Iso 15926-1
Iso 15926-1
Iso 15926-1
STANDARD 15926-1
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First edition
2004-07-15
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Industrial automation systems and
integration — Integration of life-cycle
data for process plants including oil and
gas production facilities —
Part 1:
Overview and fundamental principles
Systèmes d'automatisation industrielle et intégration — Intégration de
données de cycle de vie pour les industries de «process», y compris les
usines de production de pétrole et de gaz —
Partie 1: Vue d'ensemble et principes fondamentaux
Reference number
ISO 15926-1:2004(E)
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ISO 15926-1:2004(E)
Contents Page
1 Scope ................................................................................................................................................ 1
2 Normative references........................................................................................................................ 2
6 Conformance .................................................................................................................................. 11
6.1 Overview ............................................................................................................................... 11
6.2 Exchange files ....................................................................................................................... 12
6.3 Information system interfaces ............................................................................................... 12
6.3.1 Exchange file interface ............................................................................................... 12
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Bibliography ......................................................................................................................................... 17
Index ..................................................................................................................................................... 18
Figures
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national stan-
dards bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried
out through ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a techni-
cal committee has been established has the right to be represented on that committee. International
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work.
ISO collaborates closely with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of
electrotechnical standardization.
International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives,
Part 2.
The main task of technical committees is to prepare International Standards. Draft International Stan-
dards adopted by the technical committees are circulated to the member bodies for voting. Publication
as an International Standard requires approval by at least 75% of the member bodies casting a vote.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
ISO 15926-1 was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC184, Industrial automation systems and
integration, Subcommittee SC4, Industrial data.
ISO 15926 consists of the following parts, under the general title Industrial automation systems and
integration — Integration of life-cycle data for process plants including oil and gas production facili-
ties:
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Part 1: Overview and fundamental principles
Part 2: Data model
0 Introduction
0.1 Background
Information concerning the engineering, construction and operation of process plants is created, used
and modified by many different organizations throughout a plant’s life. Economic, safety and envi-
ronmental considerations demand that this information is available to owners and operators of facili-
ties, contractors, and regulatory bodies in a consistent, integrated form. This requirement can be satis-
fied by specifications that prescribe the structure and meaning of data that is shared by organizations
and disciplines involved in all stages of a plant’s life-cycle.
The need to increase the cost efficiency of process plants is leading to business practices that depend
on the efficient integration and sharing of plant information in a computer processable form. These
business practices include the following.
— Many users’ needs now span more than one of the traditional information views. Safety and envi-
ronment are two examples of this.
— Concurrent engineering requires design work to progress in parallel, with the state of the design
being available electronically, in computer processable form, to other engineering, planning, pur-
chasing and logistical activities.
— Significant cost savings are expected from standardization of component specifications. The in-
formation about these specifications is required in computer processable form for easy incorpora-
tion into plant designs and requirements.
— In the past, hand-over of plant design information was often restricted to design drawings and pa-
per documents. Use of this information in managing the operation and modification of the plant
was restricted to manual processes, or the information had to be redefined in a format suitable to
the required application. Having the plant design and equipment information in computer proc-
essable form increases the efficiency and effectiveness of the operational phase of the plant.
— Accurate computer processable information about a plant’s performance throughout its lifetime is
of high value, for optimising future modifications to the plant and for designing new plants on the
basis of experience with existing plants.
By using a consistent context for data definitions, the information used in the various aspects of the
plant’s life-cycle can be brought together. This allows information to be integrated, shared and ex-
changed in a consistent, computer processable form.
The purpose of this International Standard is to facilitate integration of data to support the life-cycle
activities and processes of process plants. To do this, this International Standard specifies a data
model that defines the meaning of the life-cycle information in a single context supporting all the
views that process engineers, equipment engineers, operators, maintenance engineers and other spe-
cialists may have of the plant.
Traditionally, data associated with a process plant have been concentrated on some individual view of
the plant at a point in time. Such data are usually defined and maintained independently of other
groups of users, resulting in duplicated and conflicting data that cannot be shared either within an en-
terprise or with business partners of an enterprise.
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ISO 15926-1:2004(E)
ISO 15926 is an International Standard for the representation of process plant life-cycle information.
