User's Manual UPS control system
Table Of Contents
- Apcupsd User's Manual
- Release Notes
- How To Use This Manual
- Basic User's Guide
- Planning Your Installation
- Building and Installing apcupsd
- After Installation
- Configuration Examples
- Testing Apcupsd
- Troubleshooting Your Installation
- Monitoring and Tuning your UPS
- Maintaining Your UPS
- Frequently-Asked Questions
- Apcupsd Bugs
- Advanced topics
- Customizing Event Handling
- Master/Slave Configurations
- Controlling Multiple UPSes on one Machine
- Support for SNMP UPSes
- Alternate Ways To Run The Network Information Server
- apcupsd System Logging
- Installation: Windows
- Windows Version of apcupsd
- Installation: Serial-Line UPSes
- Overview of Serial-Interface UPSes
- Connecting a Serial-Line UPS to a USB Port
- Connecting a APC USB UPS to either a PC USB or Serial Port
- Cables
- Smart-Custom Cable for SmartUPSes
- Smart Signalling Cable for BackUPS CS Models
- Voltage-Signalling Cable for "dumb" UPSes
- Other APC Cables that apcupsd Supports
- Voltage Signalling Features Supported by Apcupsd for Various Cables
- Voltage Signalling
- Back-UPS Office 500 signals
- Analyses of APC Cables
- Win32 Implementation Restrictions for Simple UPSes
- Internal Apcupsd Actions for Simple Cables
- RS232 Wiring and Signal Conventions
- Pin Assignment for the Serial Port (RS-232C), 25-pin and 9-pin, Female End
- Ioctl to RS232 Correspondence
- Testing Serial-Line UPSes
- Troubleshooting Serial Line communications
- Recalibrating the UPS Runtime
- DATA Logging
- Technical Reference
- Configuration Directive Reference
- apcupsd Status Logging
- Shutown Sequence and its Discontents
- APC smart protocol
- Apcupsd --- RPM Packaging FAQ
- Credits
- Kernel Config
a serial port card for it, or perhaps use a USB UPS. To ensure that it is
properly shutdown if Computer A goes down, you could run a second copy of
apcupsd on Computer B as a slave connected to the main copy of apcupsd on
Computer A. Thus Computer B would be running two slaves, one driven by
the master controlling UPS 1 and the other by the master controlling UPS
2, and Computer B could be shutdown by the first master that signaled it
to do so.
Support for SNMP UPSes
snmp To run apcupsd with an SNMP UPS, you need the following things:
• An SNMP UPS, for example a Web/SNMP card installed into the
SmartSlot.
• apcupsd version 3.10.0 or higher
• Net-SNMP library (previously known as ucd-snmp) installed
Connecting an SNMP UPS
The Simple Network Management Protocol provides an interface to con-
nect to remote devices through the network. apcupsd is now capable of
using the SNMP interface of an SNMP-enabled UPS to communicate with
an UPS. Currently apcupsd supports only APC’s PowerNet MIB. To en-
able the SNMP support it is enough to configure the correct device in your
apcupsd.conf configuration file. The directive needed for this configuration
is:
DEVICE 192.168.100.2:161:APC:private
where the directive is made by four parts:
• IP address of the remote UPS
• Remote SNMP port
• Kind of remote SNMP agent, currently can only be “APC” for APC’s
powernet MIB
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