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@dennypage Thanks for replying,
Running 2.4.5-RELEASE-p1 (amd64) of pfSense and 2.7.4_7 of the NUT package.
I'm currently doing this testing on a fresh install of pfSense, all I had added to the config was:
USB Type: Local USB
UPS Name: ups
Driver: usbhid
ups.users: [remoteuser]
password = upsmon
upsmon slaveHere's my UPS: BR1500GI
I have disabled the master / slave behaviour of the UPS so all 5x sockets on the battery backup side should be in the 'Battery backup outlets with surge protection only' mode. I was assuming that NUT tells the UPS to shutdown and therefore having 5x sockets I can use rather than 3x was preferable.
Thanks,
Dave -
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@dennypage Output below:
[2.4.5-RELEASE][admin@pfSense.localdomain]/root: upsrw ups [battery.charge.low] Remaining battery level when UPS switches to LB (percent) Type: STRING Maximum length: 10 Value: 10 [battery.runtime.low] Remaining battery runtime when UPS switches to LB (seconds) Type: STRING Maximum length: 10 Value: 120 [input.sensitivity] Input power sensitivity Type: STRING Maximum length: 10 Value: medium [input.transfer.high] High voltage transfer point (V) Type: STRING Maximum length: 10 Value: 294 [input.transfer.low] Low voltage transfer point (V) Type: STRING Maximum length: 10 Value: 176 [ups.delay.shutdown] Interval to wait after shutdown with delay command (seconds) Type: STRING Maximum length: 10 Value: 20 [2.4.5-RELEASE][admin@pfSense.localdomain]/root: upsc ups battery.charge: 100 battery.charge.low: 10 battery.charge.warning: 50 battery.date: 2001/09/25 battery.mfr.date: 2015/03/19 battery.runtime: 771 battery.runtime.low: 120 battery.type: PbAc battery.voltage: 27.3 battery.voltage.nominal: 24.0 device.mfr: American Power Conversion device.model: Back-UPS RS 1500G device.serial: 3B1512X15061 device.type: ups driver.name: usbhid-ups driver.parameter.pollfreq: 30 driver.parameter.pollinterval: 2 driver.parameter.port: auto driver.parameter.synchronous: no driver.version: 2.7.4 driver.version.data: APC HID 0.96 driver.version.internal: 0.41 input.sensitivity: medium input.transfer.high: 294 input.transfer.low: 176 input.voltage: 245.0 input.voltage.nominal: 230 ups.beeper.status: disabled ups.delay.shutdown: 20 ups.firmware: 878.L4 .I ups.firmware.aux: L4 ups.load: 29 ups.mfr: American Power Conversion ups.mfr.date: 2015/03/19 ups.model: Back-UPS RS 1500G ups.productid: 0002 ups.realpower.nominal: 865 ups.serial: 3B1512X15061 ups.status: OL ups.test.result: No test initiated ups.timer.reboot: 0 ups.timer.shutdown: -1 ups.vendorid: 051d [2.4.5-RELEASE][admin@pfSense.localdomain]/root:
Thanks again :)
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I don't see anything troubling in your upsrw or upsc output.
@uk_dave said in NUT package:
My problem is that when power is restored, as soon as the host that talks to the UPS starts to boot up (i.e. immediately after going through POST) it triggers the UPS to go on battery (despite being plugged into the wall with AC power on) which it then stays on until the battery dies.
More questions:
- Are you testing by pulling mains from the UPS? Assuming yes...
- When the pfSense shutdown occurs, is the UPS turning off the output?
- How long are you waiting before restoring mains to the UPS?
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- yes, I turn the mains socket off
- I don't believe it is, I've got a halogen lamp on a dimmer that can pull up to 435W so I've varied the load to full to bring the estimated run time down to 1 min remaining to force the shutdown process then ease up so it can last a few minutes and the UPS doesn't shut down until the battery dies... definitely longer than 20s
- I usually wait about a minute before restoring power.
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@uk_dave said in NUT package:
I don't believe it is
Okay, this definitely is a problem. The last thing nut does is instruct the UPS to remove power after the configurable delay (20s by default).
What I would do next is to move the pfSense box to not be powered by the UPS, but still have the USB connected. Then, test the power kill command of the UPS using "upsdrvctl shutdown" or the -k option to usbhid-ups.
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@dennypage can you help with the correct config pls.
I have a APC UPS master on TrueNAS boxI have a dumb UPS connected to pfsense and need to shutdown pfsense based on a timer triggered by the master due to the non-shared UPS.