This representation is specified by a generic, conceptual data model that is suitable as the basis for
implementation in a shared database or data warehouse. The data model is designed to be used in con-
junction with reference data, i.e. standard instances that represent information common to a number of
users, process plants, or both. The support for a specific life-cycle activity depends on the use of ap-
propriate reference data in conjunction with the data model.
ISO 15926 is organized as a series of parts, each published separately. This part of ISO 15926 pro-
vides an overview. It specifies the contents and functions of the different parts of ISO 15926 and the
relationships between them, and describes:
A numbered reference enclosed in brackets (for example, “[2]”) is a reference to a document that is
listed in the Bibliography.
In this International Standard the same English language words may be used to refer to an object in
the real world or to a concept, and as the name of an EXPRESS data type that represents this object or
concept. The following typographical convention is used to distinguish between these. If a word or
phrase occurs in the same typeface as narrative text, the referent is the object or concept. If the word
or phrase occurs in a bold typeface, the referent is the EXPRESS data type. Names of EXPRESS
schemas also occur in a bold typeface.
The name of an EXPRESS data type may be used to refer to the data type itself, or to an instance of
the data type. The distinction between these uses is normally clear from the context. If there is a like-
lihood of ambiguity, the phrase “entity data type” or “instance(s) of” is included in the text.
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Double quotation marks “ ” denote quoted text. Single quotation marks ‘ ’ denote particular text string
values.
Some components of this International Standard are available in electronic form. This access is pro-
vided through the specification of Universal Resource Locators (URLs) that identify the location of
these files on the Internet. If there is difficulty accessing these files contact the ISO Central Secre-
tariat, or contact the ISO TC 184/SC4 Secretariat directly at: sc4sec@tc184-sc4.org.
The target audiences for this part of ISO 15926 are as follows:
— technical managers wishing to determine whether ISO 15926 is appropriate for their business
needs;
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ISO 15926-1:2004(E)
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INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO 15926-1:2004(E)
Part 1:
Overview and fundamental principles
1 Scope
This International Standard specifies a representation of information associated with engineering, con-
struction and operation of process plants. This representation supports:
— the information requirements of the process industries in all phases of a plant’s life-cycle;
NOTE 1 The process industries include those involved in oil and gas production, refining, power generation,
and manufacturing of chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and food.
— sharing and integration of information amongst all parties involved in the plant’s life-cycle.
— a generic, conceptual data model that supports representation of all life-cycle aspects of a process
plant;
— reference data that represents information common to many process plants and users;
— templates for the exchange of data used in a particular context and their mapping to the concep-
tual data model;
— methods for the development of such templates and their mapping to the conceptual data model;
The scope of business activities that are supported by this International Standard is illustrated in
Figure 1, which shows the main activities and data flows associated with the life-cycle of a plant.
NOTE 2 Figure 1 is based on the Process Plant Engineering Activity Model [6].
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ISO 15926-1:2004(E)
Produce Conceptual
Produce Detailed Construct Plant Maintain Plant and Demolish Plant
Engineering Design
Engineering Design Pre-Commission Equipment and Restore Site
(Front End)
Suppliers and
Procure and Control Equipment, Material and Services
Fabricators
NOTE 3 The support for a specific life-cycle activity depends on the use of appropriate reference data in con-
junction with the data model defined in ISO 15926-2.
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EXAMPLE A reference data library covering technical data about process systems, electrical systems and
instrumentation systems can support design, engineering and maintenance activities for these systems within a
process plant.
— commercial, business, and administrative data that are not directly related to the engineering,
operation and maintenance of process plants.
This International Standard is applicable to implementation of databases or data warehouses that en-
able integration and sharing of data amongst different participants in the life-cycle of a process plant.
The generic data model specified in ISO 15926-2 provides a suitable conceptual data model for such a
database or data warehouse.
NOTE 4 See 5.2 for further information concerning the nature of conceptual data models.
This part of ISO 15926 provides an overview of this International Standard. The scopes of the other
parts of ISO 15926 are defined within those parts.
2 Normative references
The following referenced documents are indispensable for the application of this document. For dated
references, only the edition cited applies. For undated references, the latest edition of the referenced
document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 10303-1:1994, Industrial automation systems and integration — Product data representation and
exchange — Part 1: Overview and fundamental principles.
