Rslogix5000 Emulator PDF
Rslogix5000 Emulator PDF
Rslogix5000 Emulator PDF
qxd
3/1/04
5:12 PM
Page 1
ii
Contents
1 Installing RSLogix Emulate 5000
1
1
2
5
8
13
13
14
16
18
21
22
25
29
6 Simulating I/O
33
iii
CONTENTS
8 Software Activation
About the Activation Disk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Two Methods for Activating RSLogix Emulate 5000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Activating RSLogix Emulate 5000 after Installation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Protecting Your Activation Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Reactivating a Damaged Activation Key . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Troubleshooting Activation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Index
iv
37
37
39
41
43
47
47
47
49
50
50
51
53
Use:
Personal computer
Any with an Intel Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, or Pentium 4
CPU running at 300 MHz or higher
RAM
128 MB or more
Hard drive
Software Requirements
The following software must be installed before installing RSLogix Emulate 5000.
For this software
component:
Operating system
Install:
Notes:
Microsoft Windows XP
The emulator will not run on other
Professional Edition or Windows
versions of Windows.
XP Home editions (either one with
Service Pack 1 or higher)
- or Microsoft Windows 2000 (with
Service Pack 2 or higher)
- or Microsoft Windows NT 4.0
(with Service Pack 6a or higher)
Logix5000 programming
software
Communication software
5. The Setup program displays the License Agreement for the software. Read the
agreement carefully. If you choose to adhere to the terms of the agreement, click Yes.
If you do not accept the terms of the license agreement, the Setup program stops.
6. The Setup program displays the Customer Information screen. In this screen, enter
your name, the name of the company you work for, and your ten-digit software serial
number (provided with the software) in the fields provided. Click Next.
7. The Setup program asks you to choose a location for installing the software. By
default, the software is installed in the C:\Program Files\Rockwell Software\RSLogix
Emulate 5000 folder. If you want to change the location where the software will be
installed, click Browse and select a new location for the software. After choosing the
folder, click Next.
8. The Setup program asks you to choose the folder in the Start menu that will contain
the icons for the emulator. You can choose to use the default folder (Rockwell
Software), type a different folder name in the Program Folders field, or choose a
folder that already exists from the Existing Folders list.
9. The Setup program installs the software. When the software is installed, the Setup
program asks if you want an icon for the Chassis Monitor added to your Windows
desktop. The icon will give you a shortcut to starting the emulators Chassis Monitor
application. If you want an icon for the Chassis Monitor added to your desktop, click
Yes. If not, click No. (If you do not place the Chassis Monitor icon on your desktop,
you will need to access the Chassis Monitor through the Start menu.)
10. The RSLogix Emulate 5000 setup program displays a screen saying that its
installation is complete. If you want to display the release notes for the software,
check the I would like to view the README file check box. The README file
contains information concerning the software that has changed since the publication
of this book. If you have not already installed the activation for the software, check
the I would like to Move Activation to my Hard Disk check box.
11. Click Finish to end the RSLogix Emulate 5000 setup program. The setup program
ends. If you chose to view the README file in step 10, the file opens.
If you chose to move the activation file in step 10, the EVMove program starts. This
program will move the activation file from the RSLogix Emulate 5000 Master Disk
(provided with the software) to your hard drive.
The activation file is required for the proper operation of RSLogix Emulate 5000. See Chapter 8
for more information about software activation.
a. Insert your RSLogix Emulate 5000 master disk into your computers floppy disk
drive.
b. On the EvMove window, set the From Drive box to the letter for your computers
floppy disk drive (usually A:). Set the To Drive box to the letter for your
computers hard drive (usually C: or D:).
c. Click OK. The setup program displays the License Move Utility. This shows the
activation on the master disk and the activations that are already installed on your
hard disk.
1. Click the activation
you want to move
(WED32.EXE)
2. Click Move.
d. Click the activation you want to move from the master disk (WED32.EXE), then
click Move.
e. After EvMove moves the activation, it displays the Move Summary window. This
window informs you about the activations that were moved. Click OK.
This screen also asks for a serial number. Since you are installing the Lite version of
RSTestStand, there is no serial number provided with the software, but you will need
to enter a ten-digit number in the Serial Number field. (Any ten-digit number will do.)