I have looked at the NUT documentation and examples below but i can't figure out if i need to use the heartbeat config or not.
http://rogerprice.org/NUT/ConfigExamples.A5.pdf
https://wiki.ipfire.org/addons/nut/detailedi simply want to shutdown the slave 20min after power loss, but obviously cancel the timer if the power comes back.
is the a way to simulate a power failure on the master to test the slave without actually cutting power to the master?
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@dennypage
Hi, I have pfSense plugged into the wall and connected to the UPS via USB.running 'upsdrvctl shutdown' does indeed turn off the outputs, 20s later shutdowns the UPS which then turns back on since AC is still active to the UPS. Watching the console of pfSense it goes through:
- Initiating UPS shutdown
- UPS ups on battery
- UPS ups on line power
I wondered if somehow it had automagically fixed itself so after booting up again (successfully) I pulled the power to the UPS. pfSense shutdown correctly but the UPS outputs are still active and being powered. Left it for about 5 minutes but the UPS did not shutdown.
This behaviour is consistent using NUT over 3x different machines and 2x different USB cables (bought another for testing). The machines I've been testing on (each as a standalone master) are:
- HP T730 thin client (currently using as a test pfSense environment)
- Asus Chromebox running Ubuntu
- Supermicro pfSense machine based around a X11SCL-IF
Two common denominators... the UPS and me, one of them is doing something wrong I think :)
Cheers -
@uk_dave said in NUT package:
I wondered if somehow it had automagically fixed itself so after booting up again (successfully) I pulled the power to the UPS. pfSense shutdown correctly but the UPS outputs are still active and being powered. Left it for about 5 minutes but the UPS did not shutdown.
This behaviour is consistent using NUT over 3x different machines and 2x different USB cables (bought another for testing). The machines I've been testing on (each as a standalone master) are:HP T730 thin client (currently using as a test pfSense environment)
Asus Chromebox running Ubuntu
Supermicro pfSense machine based around a X11SCL-IFVery weird. It seems like the the shutdown command is being ignored if the UPS is on battery. It sounds like a firmware bug, but you said that apcupsd worked correctly. I'm afraid I'm out of ideas. You might approach folk on the NUT mailing list and see what they might have to offer.
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Thanks for all your help anyway. I've sent an email to the NUT mailing list so see if anyone has any ideas.
Cheers -
@gwaitsi said in NUT package:
@dennypage can you help with the correct config pls.
I have a APC UPS master on TrueNAS boxI have a dumb UPS connected to pfsense and need to shutdown pfsense based on a timer triggered by the master due to the non-shared UPS.
I have looked at the NUT documentation and examples below but i can't figure out if i need to use the heartbeat config or not.
http://rogerprice.org/NUT/ConfigExamples.A5.pdf
https://wiki.ipfire.org/addons/nut/detailedi simply want to shutdown the slave 20min after power loss, but obviously cancel the timer if the power comes back.
is the a way to simulate a power failure on the master to test the slave without actually cutting power to the master?
any of you guys can help me with the correct config for upssched and upsmon? Do i need the heartbeat for what i want to do?
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@gwaitsi said in NUT package:
is the a way to simulate a power failure on the master to test the slave without actually cutting power to the master?
Look for FSD in the NUT documentation.
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@gwaitsi said in NUT package:
I have a dumb UPS connected to pfsense and need to shutdown pfsense based on a timer triggered by the master due to the non-shared UPS.
...
i simply want to shutdown the slave 20min after power loss, but obviously cancel the timer if the power comes back.A dumb UPS isn't something supported by the NUT pfSense package. In general dumb USPs are not a good idea because there is nothing that will trigger the restart of the system when power returns.
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@dennypage an ideological argument over why it is not a good idea doesn't help solve the problem. My NAS box is 3 floors above my pfsense box (which is in the basement where there is no room for a full UPS). The dumb UPS i have, can simply replace the existing power adapter and on the PTZ i tested with, works for above 24hrs. I expect it will provide about 2-3hrs with the pfsense box, so I want to shutdown the box after about 50% capacity.
The last time i had a power failure a few weeks ago, i lost my system drive on pfsense and spent the entire weekend trying to recover and get the system back to its previous state. So while it may not be ideal to go and have to manually restart in a worse case scenario, it is better than having to rebuild the system. This year we've had about 4-5 utility outages lasting up to an hour. So in all cases this year, the device would have restore power before needing to shutdown. (although, having said that. the APC UPS only lasts about an hour before shutdown - so there may have been 1 or 2 shutdowns due to the master shutting down).
