Network UPS Tools is a collection of programs which provide a common interface for monitoring and administering UPS, PDU and SCD hardware. It uses a layered approach to connect all of the parts.
Drivers are provided for a wide assortment of equipment. They understand the specific language of each device and map it back to a compatibility layer. This means both an expensive high end UPS, a simple "power strip" PDU, or any other power device can be handled transparently with a uniform management interface.
This information is cached by the network server upsd
, which then
answers queries from the clients. upsd contains a number of access
control features to limit the abilities of the clients. Only authorized
hosts may monitor or control your hardware if you wish. Since the
notion of monitoring over the network is built into the software, you
can hang many systems off one large UPS, and they will all shut down
together. You can also use NUT to power on, off or cycle your data center
nodes, individually or globally through PDU outlets.
Clients such as upsmon
check on the status of the hardware and do things
when necessary. The most important task is shutting down the operating
system cleanly before the UPS runs out of power. Other programs are
also provided to log information regularly, monitor status through your
web browser, and more.
If you are installing these programs for the first time, go read the installation instructions to find out how to do that. This document contains more information on what all of this stuff does.
When upgrading from an older version, always check the upgrading notes to see what may have changed. Compatibility issues and other changes will be listed there to ease the process.
Once NUT is installed, refer to the configuration notes for directions.
This is just an overview of the software. You should read the man pages, included example configuration files, and auxiliary documentation for the parts that you intend to use.
These programs are designed to share information over the network. In
the examples below, localhost
is used as the hostname. This can also
be an IP address or a fully qualified domain name. You can specify a
port number if your upsd process runs on another port.
In the case of the program upsc
, to view the variables on the UPS called
sparky on the upsd
server running on the local machine, you’d do this:
/usr/local/ups/bin/upsc sparky@localhost
The default port number is 3493. You can change this with "configure --with-port" at compile-time. To make a client talk to upsd on a specific port, add it after the hostname with a colon, like this:
/usr/local/ups/bin/upsc sparky@localhost:1234
This is handy when you have a mixed environment and some of the systems are on different ports.
The general form for UPS identifiers is this:
<upsname>[@<hostname>[:<port>]]
Keep this in mind when viewing the examples below.
This package is broken down into several categories:
These programs provide support for specific UPS models. They understand the protocols and port specifications which define status information and convert it to a form that upsd can understand.
To configure drivers, edit ups.conf. For this example, we’ll have a UPS
called "sparky" that uses the apcsmart driver and is connected to
/dev/ttyS1
. That’s the second serial port on most Linux-based systems.
The entry in ups.conf
looks like this:
[sparky] driver = apcsmart port = /dev/ttyS1
To start and stop drivers, use upsdrvctl of upsdrvsvcctl (installed on operating systems with a service management framework supported by NUT). By default, it will start or stop every UPS in the config file:
/usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvctl start /usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvctl stop
However, you can also just start or stop one by adding its name:
/usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvctl start sparky /usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvctl stop sparky
On operating systems with a supported service management framework, you might wrap your NUT drivers into individual services instances with:
/usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvsvcctl resync
and then manage those service instances with commands like:
/usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvsvcctl start sparky /usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvsvcctl stop sparky
To find the driver name for your device, refer to the section below called "HARDWARE SUPPORT TABLE".
Some drivers may require additional settings to properly communicate with your hardware. If it doesn’t detect your UPS by default, check the driver’s man page or help (-h) to see which options are available.
For example, the usbhid-ups driver allows you to use USB serial numbers to distinguish between units via the "serial" configuration option. To use this feature, just add another line to your ups.conf section for that UPS:
[sparky] driver = usbhid-ups port = auto serial = 1234567890
The Hardware Compatibility List is available in the source directory (nut-X.Y.Z/data/driver.list), and is generally distributed with packages. For example, it is available on Debian systems as:
/usr/share/nut/driver.list
This table is also available online.
If your driver has vanished, see the FAQ and Upgrading notes.
NUT provides several generic drivers that support a variety of very similar models.
The genericups
driver supports many serial models that use the same basic
principle to communicate with the computer. This is known as "contact
closure", and basically involves raising or lowering signals to indicate
power status.
This type of UPS tends to be cheaper, and only provides the very simplest data about power and battery status. Advanced features like battery charge readings and such require a "smart" UPS and a driver which supports it.
See the genericups(8) man page for more information.
The usbhid-ups
driver attempts to communicate with USB HID Power Device
Class (PDC) UPSes. These units generally implement the same basic protocol,
with minor variations in the exact set of supported attributes. This driver
also applies several correction factors when the UPS firmware reports values
with incorrect scale factors.
See the usbhid-ups(8) man page for more information.
The blazer_ser
and blazer_usb
drivers supports the Megatec / Q1
protocol that is used in many brands (Blazer, Energy Sistem, Fenton
Technologies, Mustek and many others).
See the blazer(8) man page for more information.