After entering this information, click Next.
7. The Setup program asks you to choose a setup type. You can choose whether you
want the Setup program to install RSTestStand Lite to its default folder (\Program
Files\Rockwell Software\RSTestStand) or to another folder. You can also choose
whether or not you want to install certain components of RSTestStand Lite.
If you want to have all components of RSTestStand Lite installed to the default
folder, click Standard Feature Set Installation to Default Location.
If you want to choose the folder into which you want to install RSTestStand Lite
or choose the components you want to install, click Custom Location Selection
and/or Custom Feature Selection.
b. By default, all the components of RSTestStand Lite will be installed. Select the
components you do not want to install, and then click This feature will not be
available. (You cannot deselect the RSTestStand Lite component.)
To deselect a
component, click the
icon for the
component and then
click This feature
will not be
available.
(You cannot
deselect the
RSTestStand Lite
component.)
c. To change the folder into which you want to install RSTestStand Lite, click
Change. The Setup program displays a window that will allow you to select an
existing folder or create a new folder. Select the folder you want to use, then click
OK.
4. Click Next. The Setup program displays a window saying it is ready to install the
software.
5. Click Install. The Setup program installs the software. When the software is
installed, the Setup program displays a window saying the InstallShield Wizard is
complete.
6. Click Finish. The Setup program closes.
The Chassis Monitor, which is a software application that allows you to configure
emulation and simulated I/O modules
Emulation modules, which are Windows services that simulate the behavior of
Logix5000 processors and certain I/O modules
Emulation modules run as Windows services, which are applications that run without
interfaces of their own. The Chassis Monitor serves as an interface to the emulation
modules, allowing you to create and configure instances of the modules.
Features:
Logix5000 Processor
Not supported
Supporteda
Supported
Not supported
Forcing
Supported
Supported
Interface to non-Rockwell
Software HMI software
Programming languages
Messaging
Supported
Motion instructions
Supported
Not supported
Communications through
RS232 ports
Supported
Supported
Supported
Time scaling
Not supported
Supported
Not supported
Supported
Network cards
Yes
16
Trending
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
text programsc
a.Supported only in ladder diagram programming.
b.Supported only in SoftLogix5800 controllers.
c.Supported only in version 13.
Program execution times in RSLogix Emulate 5000 will be different from the times you can
expect in a Logix5000 processor. Execution times will also vary depending on how many other
applications (including other emulation and I/O simulation modules) are running at the same
time as the emulator. Do not depend on execution time in the emulator as a guide to how
fast a physical Logix5000 processor will execute the same program!
10
11
12
13
Means:
Normal operation. No faults.
For version 13 of RSLogix 5000 Emulate: Unlike the SoftLogix 5800 controller, RSLogix Emulate
5000 stops and starts with the Chassis Monitor. RSLogix Emulate 5000 does not run when the
Chassis Monitor is not running.
For version 12 of RSLogix 5000 Emulate: The emulator starts and stops like a SoftLogix 5800
controller, operating as a Windows service.
14
The RSLinx module represents a communication module for the chassis. This module
cannot be removed or moved to another slot.
The following illustration shows a Chassis Monitor window with three emulator and three
simulated I/O modules.
This is a simulated I/O module.
You can click on the module's
terminal cover to open it.
The red box surrounding this
module indicates it is selected.
You can right-click modules to
display a configuration menu.
This is an
emulator module.
The RSLinx
module in slot 0
cannot be
removed.
15
4. Click OK to accept your changes and add the emulator to the virtual chassis.
You can click Cancel if you wish to cancel creating the emulator.
5. If you have previously created a emulator module in the same slot and you did not
delete the configuration for the module when you removed it, the software tells you
there is previous configuration information for the module. The software asks
whether you want to use the previous configuration, or reset the configuration to
default values.
a. To use the previous configuration, click Use the Configuration from the
Previous Controller. To reset the configuration, click Reset the Configuration
to Default Values. (Even if you reset the configuration to its default values, the
name of the emulator remains the same as the one that was deleted.)
b. If there was a program in the deleted emulator module, the software shows the
controller name and the date the program was last downloaded into the controller.
If you want to load this program into the emulator module you are creating, check
the Load Saved Controller Image from Previous Instance check box.
