Computer Automated Measurement and Control
Computer-Aided Measurement And Control is a standard bus and modular [crate electronics|modular-crate electronics standard] for data acquisition and control used in particle detectors for nuclear and particle physics and in industry. The bus allows data exchange between plug-in modules and a crate controller, which then interfaces to a PC or to a VME-CAMAC interface.
The standard was originally defined by the ESONE Committee as standard EUR 4100 in 1972, and covers the mechanical, electrical, and logical elements of a parallel bus for the plug-in modules. Several standards have been defined for multiple crate systems, including the Parallel Branch Highway definition and Serial Highway definition. Vendor-specific Host/Crate interfaces have also been built.
The CAMAC standard encompasses IEEE standards:
- 583 The base standard
- 683 Block transfer specifications
- 596 Parallel Branch Highway systems
- 595 Serial highway system
- 726 Real-time Basic for CAMAC
- 675 Auxiliary crate controller specification/support
- 758 FORTRAN subroutines for CAMAC.
In addition to functions that address the module, the following global functions are defined:
- I – Crate inhibit
- Z – Crate zero
- C – Crate clear
The FASTBUS standard was introduced in 1984 as a replacement for CAMAC in large systems.