Gateways for vehicles, weapons, and industrial control systems. Standard protocol support for autonomous platforms, weapon systems, and OT/ICS infrastructure — all governed by the same authorization and audit framework as the rest of the architecture.
Command and control for autonomous platforms via MAVLink v2. Mission command execution, abort, and real-time status streaming. Integrates unmanned vehicles into the kill chain as first-class entities.
STANAG 4586 command and control interface for NATO-standard UAV interoperability. Multiple levels of interoperability from basic telemetry to full mission control.
Weapon system integration with inventory tracking and engagement authorization. Connects weapon platforms to the targeting engine and fires management pipeline with HUMAUTH enforcement at every step.
Multi-vehicle swarm primitives for coordinated operations. Task allocation, formation management, and collective behavior across heterogeneous vehicle types.
Industrial control system integration for critical infrastructure monitoring and protection. Protocol support for Modbus TCP/RTU, OPC-UA, DNP3, and MQTT. Emergency stop, interlock status, and process variable read/write.
NATO STANAG 4559 NSILI interface for querying ISR data catalogs. Search and retrieve imagery, signals intelligence, and other ISR products from allied repositories using standard NATO protocols.
Monitoring industrial control systems for interference is an operational technology problem that benefits from protocol-native access.
Varindor's OT gateway speaks the same protocols as the PLCs, RTUs, and SCADA systems it monitors. Modbus registers, OPC-UA nodes, DNP3 outstations — read natively. Process variable manipulation is detected at the protocol level and correlated with intelligence feeds across domains.
This feeds directly into the OSINT infrastructure status assessments and the Cognitive Warfare Engine's anomaly detection. A cyber-physical attack on infrastructure becomes another signal in the cross-domain fusion picture. The civil command console gets the same alert the military C2 does — because in hybrid warfare, the target is the same and the response requires both.
All protocol implementations — military data links, UAV interfaces, and industrial protocols alike — are built from publicly available specifications and open standards documentation.