The Importance of Backing Up HMI Applications

The Importance of Backing Up HMI Applications
The Importance of Backing Up HMI Applications

A dead HMI panel can turn a small failure into a long outage. The screen is dark, operators lose visibility, and the line is suddenly running blind or not running at all. Then the next question hits fast.

Where is the HMI application?

If the only copy lived on the panel, recovery gets messy. In many setups, the panel does not hold a complete, usable project file. Even when it does, pulling it back out is not always simple. A clean archive keeps the focus on restoring operations, not rebuilding screens from memory.

What You Need to Back Up for a Recovery

An HMI backup is more than a single file. The goal is to restore the application and get it communicating the same way it did before.

A solid archive usually includes:

  • The HMI project or application source files
  • Any runtime files used by the application
  • Recipe files, alarm history settings, trend configurations, and reports (as applicable)
  • Tag lists or exported databases when the platform supports them
  • Communication details like IP addresses, node names, and drivers used
  • User accounts and security settings if they are stored in the project
  • Notes on the PLC program version the HMI expects to talk to
  • Software version details for the HMI editor and the panel firmware
  • Licensing and activation information, plus where it is stored

This seems like a lot until you are trying to restore a system at 2 a.m. with three people watching the clock.

Where to Store HMI Backups so They Stay Available

Industrial facilities often have real constraints around data storage. Some networks are segmented. Some systems have limited internet access. Some plants rely on controlled laptops and removable media.

A practical approach is to store backups in layers:

  • A local copy that the maintenance or controls team can reach quickly
  • A site-level copy on a controlled server or shared storage with clear access rules
  • An offline copy stored separately for worst-case recovery

The offline copy matters when a broader event takes systems down at the same time. It also helps when file servers are not reachable from the control network.

How to Archive Without Creating New Risks

Plants still need a safe way to move files. Removable media is common in industrial environments, so it helps to treat it like a controlled tool.

Simple safeguards include:

  • Using a dedicated USB drive for controls work
  • Scanning media on an approved workstation before it touches OT systems
  • Keeping a short log of when backups were taken and who took them
  • Using consistent file names that include the machine, date, and version

This keeps backups organized and reduces the chance of restoring the wrong build.

Make Sure You Can Restore, Not Just Save

A backup that never gets tested is a guess. The best time to find out a project will not open is not during a downtime event.

A lightweight restore test looks like this:

  • Open the archived project on the engineering system
  • Confirm it compiles or validates without errors
  • Verify you have the matching software version available
  • If possible, load it to a spare panel or test environment and confirm communications

Even one successful test per year is better than none. More frequent testing helps on systems that change often.

Key Takeaways

  • A dead HMI panel becomes a bigger problem when the application is not archived.
  • A useful backup includes the project, configs, version details, and restore notes.
  • Store backups in layers, including an offline copy that stays separate.
  • Use simple controls for file movement, naming, and tracking.
  • Test restores so recovery is predictable when the panel fails.

Call ACS Industrial for Repairs and Service for Your Industrial Electronics!

Knowing how to keep industrial electronics in operation can be tough, but you don’t have to do it alone. At ACS Industrial Services, we specialize in preventative maintenance and repair services for industrial electronic equipment.

With over 20 years of experience, ACS is a leading industrial repair service provider when things break. We repair many different components of machinery across various makes and models. We provide a rapid turnaround time. Most repairs are back in your hands within 7-15 business days, with our Rush Repair Service typically shipping in just 3-5 business days.

Contact us for a FREE evaluation and a no-obligation quote, or call (800) 605-6419.