ISO 10303-11:1994, Industrial automation systems and integration — Product data representation
and exchange — Part 11: The EXPRESS language reference manual.
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© ISO 2004 – All rights reserved
ISO 10303-21:1994, Industrial automation systems and integration — Product data representation
and exchange — Part 21: Implementation methods: Clear text encoding of the exchange structure.
ISO 10303-22:1998, Industrial automation systems and integration — Product data representation
and exchange — Part 22: Implementation methods: Standard data access interface.
ISO/TS 10303-28:2003, Industrial automation systems and integration — Product data representa-
tion and exchange — Part 28: Implementation methods: XML representations of EXPRESS schemas
and data.
ISO 15926-2, Industrial automation systems and integration — Integration of life-cycle data for proc-
ess plants including oil and gas production facilities — Part 2: Data model.
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ISO 13584-1:2001, Industrial automation systems and integration — Parts library — Part 1: Over-
view and fundamental principles.
ISO/TS 18876-1, Industrial automation systems and integration — Integration of industrial data for
exchange, access, and sharing — Part 1: Architecture overview and description.
ISO/TR 9007:1987, Information processing systems — Concepts and terminology for the conceptual
schema and the information base.
For the purposes of this part of ISO 15926, the following terms and definitions apply.
NOTE Definitions copied verbatim from other standards are followed by a reference to the standard in brack-
ets, such as “[ISO 10303-1]”. In these cases the definition in the referenced document is normative; its repeti-
tion here is informative and in the case of any discrepancy the definition in the referenced document has prece-
dence. An explanatory note follows definitions that have been adapted from other standards. In these cases the
definition given here is normative for the purposes of this part of ISO 15926.
3.1.1
class
category or division of things based on one or more criteria for inclusion and exclusion
NOTE 1 A class need not have any members (things that satisfy its criteria for membership).
NOTE 2 Because of the spatio-temporal paradigm used to define individuals in this International Standard, all
classes are non-well-founded sets. These are explained in ISO 15926-2:D.2.4
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3.1.2
commodity product class
manufactured product class whose members conform to open agreed standards
NOTE Commodity product classes have sufficient characterisation to indicate suitability of use. They are
specializations of one or more de facto classes, standard classes, or both. The resulting specification is non pro-
prietary as no one organization controls it.
EXAMPLE The type of lightbulb known as 60 W 230 V E27 is a commodity product class.
3.1.3
conceptual data model
data model in the three schema architecture defined by ISO/TR 9007, in which the structure of data is
represented in a form independent of any physical storage or external presentation format
3.1.4
core class
class that is a commonly used subdivision corresponding to terms used in common language
NOTE The conditions for membership are often not formally defined; understanding of the class may be
conveyed by example.
EXAMPLE Pipe, floor, pump, and light bulb are all core classes.
3.1.5
data
representation of information in a formal manner suitable for communication, interpretation, or proc-
essing by human beings or computers
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[ISO 10303-1]
3.1.6
data store
computer system that allows data to be stored for future reference
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3.1.7
data warehouse
data store in which related data are merged to provide an integrated set of data containing no
duplication or redundancy of information, and which supports many different application viewpoints
3.1.8
de facto class
class corresponding to common natures that are widely recognized but not formally agreed or defined
EXAMPLE 1 A manufacturer may choose to make a product of similar specification to that of another
manufacturer in order to compete for the market share by choosing to conform to some characteristics of the
other product.
3.1.9
exchange file
computer-interpretable format used for storing, accessing, transferring and archiving data
3.1.10
implementation method
technique used by computer systems to exchange or access data that is described using the EXPRESS
data specification language
3.1.11
individual
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NOTE 1 In this context existence is based upon being imaginable within some consistent logic, including ac-
tual, hypothetical, planned, expected, or required individuals.
EXAMPLE A pump with serial number ABC123, Battersea Power Station, Sir Joseph Whitworth, and the
Starship “Enterprise” are examples of individuals.
NOTE 2 See ISO 15926-2, 4.7, for a detailed discussion of the concept of individuals.
3.1.12
information
facts, concepts, or instructions
[ISO 10303-1]
3.1.13
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instance
data that represents, in computer processable form, some real-world thing
NOTE This is different from the ISO 10303-11 definition due to its use for reference and life-cycle data.
