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  2. Unified Diagnostic Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_Diagnostic_Services

    Unified Diagnostic Services (UDS) is a diagnostic communication protocol used in electronic control units (ECUs) within automotive electronics, which is specified in the ISO 14229-1. [1] It is derived from ISO 14230-3 and the now obsolete ISO 15765-3 (Diagnostic Communication over Controller Area Network (DoCAN) [2]). 'Unified' in this context ...

  3. SAE J1939 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAE_J1939

    Society of Automotive Engineers standard SAE J1939 is the vehicle bus recommended practice used for communication and diagnostics among vehicle components. Originating in the car and heavy-duty truck industry in the United States, it is now widely used in other parts of the world.

  4. ASAM pursues the vision that the tools of a development process chain can be freely interconnected and allow a seamless exchange of data. The standards define protocols, data models, file formats and application programming interfaces for the use in the development and testing of automotive electronic control units. A large amount of popular ...

  5. On-board diagnostics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On-board_diagnostics

    The CAN protocol was developed by Bosch for automotive and industrial control. Unlike other OBD protocols, variants are widely used outside of the automotive industry. While it did not meet the OBD-II requirements for U.S. vehicles prior to 2003, as of 2008 all vehicles sold in the US are required to implement CAN as one of their signaling ...

  6. ISO 15765-2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_15765-2

    The most common application for ISO-TP is the transfer of diagnostic messages with OBD-2 equipped vehicles using KWP2000 and UDS, but is used broadly in other application-specific CAN implementations where one might need to send messages longer than what the CAN protocol physical layer allows (8 bytes for CAN, 64 bytes for CAN-FD, and 2048 ...

  7. Ford EEC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_EEC

    The Ford EEC or Electronic Engine Control is a series of ECU (or Engine Control Unit) that was designed and built by Ford Motor Company.The first system, EEC I, used processors and components developed by Toshiba in 1973.

  8. OBD-II PIDs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OBD-II_PIDs

    As defined in ISO 15765-4, emissions protocols (including OBD-II, EOBD, UDS, etc.) use the ISO-TP transport layer (ISO 15765-2). All CAN frames sent using ISO-TP use a data length of 8 bytes (and DLC of 8). It is recommended to pad the unused data bytes with 0xCC. The PID query and response occurs on the vehicle's CAN bus.

  9. List of automation protocols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_automation_protocols

    Keyword Protocol 2000 (KWP2000) – a protocol for automotive diagnostic devices (runs either on a serial line or over CAN) Local Interconnect Network (LIN) – a very low cost in-vehicle sub-network Media Oriented Systems Transport (MOST) – a high-speed multimedia interface