDI server and need to communicate to a system that only has a Windows-based driver.
A Linux version of the toolkit has not yet been made available, as most use cases have involved Windows servers.
Installation Steps
Step 1: Install the Remote I/O Tools
On a Windows system (this can be any standard OS - you do not require a Server edition), you will need to install the remote I/O tools. This installs the driver management framework (as well as dependencies, like Python and the ARDI driver toolkits).
Step 2: Install the Drivers
You'll need to install the individual drivers you want to communicate with.
Step 3: Add the Drivers to ARDI
Next, you'll need to add new drivers to ARDI. Remember to include the host name in the driver configuration - this tells ARDI that the driver is located on a different host.