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ABB and Red Hat: Delivering operational excellence at the industrial edge

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By Francis Chow, VP & GM, In-Vehicle Operating System and Edge at Red Hat, and Bernhard Eschermann, CTO, Process Automation at ABB

Edge computing continues to push the boundaries and capabilities of modern information technology (IT). At the same time, operational technology (OT) requirements are becoming more and more aligned with IT. As a result, a paradigm shift is taking place in the industrial sector as manufacturers turn to open source technologies to support more agile operational technology (OT) platform architecture and capture real-time data insights at the edge. In fact, IDC predicts that by 2024, 30% of industrial organisations will have become leaner and more agile than their competitors as a result of making real-time operational insights available anytime, anywhere, to anyone[1].

In response, last year Red Hat and ABB announced a global partnership to enable industries with process automation solutions backed by enterprise-grade open source technologies. Today, we are pleased to announce the latest milestone in our partnership with the availability of ABB Ability™ Edgenius™ on Red Hat OpenShift and Red Hat Device Edge (early access)to extend operational consistency for industrial use cases across edge and hybrid cloud environments.

The power of open source for industrial edge computing

Industrial controls are at the forefront of today’s edge computing-driven digital revolution. The systems that manage the operations of a power plant, a steel mill, a pharmaceutical company, or a food and beverage producer – all of these were traditionally designed as purpose-built systems. Data could be pulled from each system to allow basic management across the plant, but each system is still functioning essentially as a separate island.

As organisations move additional computing power to the plant floor, they are also realising that the methodologies previously mastered by IT organisations over the last decade are just as relevant in an OT context. Therefore, Red Hat and ABB are working together to enable OT use cases using ABB process automation solutions on Red Hat’s open hybrid cloud portfolio to fuel next-generation OT offerings. For example, Red Hat and ABB solutions can be used in industrial environments to:

  • Support low latency data extraction from control systems without interfering with the core control functionality to enable fast and secure supervision and cross-system optimisation of physical equipment, processes and plants.
  • Address security concerns by integrating security-focused features into the software supply chain to support protected device onboarding and apply more consistent policy management configurations to thousands of devices.
  • Deliver more flexible features and functions with a faster time-to-market, using modern application development principles like microservices and event driven architecture.

ABB Ability™ Edgenius™ supports a variety of scenarios such as compute, connectivity and high availability. Because of this, ABB needs a flexible but consistent platform for a broad range of use cases, including industrial IoT gateways that can securely collect and carry data from production assets to the cloud, and condition monitoring to locally track asset health to ensure plant uptime. More advanced use cases, based on multiple interoperable applications hosted on Edgenius to optimise control settings of a plant, may require high availability to ensure continuous accessibility during production.

To meet these various industrial operational requirements at the edge, ABB will utilise the full spectrum of Red Hat edge platforms. Based on Microshift and Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat Device Edge supports the smallest footprint of edge devices and will help ABB to more easily connect cloud and control environments optimising overall equipment efficiency (OEE) by aggregating and analysing data on devices at hard to reach locations and with limited resources. In addition, the flexible image builder mechanism allows ABB to create their own edge operating system based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

Single node OpenShift, Red Hat’s smallest supported Red Hat OpenShift topology, equips ABB Ability™ Edgenius™ with a self-contained node to run at the edge in protected or connect-on-demand mode. This allows ABB to seamlessly extend applications where they are most needed – alongside remote IoT data sources such as sensors and generators – all without the need for constant, centralis

ed connectivity. Furthermore, Red Hat OpenShift multi-node high availability deployment options offer greater scalability for edge workloads regardless of downtime requirements, even accommodating GPU acceleration for onsite image and video intensive workloads. 


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