The snmp-ups
driver handles various SNMP enabled devices, from many
different manufacturers. In SNMP terms, snmp-ups
is a manager, that
monitors SNMP agents.
See the snmp-ups(8) man page for more information.
The powerman-pdu
is a bridge to the PowerMan daemon, thus handling all
PowerMan supported devices. The PowerMan project supports several serial
and networked PDU, along with Blade and IPMI enabled servers.
See the powerman-pdu(8) man page for more information.
The apcupsd-ups
driver is a bridge to the Apcupsd daemon, thus handling
all Apcupsd supported devices. The Apcupsd project supports many serial,
USB and networked APC UPS.
See the apcupsd-ups(8) man page for more information.
upsdrvctl can also shut down (power down) all of your UPS hardware.
if you play around with this command, expect your filesystems to die. Don’t power off your computers unless they’re ready for it:
/usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvctl shutdown /usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvctl shutdown sparky
You should read the Configuring automatic UPS shutdowns chapter to learn more about when to use this feature. If called at the wrong time, you may cause data loss by turning off a system with a filesystem mounted read-write.
NUT also provides an advanced support for power distribution units.
You should read the NUT outlets management and PDU notes chapter to learn more about when to use this feature.
upsd
is responsible for passing data from the drivers to the client
programs via the network. It should be run immediately after upsdrvctl
in your system’s startup scripts.
upsd
should be kept running whenever possible, as it is the only source
of status information for the monitoring clients like upsmon
.
upsmon
provides the essential feature that you expect to find in UPS
monitoring software: safe shutdowns when the power fails.
In the layered scheme of NUT software, it is a client. It has this separate section in the documentation since it is so important.
You configure it by telling it about UPSes that you want to monitor in upsmon.conf. Each UPS can be defined as one of two possible types: a "primary" or "secondary".
The monitored UPS possibly supplies power to this system running upsmon
,
but more importantly — this system can manage the UPS (typically, this
instance of upsmon
runs on the same system as the upsd
and driver(s)):
it is capable and responsible for shutting it down when the battery is
depleted (or in another approach, lingering to deplete it or to tell the
UPS to reboot its load after too much time has elapsed and this system
is still alive — meaning wall power returned at a "wrong" moment).
The shutdown of this (primary) system itself, as well as eventually an UPS shutdown, occurs after any secondary systems ordered to shut down first have disconnected, or a critical urgency threshold was passed.
If your UPS is plugged directly into a system’s serial or USB port, the
upsmon
process on that system should define its relation to that UPS
as a primary. It may be more complicated for higher-end UPSes with a
shared network management capability (typically via SNMP) or several
serial/USB ports that can be used simultaneously, and depends on what
vendors and drivers implement. Setups with several competing primaries
(for redundancy) are technically possible, if each one runs its own
full stack of NUT, but results can be random (currently NUT does not
provide a way to coordinate several entities managing the same device).
For a typical home user, there’s one computer connected to one UPS.
That means you would run on the same computer the whole NUT stack — a suitable driver, upsd
, and upsmon
in primary mode.
The monitored UPS may supply power to the system running upsmon
(or
alternatively, it may be a monitoring station with zero PSUs fed by
that UPS), but more importantly, this system can’t manage the UPS — e.g. shut it down directly (through a locally running NUT driver).
Use this mode when you run multiple computers on the same UPS. Obviously, only one can be connected to the serial or USB port on a typical UPS, and that system is the primary. Everything else is a secondary.
For a typical home user, there’s one computer connected to one UPS.
That means you run a driver, upsd
, and upsmon
in primary mode.
More information on configuring upsmon can be found in these places:
upsmon.conf
that comes with the package
Clients talk to upsd over the network and do useful things with the data from the drivers. There are tools for command line access, and a few special clients which can be run through your web server as CGI programs.
For more details on specific programs, refer to their man pages.
upsc
is a simple client that will display the values of variables known
to upsd
and your UPS drivers. It will list every variable by default,
or just one if you specify an additional argument. This can be useful
in shell scripts for monitoring something without writing your own
network code.
upsc
is a quick way to find out if your driver(s) and upsd are working
together properly. Just run upsc <ups>
to see what’s going on, i.e.:
morbo:~$ upsc sparky@localhost ambient.humidity: 035.6 ambient.humidity.alarm.maximum: NO,NO ambient.humidity.alarm.minimum: NO,NO ambient.temperature: 25.14 ...
If you are interested in writing a simple client that monitors upsd
,
the source code for upsc
is a good way to learn about using the
upsclient functions.
See the upsc(8) man page and NUT command and variable naming scheme for more information.
upslog
will write status information from upsd
to a file at set
intervals. You can use this to generate graphs or reports with other
programs such as gnuplot
.
upsrw
allows you to display and change the read/write variables in your
UPS hardware. Not all devices or drivers implement this, so this may
not have any effect on your system.
