General Motors Local Area Network

From HandWiki

General Motors Local Area Network (GMLAN) is an application- and transport-layer protocol using controller area network for lower layer services.[1] It was standardized as SAE J2411 for use in OBD-II vehicle networks.[2]

Transport-layer services

Transport-layer services include the transmission of multi-CAN-frame messages based on the ISO 15765-2 multi-frame messaging scheme. It was developed and is used primarily by General Motors for in-vehicle communication and diagnostics.[3] GM's Tech2 uses the CANdi (Controller Area Network diagnostic interface) adapter to communicate over GMLAN.

Applications

Some software applications that allow interfacing to GMLAN are Intrepid Control Systems, Inc.'s Vehicle Spy 3; Vector's CANoe; Dearborn Group's Hercules, ETAS' ES-1222, ES590, ES715, and ES580; ScanTool.net's OBDLink MX; EControls by Enovation Controls' CANCapture; and GMLAN vehicle universal remote control GMRC for Android devices

Tesla uses J2411 (single-wire CAN over the Control Pilot) for their DC Supercharger (newer units are also capable of PLC over the control pilot) and AC Destination Charging.[4]

References

  1. "GMW3089". https://global.ihs.com/doc_detail.cfm?document_name=GMW3089. Retrieved 2018-08-08. "General Motors Local Area Network (GMLAN) Single Wire Controller Area Network (SWCAN) Physical and Data Link Layers Specification" 
  2. "Controller Area Network (CAN BUS) Protocol | Free Course". Kvaser. https://www.kvaser.com/can-protocol-tutorial/. 
  3. Jeff Hartman (13 February 2004). How to Tune and Modify Engine Management Systems. Motorbooks. pp. 252–. ISBN 978-0-7603-1582-8. https://books.google.com/books?id=KZSbG-dVT3YC&pg=PA252. "GMW3110" 
  4. Template:Cite tech report