3.1.14
manufactured product class
class whose members are individuals produced by a manufacturing process
NOTE 1 The members of a manufactured product class may be discrete or may be batches or continuous flows,
such as process fluids.
EXAMPLE 1 “Lightbulbs 60 W 230 V E27” is an example of a manufactured product class whose members
are discrete.
EXAMPLE 2 “BS4040 Leaded Petrol” is an example of a manufactured product class whose members are
continuous.
NOTE 2 A manufactured product class may correspond to a specification that has not been realized, such a
product specification for which no products have been made.
3.1.15
process plant life-cycle data
data that represents, in computer processable form, information about one or more process plants in or
throughout any phases of their life
NOTE The phases of the life of a process plant may include design, engineering, construction, op-
eration, maintenance, decommissioning and demolition.
3.1.16
proprietary class
class whose specification for membership is owned, controlled, or protected by an organization and is
not generally available outside that organization
3.1.17
proprietary product class
class that is a manufactured product class and a proprietary class
NOTE Proprietary product classes are specializations that depend on rules of inclusion and exclusion some
of which are controlled in a closed way. This means that some aspects of the specification can be arbitrarily
changed. Many proprietary product classes are specializations of commodity product classes, de facto classes,
or both, where the additional restrictions reflect design or manufacturing details that the manufacturer uses to
differentiate his product from others of the same general type.
EXAMPLE 1 A product specification that is owned by a commercial organization, and is marketed under and
protected by a registered trade name, is the basis for a proprietary product class.
EXAMPLE 2 Lightbulbs 60 W 230 V E27 manufactured by Phillips are members of a proprietary product
class.
3.1.18
reference data
process plant life-cycle data that represents information about classes or individuals which are com-
mon to many process plants or of interest to many users
3.1.20
standard class
class whose specification for membership is owned or controlled by a standardization body and is
publicly available
NOTE Standard classes result from the work of national, international, or industry standardization bodies and
cover sizes, shapes, materials, performance, and manufacturing processes of equipment and materials. The rules
for exclusion and inclusion (or conformance) are agreed by an open, consensus process and are made publicly
available. A standard class may only constrain one particular aspect and often be insufficient to determine usage
or full manufacturing specifications.
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EXAMPLE 1 The ASME B16.9 standard [3] constrains the dimensions and shapes of steel buttwelding pipe
fittings.
EXAMPLE 2 The IEC 60079-1 [2] standard specifies constraints on electrical equipment to ensure standard
degrees of explosion proofness.
3.2 Abbreviations
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For the purposes of this part of ISO 15926, the following abbreviations apply.
— ISO 15926-2 specifies a generic, conceptual data model that supports representation of all life-
cycle aspects of a process plant.
— ISO 15926-4 defines a reference data library that can be periodically updated by a competent
body, designated by ISO as a registration authority, which has the requisite infrastructure to en-
sure the effective use of the reference data library.
— ISO 15926-5 specifies the procedures to be followed by a registration authority for reference data.
— ISO 15926-6 specifies the information required when defining additions to the reference data
specified in ISO 15926-4.
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5 Fundamental principles
5.1 Architecture
The architecture that underlies this International Standard is illustrated in Figure 2. The architecture is
an example of that described in ISO 18876-1. This International Standard supports integration over a
wide context due to the nature of the generic, conceptual data model that is its foundation. Process
plant life-cycle data is structured according to the data model defined in ISO 15926-2. This data is
divided into data about an individual process plant, and reference data, which represents information
that is common to many process plants or of interest to many users.
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Data about an
individual
process plant
Reference data Standard instances that
Pipe … conform to
References
Valve …
Pump …
Figure 2 – Architecture
Reference data provides consistency of meaning within and across multiple sets of process plant data.
The data model defined in ISO 15926-2 supports representation of both classes (see 3.1.1) and
individuals (see 3.1.11) as instances with attribute values. Characteristics common to the class
members are defined once as computer processable data. Characteristics of particular items are then
specified by reference to the appropriate classes.
EXAMPLE An individual pipe may be identified as a member of the class “6 inch pipe”, thereby specifying
the particular pipe’s dimensions to be within the range of possible dimensions specified for the class.
Information about particular items that conform, or are intended to conform, to standards or to
standardized engineering practices is represented in a concise and accurate form, without duplication.