A driver that supports read/write variables will give results like this:
$ upsrw sparky@localhost
( many skipped )
[ups.test.interval] Interval between self tests Type: ENUM Option: "1209600" Option: "604800" SELECTED Option: "0"
( more skipped )
On the other hand, one that doesn’t support them won’t print anything:
$ upsrw fenton@gearbox
( nothing )
upsrw
requires administrator powers to change settings in the hardware.
Refer to upsd.users(5) for information on defining
users in upsd
.
Some UPS hardware and drivers support the notion of an instant command - a feature such as starting a battery test, or powering off the load. You can use upscmd to list or invoke instant commands if your hardware/drivers support them.
Use the -l command to list them, like this:
$ upscmd -l sparky@localhost Instant commands supported on UPS [sparky@localhost]:
load.on - Turn on the load immediately test.panel.start - Start testing the UPS panel calibrate.start - Start run time calibration calibrate.stop - Stop run time calibration ...
upscmd
requires administrator powers to start instant commands.
To define users and passwords in upsd
, see
upsd.users(5).
The CGI programs are clients that run through your web server. They allow you to see UPS status and perform certain administrative commands from any web browser. Javascript and cookies are not required.
These programs are not installed or compiled by default. To compile
and install them, first run configure --with-cgi
, then do make
and
make install
. If you receive errors about "gd" during configure, go
get it and install it before continuing.
You can get the source here:
http://www.libgd.org/
In the event that you need libpng or zlib in order to compile gd, they can be found at these URLs:
http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/pngcode.html
http://www.gzip.org/zlib/
The CGI programs use hosts.conf to see if they are allowed to talk to a host. This keeps malicious visitors from creating queries from your web server to random hosts on the Internet.
If you get error messages that say "Access to that host is not authorized", you’re probably missing an entry in your hosts.conf.
upsstats
generates web pages from HTML templates, and plugs in status
information in the right places. It looks like a distant relative of
APC’s old Powerchute interface. You can use it to monitor several
systems or just focus on one.
It also can generate IMG references to upsimage
.
This is usually called by upsstats via IMG SRC tags to draw either the utility or outgoing voltage, battery charge percent, or load percent.
upsset
provides several useful administration functions through a web
interface. You can use upsset
to kick off instant commands on your UPS
hardware like running a battery test. You can also use it to change
variables in your UPS that accept user-specified values.
Essentially, upsset
provides the functions of upsrw
and upscmd
, but
with a happy pointy-clicky interface.
upsset
will not run until you convince it that you have secured your
system. You must secure your CGI path so that random interlopers
can’t run this program remotely. See the upsset.conf
file. Once you
have secured the directory, you can enable this program in that
configuration file. It is not active by default.
The version numbers work like this: if the middle number is odd, it’s a development tree, otherwise it is the stable tree.
The past stable trees were 1.0, 1.2, 1.4, 2.0, 2.2 and 2.4, with the latest stable tree designated 2.6. The development trees were 1.1, 1.3, 1.5, 2.1 and 2.3. As of the 2.4 release, there is no real development branch anymore since the code is available through a revision control system (namely Subversion) and snapshots.
Major release jumps are mostly due to large changes to the features list. There have also been a number of architectural changes which may not be noticeable to most users, but which can impact developers.
The old network code spans a range from about 0.41.1 when TCP support was introduced up to the recent 1.4 series. It used variable names like STATUS, UTILITY, and LOADPCT. Many of these names go back to the earliest prototypes of this software from 1997. At that point there was no way to know that so many drivers would come along and introduce so many new variables and commands. The resulting mess grew out of control over the years.
During the 1.3 development cycle, all variables and instant commands were renamed to fit into a tree-like structure. There are major groups, like input, output and battery. Members of those groups have been arranged to make sense - input.voltage and output.voltage compliment each other. The old names were UTILITY and OUTVOLT. The benefits in this change are obvious.
The 1.4 clients can talk to either type of server, and can handle either naming scheme. 1.4 servers have a compatibility mode where they can answer queries for both names, even though the drivers are internally using the new format.
When 1.4 clients talk to 1.4 or 2.0 (or more recent) servers, they will use the new names.
Here’s a table to make it easier to visualize:
Server version | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Client version | 1.0 | 1.2 | 1.4 | 2.0+ |
1.0 | yes | yes | yes | no |
1.2 | yes | yes | yes | no |
1.4 | yes | yes | yes | yes |
2.0+ | no | no | yes | yes |
Version 2.0, and more recent, do not contain backwards compatibility for the old protocol and variable/command names. As a result, 2.0 clients can’t talk to anything older than a 1.4 server. If you ask a 2.0 client to fetch "STATUS", it will fail. You’ll have to ask for "ups.status" instead.
Authors of separate monitoring programs should have used the 1.4 series to write support for the new variables and command names. Client software can easily support both versions as long as they like. If upsd returns ERR UNKNOWN-COMMAND to a GET request, you need to use REQ.
If you are in need of help, refer to the Support instructions in the user manual.
Additional documentation can be found in:
The many people who have participated in creating and improving NUT are listed in the user manual acknowledgements appendix.