ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login

    Pi as a UPS monitor

    IT Discussion
    raspberry pi ups apc eaton nut
    8
    114
    33.8k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • gjacobseG
      gjacobse @JaredBusch
      last edited by

      @JaredBusch
      Well push comes to Meh -okay. I restarted the box and it's polls now.

      Won't do anything else with it for a spell to see if it retains it. It's been four days since I restarted it. Now - to reconnect to it as I had to pull the monitor off. X2Go works great,.. but only once I've signed in at the local. sure that is omething that can be changed.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • gjacobseG
        gjacobse
        last edited by

        checking on my UPS this morning

         ~ $ uptime
         09:59:20 up 6 days, 18:12,  2 users,  load average: 0.19, 0.25, 0.25
        
         ~ $ sudo upsc pandora
        Init SSL without certificate database
        battery.charge: 100
        battery.charge.low: 10
        battery.charge.warning: 50
        battery.date: not set
        battery.mfr.date: 2014/06/22
        battery.runtime: 3172
        battery.runtime.low: 120
        battery.type: PbAc
        battery.voltage: 13.6
        battery.voltage.nominal: 12.0
        device.mfr: APC
        device.model: Back-UPS ES 550G
        device.serial: 4B1425P54201
        device.type: ups
        driver.name: usbhid-ups
        driver.parameter.pollfreq: 30
        driver.parameter.pollinterval: 2
        driver.parameter.port: auto
        driver.version: 2.7.1
        driver.version.data: APC HID 0.95
        driver.version.internal: 0.38
        input.sensitivity: medium
        input.transfer.high: 139
        input.transfer.low: 92
        input.voltage: 126.0
        input.voltage.nominal: 120
        ups.beeper.status: enabled
        ups.delay.shutdown: 20
        ups.firmware: 904.W1 .D
        ups.firmware.aux: W1
        ups.load: 13
        ups.mfr: APC
        ups.mfr.date: 2014/06/22
        ups.model: Back-UPS ES 550G
        ups.productid: 0002
        ups.serial: 4B1425P54201
        ups.status: OL
        ups.timer.reboot: 0
        ups.timer.shutdown: -1
        ups.vendorid: 051d
        

        Since reboot, the monitor has been running all the time. So it may have been simply that.

        As for having multiple UPS monitoring, I was curious what you thought about having a central display which showed the status of each UPS monitored. That way you have one display to glance at for a health check.

        gjacobseG travisdh1T thwrT 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • gjacobseG
          gjacobse @gjacobse
          last edited by

          @gjacobse said in Pi as a UPS monitor:

          checking on my UPS this morning

          Since reboot, the monitor has been running all the time. So it may have been simply that.

          As for having multiple UPS monitoring, I was curious what you thought about having a central display which showed the status of each UPS monitored. That way you have one display to glance at for a health check.

          Maybe something similar to the UBNT controller software - central configuration ability.....

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • travisdh1T
            travisdh1 @gjacobse
            last edited by

            @gjacobse said in Pi as a UPS monitor:

            checking on my UPS this morning

             ~ $ uptime
             09:59:20 up 6 days, 18:12,  2 users,  load average: 0.19, 0.25, 0.25
            
             ~ $ sudo upsc pandora
            Init SSL without certificate database
            battery.charge: 100
            battery.charge.low: 10
            battery.charge.warning: 50
            battery.date: not set
            battery.mfr.date: 2014/06/22
            battery.runtime: 3172
            battery.runtime.low: 120
            battery.type: PbAc
            battery.voltage: 13.6
            battery.voltage.nominal: 12.0
            device.mfr: APC
            device.model: Back-UPS ES 550G
            device.serial: 4B1425P54201
            device.type: ups
            driver.name: usbhid-ups
            driver.parameter.pollfreq: 30
            driver.parameter.pollinterval: 2
            driver.parameter.port: auto
            driver.version: 2.7.1
            driver.version.data: APC HID 0.95
            driver.version.internal: 0.38
            input.sensitivity: medium
            input.transfer.high: 139
            input.transfer.low: 92
            input.voltage: 126.0
            input.voltage.nominal: 120
            ups.beeper.status: enabled
            ups.delay.shutdown: 20
            ups.firmware: 904.W1 .D
            ups.firmware.aux: W1
            ups.load: 13
            ups.mfr: APC
            ups.mfr.date: 2014/06/22
            ups.model: Back-UPS ES 550G
            ups.productid: 0002
            ups.serial: 4B1425P54201
            ups.status: OL
            ups.timer.reboot: 0
            ups.timer.shutdown: -1
            ups.vendorid: 051d
            

            Since reboot, the monitor has been running all the time. So it may have been simply that.