The detailed classes that have been recognised in the information associated with process plants are
defined as reference data.
The data model specified in ISO 15926-2 is a conceptual data model as described in the three schema
architecture of ISO/TR 9007.
The model excludes all business rules that are appropriate to specific applications, to enable integra-
tion of information and to give a stable and flexible model with respect to developing and changing
business practices.
— External model: the data structure corresponds to a view of data for a particular purpose that in-
cludes rules about the data that are appropriate to the particular purpose.
— Conceptual data model: a neutral model that is capable of supporting any valid view that falls
within its scope. Such models can only include rules for data that are universally true across its
entire scope for the envisaged life of the model. As a consequence most rules or constraints aris-
ing from particular business uses of data are excluded from conceptual data models.
— Physical model: a definition of the way data is stored. The entity data types reflect things that are
important for storage and access and not the business meaning of the data.
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As shown in Figure 2, use of this International Standard is dependent on shared reference data. Data
about an individual process plant can be shared and exchanged only if both the sender and the re-
ceiver use the same reference data or use common reference data. This reference data shall be suffi-
cient to ensure unambiguous communication between parties. The data model specified in ISO 15926-
2 supports exchange of data but does not provide sufficient specific meaning of data to enable unam-
biguous communication.
NOTE A reference data library that is used to support unambiguous exchange or sharing of data can be stan-
dardized or can be developed and agreed by the communicating parties.
EXAMPLE The European Datum of 1950 (ED50) located at the geodetic observatory at Potsdam near
Berlin is a reference individual.
The latter division of reference data is further subdivided into the following categories:
The relationship between the different class types is illustrated in Figure 4 below.
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ISO 15926-1:2004(E)
Core
classes
Sta
e
s
lass
Defacto classe
nda
c
rd c
ary
l
t
asse
prie
s
Pro
Manufactured product classes
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The position of a class relative to the top and base of the triangle indicates the degree of definition.
Classes at the top are general and have few restrictions on membership, whereas those at the base are
more specific. Classes at the base of the triangle are specializations of the ones above, and so on up
the triangle.
As described in 5.1, implementation and use of this International Standard requires both a conceptual
data model and reference data. The conceptual data model is specified in ISO 15926-2. A reference
data library may not include all reference data that is required for all implementations of this Interna-
tional Standard. Reference data can be added, removed or updated and new revisions of the reference
data library published, as shown in Figure 5. ISO 15926-5 and ISO 15926-6 describe this process.
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Initial set as an
ISO standard Updates and amendments
to the published standard
6 Conformance
6.1 Overview
The conformance requirements of this International Standard state how the data model defined in ISO
15926-2 and reference data constrain conforming computer implementations.
— An exchange file encoded according to ISO 10303-21 or ISO/TS 10303-28 and the model speci-
fied in ISO 15926-2.
— A database, data warehouse, or other information system that supports storage, management, ma-
nipulation, and retrieval of data according to the model specified in ISO 15926-2.
NOTE Such an implementation of the International Standard provides at least one of the following services:
— providing persistent storage of instances that conform to the data model specified in ISO 15926-2;
Conformance of database, data warehouse or other information systems is described in terms of the
interfaces that the system supports with respect to two system implementation forms, as follows.
— An exchange file interface that allows conformant exchange files to be written or read by the sys-
tem.
— An application programming interface (API) whereby data can be stored and then data added, de-
leted, updated and queried. Two levels of API conformance are specified:
NOTE ISO 15926-2 specifies a conceptual model; therefore this International Standard does not prescribe
the structures of any database or other implementation.
The information content of a conforming implementation of this International Standard may be con-
strained to include part or all of the reference data described in a specific reference data library.
An ISO 10303-21 exchange file conforms to the requirements of this International Standard if it satis-
fies the syntactic conformance requirements specified in ISO 10303-21, 5.3 and satisfies the schema
conformance requirements specified in ISO 10303-21, 5.3 combined with the data model specified in
ISO 15926-2. Every conforming exchange file shall apply the external mapping specified in 11.2.5.3
of ISO 10303-21, 11.2.5.3.