Using a previously loaded controller image may result in unexpected operation. Make sure the
program is correct before running your emulations.
16
Select or type:
Startup mode
The mode in which you want the emulator to start when it first
launches. It can start either in Remote Program mode or in whatever
mode it was in when the emulator service is stopped (when the
computer was shut down or the emulator was stopped manually).
Memory size
The memory size for the emulator. Make this equal to the memory size
of the controller you are emulating.
5. Click Next. The software displays a window for setting additional features of the
emulator.
For this:
Select or type:
Specify the timeslice (0-1000 ms) made available for all other
Windows applications. The default is 10 ms.
The dwell time is the time between the end of the continuous task and
the start of the next execution of the continuous task.
CPU Affinity
If you are running the emulator on a computer that has more than one
CPU, set the CPU that you want to run the emulator (the emulator can
run on only one CPU).
6. Click Finish. The Chassis Monitor places an emulator module in the slot you
selected.
If you right click on the virtual chassis on the slot where you wish to create your module, and
then choose Create, the slot number is automatically filled in for you.
17
These controls
allow you to
configure trace
displays
This control
allows you to log
traces to a file
Active traces
appear in this list
18
19
Does this:
This button toggles whether the trace displays should record every
trace or only those traces where there are changes to the value being
traced. If the button is indented, the trace displays will ignore those
traces where the value does not change.
TimeStamp
20
Check this box if you want all new traces to display automatically in a
trace window.
Check this box if you want new traces to automatically log to disk.
Click this button to display all of the current traces in their trace
windows. (The current traces are listed by name in the Configure
Emulation window.)
Click this button to remove all of the current traces from the trace list.
This field shows the currently set log file. To set the log file, click
Browse. For more information, see Log Traces to Disk on page 21.
5. Click Open. If the file you selected already has data in it, the software asks if you
want to append your traces to the end of the file, overwrite the data in the file with the
traces, or cancel.
6. Execute your logic. When a TPT instruction executes, the trace information is logged
to the file you selected.
7. When you are ready to view the traces stored in the log file, display the emulator
configuration, then click Close Log File. You can then open the log file in a text
editor (such as Windows Notepad).
If you try to open the log file without closing it in the emulator configuration, you will see an error
message saying that the file cannot be accessed. You must close the log file in the emulator
before it can be viewed by another application.
21
a. If you deleted a SIM module from this slot without clearing its configuration, the
software displays a message saying that previous configuration information exists
for the module. You can retain the previous configuration, or you can reset the
configuration to default values. To retain the previous configuration, click Use
the Previous Configuration. To reset the module to its default values, click
Reset the Configuration to Default Values.
b. Click Next.
3. The software displays the General window. In this window, you can label the SIM
module with a text string that will scroll across the face of the module to help you
identify it while it is in the Chassis Monitor. Type the name for the module in the
Label for 1789-SIM Module Marquee field. (If you do not type a name, the
software uses the words Simulator Module.)
Hide slots 9-16 (if you are not using those slots or you
View > Hide Slots 9-16
simply want the Chassis Monitor to take up less space onscreen)
Hide the computer name
Keep the Chassis Monitor on top of other windows when Options > Always On Top
it is displayed
Set the Chassis Monitor to start in a minimized state (the Options > Start Minimized
window is not opened immediately and the application is
available from the Windows Taskbar)
Remove the Chassis Monitor from the Windows Taskbar Options > Hide When Minimized
when you minimize its window (the Chassis Monitor icon
remains in the System Tray)
22
When you delete a module, automatically check the Clear Options > Clear Configuration on Remove
Chassis Monitor module configuration check box.
(If this feature is not set, the software does not
automatically check that box for you.)
23
24
25
1.
3. Click Close.
26
2. Select RSLogix
Emulate 5000
Controller.
2. Click OK.
27
28
29
Set or enter:
Data Source
OPC Server
Name
Enter a name for the node (representing the emulator). This can be the
name of the emulator, if you like.
Enabled
Server
Click the button next to the Server Name field, choose RSLinx OPC
Server, then click OK.
Type
Select In-Process.
Access Path
Update Rate
This defaults to 1.000 seconds (one update per second). If you need a faster
or slower update rate, enter the update frequency.
2.
Enter a name
for the node.