            As for having multiple UPS monitoring, I was curious what you thought about having a central display which showed the status of each UPS monitored. That way you have one display to glance at for a health check.

            Take the output of upsc and throw it up on a web page. Unless you want a local display, in which case it's actually more difficult.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • thwrT
              thwr @gjacobse
              last edited by

              @gjacobse said in Pi as a UPS monitor:

              checking on my UPS this morning

               ~ $ uptime
               09:59:20 up 6 days, 18:12,  2 users,  load average: 0.19, 0.25, 0.25
              
               ~ $ sudo upsc pandora
              Init SSL without certificate database
              battery.charge: 100
              battery.charge.low: 10
              battery.charge.warning: 50
              battery.date: not set
              battery.mfr.date: 2014/06/22
              battery.runtime: 3172
              battery.runtime.low: 120
              battery.type: PbAc
              battery.voltage: 13.6
              battery.voltage.nominal: 12.0
              device.mfr: APC
              device.model: Back-UPS ES 550G
              device.serial: 4B1425P54201
              device.type: ups
              driver.name: usbhid-ups
              driver.parameter.pollfreq: 30
              driver.parameter.pollinterval: 2
              driver.parameter.port: auto
              driver.version: 2.7.1
              driver.version.data: APC HID 0.95
              driver.version.internal: 0.38
              input.sensitivity: medium
              input.transfer.high: 139
              input.transfer.low: 92
              input.voltage: 126.0
              input.voltage.nominal: 120
              ups.beeper.status: enabled
              ups.delay.shutdown: 20
              ups.firmware: 904.W1 .D
              ups.firmware.aux: W1
              ups.load: 13
              ups.mfr: APC
              ups.mfr.date: 2014/06/22
              ups.model: Back-UPS ES 550G
              ups.productid: 0002
              ups.serial: 4B1425P54201
              ups.status: OL
              ups.timer.reboot: 0
              ups.timer.shutdown: -1
              ups.vendorid: 051d
              

              Since reboot, the monitor has been running all the time. So it may have been simply that.

              As for having multiple UPS monitoring, I was curious what you thought about having a central display which showed the status of each UPS monitored. That way you have one display to glance at for a health check.

              AMQP / MQTT may be awesome for this at the transport layer. MQTT is an interesting protocol that let you define a "last will and testament" action in case something goes south.

              Ansible/Puppet etc. can handle the central configuration.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • JaredBuschJ
                JaredBusch
                last edited by

                Hey 3 months later.....

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • JaredBuschJ
                  JaredBusch
                  last edited by

                  Alright, I plugged the thing back in and got to testing.

                  Yeah! It still communicates.

                  pi@raspberrypi:~ $ sudo upsc jaredoffice
                  Init SSL without certificate database
                  battery.charge: 84
                  battery.charge.low: 10
                  battery.charge.warning: 50
                  battery.date: 2001/09/25
                  battery.mfr.date: 2010/12/15
                  battery.runtime: 1236
                  battery.runtime.low: 120
                  battery.type: PbAc
                  battery.voltage: 27.0
                  battery.voltage.nominal: 24.0
                  device.mfr: American Power Conversion
                  device.model: Back-UPS BR1000G
                  device.serial: 3B1051X20329
                  device.type: ups
                  driver.name: usbhid-ups
                  driver.parameter.pollfreq: 30
                  driver.parameter.pollinterval: 2
                  driver.parameter.port: auto
                  driver.version: 2.7.2
                  driver.version.data: APC HID 0.95
                  driver.version.internal: 0.38
                  input.sensitivity: medium
                  input.transfer.high: 147
                  input.transfer.low: 88
                  input.transfer.reason: input voltage out of range
                  input.voltage: 124.0
                  input.voltage.nominal: 120
                  ups.beeper.status: enabled
                  ups.delay.shutdown: 20
                  ups.firmware: 868.L1 .D
                  ups.firmware.aux: L1
                  ups.load: 20
                  ups.mfr: American Power Conversion
                  ups.mfr.date: 2010/12/15
                  ups.model: Back-UPS BR1000G
                  ups.productid: 0002
                  ups.realpower.nominal: 600
                  ups.serial: 3B1051X20329
                  ups.status: OL CHRG
                  ups.test.result: No test initiated
                  ups.timer.reboot: 0
                  ups.timer.shutdown: -1
                  ups.vendorid: 051d
                  
                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                  • JaredBuschJ
                    JaredBusch
                    last edited by JaredBusch

                    Pulled the power cord from the wall. UPS beeps, but nothing from nut.

