Level 0:
It is the Process or equipment under control
Level 1:
It includes the Controllers/PLCs that provide basic control, safety and protection functions
Level 2:
It includes supervisory control functions and includes devices such as HMIs, Operating workstations, Engineering Workstations, Historians, Application Servers, Engineering Databases, etc.
Level 3:
It includes the operations management functions such as domain controller, backup server, antivirus and patch management, etc.
Level 4:
It refers to the Enterprise systems
Architecture Diagram Notations
The architecture diagrams show a very simplistic view of system architectures.
These architecture diagrams illustrate specific ways to perform remote access.
The local “IACS” network is represented simplistically to ease the understanding (the actual internal IACS architecture will vary and specific integration and interfaces between the diverse IACS usually required in most implementation is not included or represented in these diagrams).
Dataflows between the different functions are represented by arrows. The direction of the arrows show the outbound or inbound characteristic of the dataflow, but do not represent network sessions.
HMI is used as a generic term to refer to any Human Machine Interface or workstation (Operator, maintenance or engineering workstations, for BPCS, SIS, or Packages).
Local station refers to any workstation or server located at the production site that is used to transfer data or is accessed from a remote site.
The DMZ firewall is represented as a single symbol but can be implemented as a pair of physical firewalls.
The tunnel shown on the diagram refers to a secure tunnel, that can be set up with different technical solutions (e.g., IPSec).
These architecture Diagrams do not show the full detail of all possible types of local networks. Depending on the system vendor solution, some networks that are represented as the separate networks (such as control and HMI network) may be a single network.
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