30
7. Click
Accept.
1. Click Device.
7. Click OK.
3. In the Data Source section of the Tag Database editor, click Device.
31
4. Click the button next to the Node Name field. This displays the Node Browser. Select
the OPC node you created for the emulator and click OK.
5. In the Tag section of the Tag Database editor, select the type of tag you want to create
from the Type list.
6. In the Data Source section of the Tag Database editor, click the button next to the
Address field. This displays the OPC Address Browser.
7. In the OPC Address Browser, select the address you want to use with the tag and click
OK.
8. Finish creating the tag by filling in the fields in the Tag Database editor.
For this field or control:
Set or enter:
Name
Security
If you have set up security for your RSView project, set the security class
associated with the tag.
Description
Minimum
Maximum
Scale
Offset
Units
Data Type
9. Click Accept. The tag is stored in the tag database. You can now use the tag in your
RSView project.
32
Simulating I/O
There are two methods of simulating I/O with RSLogix Emulate 5000. You can use a
simulated I/O module to simulate discrete I/O, or you can use another emulation module
to produce and consume tags of any type. You can use both methods simultaneously.
Additionally, you can use other software products such as RSView and RSTestStand to simulate
I/O.
Enter:
Name
Description (optional)
Comm Format
Slot
4. Specify the connection parameters for the module as shown in the following table.
33
Input Size
Input Size
Output Size
Output Size
16
Configuration Size
Configuration Size
7. Click Finish.
34
3. Right-click the tag you want the emulator to produce, then click Edit Tag Properties.
This displays the Tag Properties window.
A produced tag must be one of the following data types:
DINT
REAL
user-defined
4. In the Tag Properties window, select the Produce tag type. Set the number of
consumers equal to the number of emulators that will consume the tag.
5. Click OK.
THE
PRODUCER
AN
I/O MODULE
OF THE
CONSUMER
CONSUMED TAG
35
6 SIMULATING I/O
2. Right-click the tag you want the emulator to consume, then click Edit Tag
Properties. This displays the Tag Properties window.
A consumed tag must be of the same data type (including array size) as the produced tag it
uses. If it is not, the emulator consuming the tag will experience an I/O fault.
36
Programming Breakpoints
Breakpoints are programmed with the Breakpoint output instruction (BPT). When the
inputs on a rung containing a BPT instruction are true, the BPT instruction stops program
execution. The software displays a window indicating that the breakpoint triggered and
the values that triggered it.
When a breakpoint triggers, the emulator displays a window informing you that a
breakpoint occurred. The title bar of the window shows the slot containing the emulator
that encountered the breakpoint.
When you click OK, the emulator resumes program execution. If the conditions that
triggered the breakpoint have not changed, the breakpoint will trigger again.
In addition, the emulator opens a trace window for the breakpoint. Information about the
breakpoint and the values it traces are displayed in the trace window.
When a breakpoint triggers, you will not be able to edit your project until you permit execution to
continue. You can go online with the emulator to observe the state of your project, but you will
not be able to edit it. If you try to accept a rung edit while a breakpoint is triggered, you will see a
dialog box saying the controller is not in the correct mode.
37
Requires:
Format
Trace This:
You can display a large number of tag values with the BPT instruction, however, the
formatting string can contain only 82 characters. Because two characters are required in
the formatting string for each tag you want in the breakpoint, the maximum number of
tags you could trace with a single BPT instruction is 41. However, you will probably want
to include spaces and other formatting to separate tag data in your traces, so the resulting
number of tag values that can be effectively displayed by one BPT instruction is
significantly lower than 41.
EXAMPLE:
The following rung shows a breakpoint that stops program execution when an analog
value is greater than 3.02 or less than 2.01.
38
When the breakpoint triggers, the breakpoint trace window shows the characters before
the colon (Breakpoint) in the title bar of the trace window. The other characters make
up the traces. In this example, %f represents the first (and in this case, the only) tag to be
traced (analogvalue). (See String Formats for Tracepoint and Breakpoint Instructions
on page 41 for more information about formatting strings. The resulting traces appear as
shown in the following illustration.
Programming Tracepoints
Tracepoints are programmed with the tracepoint output instruction (TPT). When the
inputs on a rung containing a TPT instruction are true, the TPT instruction writes a trace
entry to a trace display or log file. (To configure how traces are displayed or logged, see
Configure Trace Displays on page 20.)