                    Ok back to the manual and checking the conf files.

                    Well it would probably help if I told the thing what to monitor..
                    /etc/nut/upsmon.conf

                    MONITOR jaredoffice@localhost 1 upsmon demo master
                    

                    Oh but those details have to match /etc/nut/ups.conf and /etc/nut/upsd.users. Well I already know that my unit is called jaredoffice@localhost from ups.conf. So just edit upsd.users.

                    pi@raspberrypi:~ $ sudo nano /etc/nut/upsd.users
                    # put at end of file
                    [upsmon]
                    password = demo
                    upsmon master
                    

                    Now reload the monitor

                    pi@raspberrypi:~ $ sudo upsmon -c reload
                    Network UPS Tools upsmon 2.7.2
                    pi@raspberrypi:~ $
                    

                    Then unplug the UPS. and get nothing.

                    look in the logs..
                    tail/var/log/syslog

                    Feb  1 17:05:38 raspberrypi upsmon[732]: UPS jaredoffice@localhost on battery
                    Feb  1 17:05:38 raspberrypi rsyslogd-2007: action 'action 17' suspended, next retry is Wed Feb  1 17:06:08 2017 [try http://www.rsyslog.com/e/2007 ]
                    Feb  1 17:05:38 raspberrypi upssched[964]: Can't open /etc/nut/upssched.conf: Permission denied
                    Feb  1 17:05:48 raspberrypi upsmon[732]: UPS jaredoffice@localhost on line power
                    Feb  1 17:05:48 raspberrypi upssched[967]: Can't open /etc/nut/upssched.conf: Permission denied
                    

                    Say to yourself, WTF did I do 3 months ago....

                    Time to reload and start over.

                    gjacobseG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • gjacobseG
                      gjacobse @JaredBusch
                      last edited by

                      @JaredBusch said in Pi as a UPS monitor:

                      Pulled the power cord from the wall. UPS beeps, but nothing from nut.

                      Ok back to the manual and checking the conf files.

                      Well it would probably help if I told the thing what to monitor..
                      /etc/nut/upsmon.conf

                      MONITOR jaredoffice@localhost 1 upsmon demo master
                      

                      Oh but those details have to match /etc/nut/ups.conf and /etc/nut/upsd.users. Well I already know that my unit is called jaredoffice@localhost from ups.conf. So just edit upsd.users.

                      pi@raspberrypi:~ $ sudo nano /etc/nut/upsd.users
                      # put at end of file
                      [upsmon]
                      password = demo
                      upsmon master
                      

                      Now reload the monitor

                      pi@raspberrypi:~ $ sudo upsmon -c reload
                      Network UPS Tools upsmon 2.7.2
                      pi@raspberrypi:~ $
                      

                      Then unplug the UPS. and get nothing.

                      look in the logs..
                      tail/var/log/syslog

                      Feb  1 17:05:38 raspberrypi upsmon[732]: UPS jaredoffice@localhost on battery
                      Feb  1 17:05:38 raspberrypi rsyslogd-2007: action 'action 17' suspended, next retry is Wed Feb  1 17:06:08 2017 [try http://www.rsyslog.com/e/2007 ]
                      Feb  1 17:05:38 raspberrypi upssched[964]: Can't open /etc/nut/upssched.conf: Permission denied
                      Feb  1 17:05:48 raspberrypi upsmon[732]: UPS jaredoffice@localhost on line power
                      Feb  1 17:05:48 raspberrypi upssched[967]: Can't open /etc/nut/upssched.conf: Permission denied
                      

                      Say to yourself, WTF did I do 3 months ago....

                      Time to reload and start over.

                      think i got the same thing, and decide the same course of action, to which I have not moved forward with. Albeit, it's not on a rPi but a desktop - premise is the same.

                      Think we may have to create a user for the NUT system.... but again,.. can't work with it right now.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • JaredBuschJ
                        JaredBusch
                        last edited by JaredBusch

                        Quick check of upsmon.conf found this, uncommented it.

                        # RUN_AS_USER nut
                        

                        Rebooted Pi, unplugged UPS.

                        Broadcast message from nut@raspberrypi (somewhere) (Wed Feb  1 17:19:04 2017):
                        
                        UPS jaredoffice@localhost on battery
                        
                        
                        Broadcast message from nut@raspberrypi (somewhere) (Wed Feb  1 17:19:24 2017):
                        
                        UPS jaredoffice@localhost on line power
                        
                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • JaredBuschJ
                          JaredBusch
                          last edited by

                          Syslog had this though.