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@gwaitsi said in NUT package:
@dennypage an ideological argument over why it is not a good idea doesn't help solve the problem.
No, it won't. But then again, there isn't anything in the pfSense NUT package that will help you solve the problem as defined.
Operating within the constraints you have defined, I would just use an ssh script run from your NAS box to perform the shutdown.
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Over the weekend I restarted my old QNAP NAS. That left me to solve the problem of one Synology NAS and one QNAP NAS that I wanted to have run as UPS slaves to NUT on pfsense.
Spent a minute looking at changing the default UPS name on both and quickly decided that wasn't going to be worth the effort.
Set up a "dummy-ups" in NUT thinking that would work. That didn't work the way I thought it would, adding the lines to 'additional configuration line to ups.conf'. For some reason that prepends the additional lines not append. Bad.
So, I then added the lines to 'extra arguments to driver' which appended the lines to ups.conf and that resulted in the ups.conf I wanted.
You want this in the right place, after your real UPS:
[qnapups]
driver = dummy-ups
port = ups@127.0.0.1
desc = "dummy-ups in repeater mode"I now have a real UPS named ups and a replicate UPS named qnapups. I DO have additional lines to override low battery that come BEFORE the repeater configuration. If you want to do this in the GUI best to have a shell open and see what is going on in the config files in /usr/local/etc/nut.
My ups.conf looks like this:
[ups]
driver=usbhid-ups
port=auto
ignorelb
override.battery.charge.low = 30
[qnapups]
driver = dummy-ups
port = ups@127.0.0.1
desc = "dummy-ups in repeater mode"As best I understand (please correct me if I'm wrong) the NUT package is all but unmaintained at this point. I wonder if the best way to get things working is to install the package, stay out of the GUI and configure things by hand in the various config files.
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@jwj said in NUT package:
That left me to solve the problem of one Synology NAS
Like :
To have the Syno NAS connect to the NUT on pfSEnse as a salve :
Set the IP to the IP of pfSense in which the NUT package is running.
Define on pfSense the IP it has to expose it's NUT interface on :and of course tell it what user / slave could 'login".
This user and password are somewhat hard coded into the NUT core files of the Syno (if I recall that correctly). -
@Gertjan Yes. Required to get things working with a Synology NAS. I had a quick look at the Marketing blurb concerning DSM 7 beta. Supposedly more control over UPS configuration. We'll see. All this hard coded stuff is a pain in the butt!
Good post!
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For completeness I'll put my complete config.
The situation is: one Synology NAS (1618+) one QNAP NAS (TS-451) both as slaves. pfsense/NUT as the master. APC Smart-UPS C 1000 usb to pfsense host.
In /usr/local/etc/nut
ups.conf:
[ups]
driver=usbhid-ups
port=auto
ignorelb
override.battery.charge.low = 30
[qnapups]
driver = dummy-ups
port = ups@127.0.0.1
desc = "dummy-ups in repeater mode"upsd.conf:
LISTEN 127.0.0.1
LISTEN ::1LISTEN 192.168.40.1
(Maybe I should have the IPv6 address for the VLAN the NAS are in, not sure it matters and things work fine without it.)
upsd.users:
[admin]
password=db8075bb45efab9ee80a
actions=set
instcmds=all
[local-monitor]
password=997fae5f5b0fc09becb3
upsmon master[monuser]
password = secret
upsmon slaveupsmon.conf
MONITOR ups 1 local-monitor 997fae5f5b0fc09becb3 master
SHUTDOWNCMD "/sbin/shutdown -p +0"
POWERDOWNFLAG /etc/killpowerupssched.conf:
CMDSCRIPT /usr/local/bin/upssched-cmd
(And a bunch of comments, Nothing to see here)For sure there are improvements that could be made, more control over the UPS shutdown and startup when going to a low battery condition and when power returns. I'd vey much like to hear from those that know more about this :)
I do suggest getting used to looking at this from the real configuration files and not just staring at the GUI. Just saying...
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@jwj said in NUT package:
As best I understand (please correct me if I'm wrong) the NUT package is all but unmaintained at this point. I wonder if the best way to get things working is to install the package, stay out of the GUI and configure things by hand in the various config files.
I honestly don't understand how you would find your way to a active 700+ post support thread yet determine that the package was unmaintained...