Requires:
Format
Trace This:
39
You can trace a large number of tags with the TPT instruction, however, the formatting
string can contain only 82 characters. Because two characters are required in the
formatting string for each tag you want to trace, the maximum number of tags you could
trace with a single TPT instruction is 41. However, you will probably want to include
spaces and other formatting to separate tag data in your traces, so the resulting number of
tags that can be effectively traced by one TPT instruction is significantly lower than 41.
EXAMPLE:
The following rung triggers a trace of three analog values when any one of them exceeds
a given value (30.01).
When the tracepoint triggers, the characters before the colon (Analog inputs trace)
appear in the title bar of the trace window. The other characters make up the traces. In
this example, the %f characters represent the tags to be traced (analogvalue1,
analogvalue2, and analogvalue3). (See String Formats for Tracepoint and
Breakpoint Instructions on page 41 for more information about formatting strings.
40
When this trace is logged to disk, the characters before the colon appear in the traces.
This indicates which tracepoint caused which trace entry. The following is an example of
a trace entry. Analog inputs trace: is the heading text from the tracepoint's format
string.
Analog inputs trace:Analog inputs = 31.00201, 30.282000, and 30.110001
where heading is a text string identifying the tracepoint or breakpoint, text is a string
describing the tag (or any other text you choose), and %(type) indicates the format of the
tag. You need one type indicator for each tag you are tracing with the tracepoint or
breakpoint instruction.
For example, you could format a tracepoint string like this:
My tracepoint:Tag 1 = %e and Tag 2 = %d
The %e formats the first traced tag as double-precision float with an exponent, and %d
formats the second traced tag as a signed decimal integer. See the table below for more
information.
41
In this case, you would have a tracepoint instruction that has two Trace This parameters
(one for a REAL and one for an INT, although the value of any tag can be formatted with
any flag).
The resulting tracepoint window that would appear when the tracepoint is triggered would
look like:
The slot number
indicates the slot
containing the
emulator module that
has the tracepoint or
breakpoint being
traced in the trace
window
42
This type:
Example:
%d
%o
This type:
Example:
%x
%X
%e
%E
%f
%g
%G
45.320200 is rendered as
45.320200.
43
Do this:
Active traces
appear in this list
-- double-click a
trace to display it
44
Does this:
Freeze Display
Stops the trace window from updating. Use this when you want to read
values from a rapidly updating trace.
Clear Display
Freeze Log
When you are logging a trace to disk, this button stops and starts logging.
When the button is pressed, logging stops. If you are not logging the
trace to disk, this button has no effect.
45
46
Software Activation
Rockwell Software uses activation files to provide copy protection for its Windows-based
software packages. These activation files reside on the Activation disk. During
installation, the software prompts you to insert the Activation disk and move the
activation key from the disk to the drive where you are installing RSLogix Emulate 5000.
An activation key, which is the software that activates RSLogix Emulate 5000.
Depending on your requirements, the Activation disk will have one or more activation
keys. For example, if your company purchases four RSLogix Emulate 5000
installations, the Activation disk will contain four keys. Multiple copies of the same
software require activation keys with matching serial numbers. All of the activation
keys can be on the same Activation disk.
A file called EVMOVE.EXE that moves activation keys to and from computers
You can move activation keys off and on the Activation disk. The files EVMOVE.EXE
and RESET.EXE always stay on the Activation disk.
Diskette drive. Use this method if you will typically use the software on more than
one computerfor example, if you want to run the software on a desktop computer
and a portable computer.
Hard drive. Use this method if you will typically use the software on only one
computer. This is the default method if you activate the software during installation.
To run the software on a different computer, move the activation key back to the
Activation disk, and then reactivate the software.
47
THE
ROCKSOFT.INI FILE
TO THE
ACTIVATION DISK
You can move activation keys from the hard drive back to the Activation disk at any time.
Move activation back to the Activation disk:
TO
ACTIVATION
DISK
48
3. In the EvMove window, select the drive where the activation key is currently stored in
the From box. In the To box, select the drive containing the Activation disk. Click
OK.
4. Do one of the following:
49
8 SOFTWARE ACTIVATION
50
3.