                          Feb  1 17:19:04 raspberrypi upsmon[734]: UPS jaredoffice@localhost on battery
                          Feb  1 17:19:11 raspberrypi upssched[792]: Failed to connect to parent and failed to create parent: No such file or directory
                          Feb  1 17:19:24 raspberrypi upsmon[734]: UPS jaredoffice@localhost on line power
                          

                          Back to the config files we go!
                          /etc/nut/upssched.conf

                          # PIPEFN <filename>
                          # This is commented out by default to make you visit this file and think
                          # about how your system works before potentially opening a hole.
                          

                          FFS, but it gets better! Right below that, also commented out.

                          # LOCKFN <filename>
                          #
                          # REQUIRED.  This was added after version 1.2.1.
                          #
                          # upssched needs to be able to create this filename in order to avoid
                          # a race condition when two events are dispatched from upsmon at nearly
                          # the same time.  This file will only exist briefly.  It must not be
                          # created by any other process.
                          #
                          # You should put this in the same directory as PIPEFN.
                          #
                          

                          So I update the config and make a directory forgetting to chown it from root /sigh...

                          PIPEFN /etc/nut/upssched/upssched.pipe
                          LOCKFN /etc/nut/upssched/upssched.lock
                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • JaredBuschJ
                            JaredBusch
                            last edited by JaredBusch

                            Once it was all chowned...

                            Feb  1 17:33:08 raspberrypi upssched[793]: Timer daemon started
                            Feb  1 17:33:09 raspberrypi upssched[793]: New timer: onbattwarn (30 seconds)
                            Feb  1 17:33:39 raspberrypi upssched[793]: Event: onbattwarn
                            Feb  1 17:33:54 raspberrypi upssched[793]: Timer queue empty, exiting
                            

                            And output to the screen:

                            Broadcast message from nut@raspberrypi (somewhere) (Wed Feb  1 17:33:39 2017):
                            
                            The UPS is currently running on battery power!
                            
                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • JaredBuschJ
                              JaredBusch
                              last edited by

                              Now time to wipe, replicate, test and document.

                              Then the command can be changed to send email.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                              • JaredBuschJ
                                JaredBusch
                                last edited by JaredBusch

                                Following my own notes from post 62
                                At step 11 (installing nut form repo) I see an error.
                                May or may not have gotten this the first time around..

                                pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ sudo apt-get install nut
                                Reading package lists... Done
                                <snip>
                                Unpacking nut (2.7.2-4) ...
                                Processing triggers for man-db (2.7.0.2-5) ...
                                Processing triggers for systemd (215-17+deb8u6) ...
                                Setting up libnspr4:armhf (2:4.12-1+debu8u1) ...
                                Setting up libnss3:armhf (2:3.26-1+debu8u1) ...
                                Setting up libupsclient4:armhf (2.7.2-4) ...
                                Setting up nut-client (2.7.2-4) ...
                                Job for nut-monitor.service failed. See 'systemctl status nut-monitor.service' and 'journalctl -xn' for details.
                                invoke-rc.d: initscript nut-client, action "start" failed.
                                Setting up nut-server (2.7.2-4) ...
                                A dependency job for nut-server.service failed. See 'journalctl -xn' for details.
                                invoke-rc.d: initscript nut-server, action "start" failed.
                                Job for nut-driver.service failed. See 'systemctl status nut-driver.service' and 'journalctl -xn' for details.
                                Setting up nut (2.7.2-4) ...
                                Processing triggers for libc-bin (2.19-18+deb8u7) ...
                                Processing triggers for systemd (215-17+deb8u6) ...
                                pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ systemctl status nut-monitor
                                ● nut-monitor.service - Network UPS Tools - power device monitor and shutdown controller
                                   Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/nut-monitor.service; enabled)
                                   Active: failed (Result: resources) since Thu 2017-02-02 02:10:27 UTC; 49s ago
                                pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ 
                                
                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • JaredBuschJ
                                  JaredBusch
                                  last edited by

                                  ah here we go, this is normal because not configured.