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An ISO/TS 10303-28 exchange file conforms to the requirements of this International Standard if it
satisfies the syntactic conformance requirements specified in ISO/TS 10303-28, 5.1.1 and XML
document representation category LB, ETEB or OSEB requirements specified in ISO/TS 10303-28,
5.1.3 combined with the data model specified in ISO 15926-2.
An information system conforming to ISO 15926 shall provide an exchange file interface to read and
write files that exhibit exchange file conformance as defined in 6.2.
Operation of the read interface shall result in the information encoded in the exchange file being
available through the other interfaces of the system as instances that conform to the data model speci-
fied in ISO 15926-2.
EXAMPLE 1 If an exchange file that contains information about the design of a heat exchanger is presented to
the exchange file interface of a system that conforms to ISO 15926, then that design information should be
transferred into the internal data structures of the system and be available for use through any other system
interface.
Operation of the write interface shall result in a selected set of instances being encoded as a confor-
mant exchange file as defined in 6.2, where these instances:
EXAMPLE 2 If a conformant system holds information about pipes, piping components and their
interconnections, the same information should be found in the resulting exchange file.
An information system conforming to ISO 15926 shall provide an API that enables instances to be
manipulated by reference to their entity data types and their attribute types as defined by the data
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model specified in ISO 15926-2. The API shall support the following operations:
— creation of new instances of any valid entity data type, together with valid attribute values for
these instances;
NOTE 1 The data model specified in ISO 15926-2 restricts the valid combinations of entity data types that
may type an instance and the types of attributes the instance may have.
— deletion of instances;
— selection of groups of instances according to their entity data type(s) and attribute values.
NOTE 2 Due to the structure of the data model specified in ISO 15926-2 all instances are complex, with the
exception of instances whose type is thing in combination with no subtypes.
EXAMPLE 1 Selection of instances whose type includes thing selects all instances in the data store.
EXAMPLE 2 Selection of instances whose type is exactly (thing & class) excludes instances of all subtypes
of class, as well as instances of individual and relation.
An API implementation that claims conformance to this International Standard shall at least support
the operations listed above.
An API implementation of this International Standard can also conform to ISO 10303-22 and so be
consistent with one of the levels of transaction specified in ISO 10303-22, clause 11. Such an imple-
mentation shall combine the data access interface specification of ISO 10303-22, one or more SDAI
language bindings, and the data model specified in ISO 15926-2.
— standards that specify the representation of industrial information within computer systems and
communications between computer systems;
— standards that specify data elements and their meanings, independent of particular representation.
NOTE These categories are not mutually exclusive. Standards such as ISO 10303 Application Protocols
specify the representation and meaning of data.
ISO 15926 is complementary to a number of other standards for the representation of industrial data.
This International Standard makes use of ISO 10303-11 “EXPRESS” for specification of data models.
Implementations of this International Standard may be based on any implementation method that has
a mapping from EXPRESS.
EXAMPLE 1 Suitable implementation methods include ISO 10303-21, ISO 10303-22, and the Data Access
and Exchange Facilities (DAEF) developed by the Petrotechnical Open Software Corporation (POSC) [5].
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EXAMPLE 2 The ISO 10303-25 mapping from EXPRESS into the Unified Modeling Language, which is
undergoing ISO standardization, is also a suitable implementation of this International Standard.
This International Standard supports representation of life-cycle data for process plants including oil
and gas production facilities in a form that is suitable for implementation in a shared database or data
warehouse. ISO 10303 Application Protocols provide specifications for the exchange of well-defined
subsets of the total life-cycle data. Mappings can be defined between the data specification (AIM) of
ISO 10303 Application Protocols and ISO 15926, where they overlap, as the basis for standard inter-
faces for the input or output of data stored in a database or data warehouse.
EXAMPLE 3 ISO 10303-212 [1] specifies how design information for electrotechnical plants and industrial
systems can be exchanged. An interface conforming to ISO 10303-212 may be used to import or export
electrotechnical design data that is stored within a database that is based on the data model specified in ISO
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15926-2.
NOTE This International Standard does not specify such interfaces or transformations.
ISO 13584 provides a mechanism for representing manufacturers’ and suppliers’ product catalogue
information. This mechanism is suitable for communication of catalogue information, and for the se-
lection of parts based on a standard query interface specification. This mechanism provides an alterna-
tive representation for some of the information that can be represented using the data model specified
in ISO 15926-2.
