The KNX standard has been built on the
OSI-based
EIB communication stack extended with the
physical layers, configuration modes and application experience of
BatiBUS and
EHS. KNX installations can use several physical communication media: •
Twisted pair wiring (TP1 Cable) (inherited from the EIB standard). (The previously inherited
BatiBUS communication medium (TP0) is no longer part of the KNX Specifications.) •
Power-line networking (inherited from EIB standard). (The previously inherited
EHS communication medium (PL132) is no longer part of the KNX Specifications.) •
Radio (KNX-RF) • IP (also referred to as EIBnet/IP or KNXnet/IP) KNX is not based on a specific hardware platform and a network can be controlled by anything from an 8-bit
microcontroller to a PC, according to the demands of a particular building. The most common form of installation is over twisted pair medium. KNX is an approved standard by the following organisations, (
inter alia): • International standard (ISO/IEC 14543-3) • European standard (
CENELEC EN 50090 and CEN EN 13321–1) • US standard (
ANSI/
ASHRAE 135) • China
Guobiao (GB/T 20965) It is administered by the KNX Association
cvba, a non-profit organisation governed by Belgian law which was formed in 1999. The KNX Association had 500 registered hardware and software vendor members from 45 nations as at 1 July 2021. It had partnership agreements with 100,000 installer companies in 172 countries and more than 500 registered training centres. This is a royalty-free
open standard and thus access to the KNX specifications is unrestricted. == Architecture ==