                                  pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ sudo journalctl -xn
                                  -- Logs begin at Fri 2016-11-25 18:24:08 UTC, end at Thu 2017-02-02 02:33:03 UTC. --
                                  Feb 02 02:32:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 sudo[23103]: pam_unix(sudo:session): session opened for user root by pi(uid=0)
                                  Feb 02 02:32:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Starting Network UPS Tools - power device monitor and shutdown controller...
                                  -- Subject: Unit nut-monitor.service has begun with start-up
                                  -- Defined-By: systemd
                                  -- Support: http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
                                  -- 
                                  -- Unit nut-monitor.service has begun starting up.
                                  Feb 02 02:32:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[23113]: upsmon disabled, please adjust the configuration to your needs
                                  Feb 02 02:32:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[23113]: Then set MODE to a suitable value in /etc/nut/nut.conf to enable it
                                  Feb 02 02:32:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: PID file /var/run/nut/upsmon.pid not readable (yet?) after start.
                                  Feb 02 02:32:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Failed to start Network UPS Tools - power device monitor and shutdown controller.
                                  -- Subject: Unit nut-monitor.service has failed
                                  -- Defined-By: systemd
                                  -- Support: http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
                                  -- 
                                  -- Unit nut-monitor.service has failed.
                                  -- 
                                  -- The result is failed.
                                  Feb 02 02:32:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Unit nut-monitor.service entered failed state.
                                  Feb 02 02:32:48 bna-pwr-pi-01 sudo[23103]: pam_unix(sudo:session): session closed for user root
                                  Feb 02 02:33:03 bna-pwr-pi-01 sudo[23121]: pi : TTY=pts/0 ; PWD=/home/pi ; USER=root ; COMMAND=/bin/journalctl -xn
                                  Feb 02 02:33:03 bna-pwr-pi-01 sudo[23121]: pam_unix(sudo:session): session opened for user root by pi(uid=0)
                                  
                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • JaredBuschJ
                                    JaredBusch
                                    last edited by JaredBusch

                                    So on to configuration. Nut has only a few config files you need to deal with.

                                    We will go right down the list.

                                    pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ ls -l /etc/nut
                                    total 44
                                    -rw-r----- 1 root nut  1538 Mar 26  2015 nut.conf
                                    -rw-r----- 1 root nut  4572 Mar 26  2015 ups.conf
                                    -rw-r----- 1 root nut  4578 Mar 26  2015 upsd.conf
                                    -rw-r----- 1 root nut  2131 Mar 26  2015 upsd.users
                                    -rw-r----- 1 root nut 15170 Mar 26  2015 upsmon.conf
                                    -rw-r----- 1 root nut  3887 Mar 26  2015 upssched.conf
                                    
                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • JaredBuschJ
                                      JaredBusch
                                      last edited by

                                      First up is nut.conf. There is only a single option to set in this file, but it is important.

                                      Assuming you are going to have only one device, or if multiple devices, that they will report in on their own, the simplest configuration is to choose standalone

                                      MODE=standalone
                                      

                                      Here are the various meanings from the conf file.

                                      # - none: NUT is not configured, or use the Integrated Power Management, or use
                                      #   some external system to startup NUT components. So nothing is to be started.
                                      # - standalone: This mode address a local only configuration, with 1 UPS
                                      #   protecting the local system. This implies to start the 3 NUT layers (driver,
                                      #   upsd and upsmon) and the matching configuration files. This mode can also
                                      #   address UPS redundancy.
                                      # - netserver: same as for the standalone configuration, but also need
                                      #   some more network access controls (firewall, tcp-wrappers) and possibly a
                                      #   specific LISTEN directive in upsd.conf.
                                      #   Since this MODE is opened to the network, a special care should be applied
                                      #   to security concerns.
                                      # - netclient: this mode only requires upsmon.
                                      
                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • JaredBuschJ
                                        JaredBusch
                                        last edited by

                                        Next up is ups.conf, again read the config file for more information, it is fairly thorough.

                                        In this case I am going to connect it to the APC unit pictured at the beginning of this thread.

                                        [bnajaredrouter]
                                        driver = usbhid-ups
                                        port = auto
                                        desc = "Jared Router UPS"
                                        
                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • JaredBuschJ
                                          JaredBusch
                                          last edited by

                                          The file upsd.conf does not need modified for a typical standalone setup.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • JaredBuschJ
                                            JaredBusch
                                            last edited by

                                            The file upsd.users needs modified to have the authentication that upsmon will use added to the end of the file.

                                            [bnaupsmon]
                                            password = AGoodPassword
                                            upsmon master
                                            
                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • 1
                                            • 2
                                            • 3
                                            • 4
                                            • 5
                                            • 6
                                            • 5 / 6
                                            • First post
                                              Last post