In the Reset Code box, type the reset code, and then click OK.
4.
Troubleshooting Activation
If activation is not working:
Are you using the right Activation disk? Check the serial number for RSLogix
Emulate 5000 against the serial number on the Activation disk label. The serial
numbers must match.
Does the computer have a virus? Boot sector viruses can damage the Activation disk.
The Rockwell Software support team recommends using a commercial virus
protection program.
Did you save other files on the Activation disk? Saving any files to the Activation disk
can damage the activation software.
Did you perform an operation on the hard drive that damaged the activation software?
See Protecting Your Activation Files on page 50 for information about actions that can
damage activation.
51
8 SOFTWARE ACTIVATION
52
Index
Numerics
1789-SIM module
21
A
activating
after installation 49
from diskette drive 47
from hard drive 47
reactivating damaged key 50
running on multiple computers 47
troubleshooting 51
with reset code 50
Activation disk 47
moving activation keys 48
protecting files 50
using as a key 48
B
BPT. See breakpoints.
breakpoints
example 38
format string 38
programming 37, 38
string formats for 41
traced tags 38
types for the format string
when triggered 37
C
calculations
floating point 11
Channel 0 serial port 17
Chassis Monitor
configuring 22
navigating in 14
starting 13
clear display 45
communications driver 25
communications node
42
configuring in RSView 29
comparison of Emulate 5000 and Logix5000
processors 9
Configuration Size 34
Configure Emulation window 18
configuring an emulator 18
consumed tags 22
continuous task dwell time 17
CPU affinity 17
D
dwell time
17
E
e-mail
technical support 8
emulation module
creating 16
emulation modules 9
emulator
configuring 18
EVMOVE.EXE
on Activation disk 47
execution time 10
F
fax number
technical support 8
floating point 11
folder
default installation 3
freeze display 45
freeze log 45
H
hardware requirements
help
accessing 8
53
I
I/O
Configuration Assembly Instance 34
Input Assembly Instance 34
Input Size 34
Output Assembly Instance 34
Output Size 34
simulating 33
ignore if no value changed 20
installation
activating after installation 49
default folder 3
procedure 2
process 1
required software and hardware 1
running on multiple computers 47
L
license agreement 3, 5
License Move Utility 4
limitations of the software 9
log
freezing and unfreezing 45
log traces to disk 21
Logix5000 processors
compared to Emulate 5000 9
M
master disk 3
memory size 17
module
1789-SIM 21
creating emulator 16
Moving
activation keys 48
RSLogix Emulate 5000 to another computer
47
N
node
configuring in RSView
29
O
OLE for Process Control. See OPC.
54
OPC 29
configuring topic for emulator
operating system
version required 2
overview 9
of using Emulate 5000 12
29
P
periodic save interval 17
phone number
technical support 8
produced tags 22
R
reactivating RSLogix Emulate 5000 49
README file 3
reset code
damaged activation 50
ROCKSOFT.INI
modifying 48
RSLinx
creating communication driver for emulator
25
RSLogix 5000
configuring communications for the
emulator 27
connecting to the emulator 25
setting project to use the emulator 26
RSTestStand
using to simulate I/O 33, 36
RSView
communications node 29
configuring tag 31
connecting the emulator to 29
using to simulate I/O 33, 36
S
serial number 3
serial number for RSTestStand Lite 6
simulated I/O
configuring in a logic project 33
creating 21
simulating I/O 33
software requirements 2
speed of time 19
startup mode
17
T
tags
configuring in RSView 31
consumed 22, 34
configuring 35
produced 22, 34
configuring 34
technical support 8
Technical Support Services
resetting damaged activation 50
time
dwell 17
of execution 10
speed of 19
timeslice 17
timestamp 20
TPT. See tracepoints.
trace
configuring display 20
logging to disk 21
windows
controls on 45
trace log file 20
tracepoints
configuring display 20
example 40
format string 39
programming 39
string formats for 41
traced tags 39
types for the format string
troubleshooting
activation 51
42
U
uninstallation 2
user name 3, 5
using Emulate 5000
12
V
version required for installation
operating system 2
Windows 2
virus
protecting activation files 51
W
Web site
technical support 8
Windows
version required 2
55
INDEX
56