NOTE 1 ISO 13584 does not support all aspects of process plant information, and so precludes creation and
maintenance of a single integrated data representation of this information.
Parts library information represented by ISO 13584 data can be referenced within data about an
individual process plant or reference data that conforms to the data model specifed in ISO 15926-2. In
particular, instances can record the following information:
— a thing possesses a property or characteristic that is defined in an ISO 13584 compliant library;
NOTE 2 The data model defined in ISO 15926-2 represents possession of properties or characteristics as
membership of a class.
— a thing is described by information that is represented within an ISO 13584 compliant library.
EXAMPLE The shape of members of a family of related parts can be described using a parametric
representation within an ISO 13584 compliant library.
Exchange files that conform to ISO 13584 can be used to transfer manufacturers’ data sheets and cata-
logues between implementations of this International Standard.
Many products, processes and materials are the subject of standards that prescribe aspects such as
form, function, properties, or manufacture. Many of these standards are published as text only, and are
therefore not computer processable. The information that these standards contain, however, may be
represented using reference data that conforms to this International Standard. This provides a mecha-
nism by which consistent representation of engineering information drawn from diverse international
and national standards may be brought together for use in an enterprise or project.
NOTE Reference data libraries may include references to product and manufacturing standards.
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ISO 15926-1:2004(E)
Annex A
(normative)
is assigned to this part of ISO 15926. The meaning of this value is defined in ISO/IEC 8824-1, and is
described in ISO 10303-1.
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Bibliography
1. ISO 10303-212:2001, Industrial automation systems and integration — Product data representa-
tion and exchange — Part 212: Application protocol: Electrotechnical design and installation.
2. IEC 60079-1:1990, Electrical apparatus for explosive gas atmospheres — Part 1: Construction
and verification test of flameproof enclosures of electrical apparatus
3. ASME B16.9-1993, Factory-Made Wrought Steel Buttwelding Fittings. American Society of Me-
chanical Engineers, 1993.
4. Integration Definition for Information Modeling (IDEF1X). Federal Information Processing Stan-
dards Publication 184, December 1993
5. Petrotechnical Open Software Corporation. Data Access And Exchange. PTR Prentice-Hall, Inc.,
Englewood Cliffs, 1994.
6. Process Industries STEP Consortium. STEP In The Process Industries: Process Plant Engineer-
ing Activity Model. Issue 1, July 1994.
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Index
activity model.......................................................................................................................................... 2
application programming interface ....................................................................................................... 13
application protocol ........................................................................................................................ 13, 14
architecture.............................................................................................................................................. 7
class..................................................................................................................................................... 3, 7
commodity product........................................................................................................................... 3
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core ................................................................................................................................................... 4
de facto ............................................................................................................................................. 4
manufactured product....................................................................................................................... 5
proprietary ........................................................................................................................................ 5
proprietary product ........................................................................................................................... 6
standard ............................................................................................................................................ 6
commodity product class ........................................................................................................................ 3
conceptual data model................................................................................................................. 1, 2, 4, 8
conformance.......................................................................................................................... 1, 11, 12, 13
core class................................................................................................................................................. 4
data.......................................................................................................................................................... 4
data store ........................................................................................................................................... 4, 13
data warehouse........................................................................................................................ 2, 4, 11, 14
de facto class ........................................................................................................................................... 4
exchange file ............................................................................................................................... 4, 11, 12
external model......................................................................................................................................... 8
implementation ..................................................................................................................... 2, 12, 13, 14
implementation method..................................................................................................................... 4, 14
individual ............................................................................................................................................ 5, 7
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information.............................................................................................................................................. 5
information object registration.............................................................................................................. 16
instance ............................................................................................................................................. 5, 13
ISO 10303 ............................................................................................................................................. 13
ISO 13584 ............................................................................................................................................. 14
manufactured product class..................................................................................................................... 5
physical model ........................................................................................................................................ 8
process plant life-cycle data.................................................................................................................... 5
product and manufacturing standards ................................................................................................... 15
proprietary class ...................................................................................................................................... 5
proprietary product class......................................................................................................................... 6
reference data ...................................................................................................... 1, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 15
reference data library ............................................................................................................ 6, 10, 12, 15
standard class .......................................................................................................................................... 6
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