On 11/18/24 12:45, Gupta, Tulika wrote:
Dear support team
I have purchased a new APC UPS which I want to connect with four Linux Debian
clusters.
The APC UPS Model: SURTD3000XLIM (APC model) has one serial com connector and
one USB connector on the back of the UPS. Two cables were provided
On Mon, 18 Nov 2024 11:45:33 +
"Gupta, Tulika" wrote:
> The APC UPS Model: SURTD3000XLIM (APC model) has one serial com
> connector and one USB connector on the back of the UPS. Two cables
> were provided alongwith the UPS purchase- a) RJ-45 to DB-9
> communication cab
Dear support team
I have purchased a new APC UPS which I want to connect with four Linux Debian
clusters.
The APC UPS Model: SURTD3000XLIM (APC model) has one serial com connector and
one USB connector on the back of the UPS. Two cables were provided alongwith
the UPS purchase- a) RJ-45 to DB
On Friday 09 February 2024 04:41:37 pm hw wrote:
> On Fri, 2024-02-09 at 11:34 -0500, Roy J. Tellason, Sr. wrote:
> > On Friday 09 February 2024 06:07:16 am hw wrote:
> > > What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
> >
> > I have a Tripp-Lite sitting next to me here that replaced an APC an
On Fri 09 Feb 2024 at 22:28:28 (-0500), Felix Miata wrote:
> When you live on a power grid, extended outages are much less common than
> when on
> or near waterfront or political boundaries. Most of Florida's population has
> no
> out-of-state neighbors to share utilities with, making its grid mo
ally a good deal. I don't have test equipment for UPCs, but you can
> > feel how warm they get and see how cheaply they're built without
> > special equipment.
> >
>
> It's quite surprising how many complaints about swollen UPS batteries
> there are aroun
n
feel how warm they get and see how cheaply they're built without
special equipment.
It's quite surprising how many complaints about swollen UPS batteries
there are around the Net. Given the fairly light duties of the batteries
almost all of the time, this is pretty well certain to be cau
gt; > Maybe, maybe not. I couldn't get replacement batteries for the UPS
> > from HP not only because HP was so ridiculous as to tell me that I
> > could pay for a support ticket to get a price for the batteries, but
> > also because the replacement batteries I could
hw composed on 2024-02-10 11:01 (UTC+0100):
> On Fri, 2024-02-09 at 22:28 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
>> Those from the above URL are the same spec batteries used in many APC models.
> Maybe, maybe not. I couldn't get replacement batteries for the UPS
> from HP not on
On Fri, 2024-02-09 at 22:28 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> hw composed on 2024-02-10 03:18 (UTC+0100):
> [...]
> > Well, having batteries shipped over from the US would probably cost
> > more than a new UPS.
>
> They are made in China. Surely there are UK sellers.
It might
battery availability with Eaton?
>> <https://batterysharks.com/csb-battery-hr1234w-battery-replacement-12v-9ah-version.html>
>> has the very common physical attributes used by all my Eaton, Tripp-Lite and
>> Powercom UPSes.
> Well, having batteries shipped over from the
harks.com/csb-battery-hr1234w-battery-replacement-12v-9ah-version.html>
> has the very common physical attributes used by all my Eaton, Tripp-Lite and
> Powercom UPSes.
Well, having batteries shipped over from the US would probably cost
more than a new UPS. And the question is not so muc
Stefan Monnier composed on 2024-02-09 12:18 (UTC-0500):
>>> What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
>> I have a Tripp-Lite sitting next to me here that replaced an APC and has
>> 2-1/2 times the capabiliity. Been in service several weeks and so far I'm
>> pretty happy with it...
> Woul
hw composed on 2024-02-09 22:45 (UTC+0100):
> On Fri, 2024-02-09 at 12:10 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
>> hw composed on 2024-02-09 12:07 (UTC+0100):
>> > What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
>> I bought my first APC just last year, because it was what I found on the
>> shelf in
>> Wa
. They are USB connected devices readable by NUT.
Some selected stats:
battery.charge: 100
battery.charge.low: 10
battery.charge.warning: 20
battery.runtime: 3060
battery.runtime.low: 300
battery.type: PbAcid
battery.voltage: 24.0
battery.voltage.nominal: 24
device.mfr: CPS
device.model: C
On Fri, 2024-02-09 at 12:10 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> hw composed on 2024-02-09 12:07 (UTC+0100):
>
> > What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
>
> I bought my first APC just last year, because it was what I found on the
> shelf in
> WalMart, only 450VA, with "Best-in-class Service an
On Fri, 2024-02-09 at 11:34 -0500, Roy J. Tellason, Sr. wrote:
> On Friday 09 February 2024 06:07:16 am hw wrote:
> > What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
>
> I have a Tripp-Lite sitting next to me here that replaced an APC and
> has 2-1/2 times the capabiliity. Been in service sever
On Fri, 2024-02-09 at 06:44 -0500, Dan Ritter wrote:
> hw wrote:
> > On Thu, 2024-02-08 at 15:29 +, Andy Smith wrote:
> > > [...]
> > That sucks. I didn't know that they don't stand behind their
> > products, and it makes APC not recommendable any longer.
> >
> > What other manufacturers cou
Felix Miata wrote:
> hw composed on 2024-02-09 12:07 (UTC+0100):
>
> > What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
>
> I bought my first APC just last year, because it was what I found on
> the shelf in WalMart, only 450VA, with "Best-in-class Service and
> Support", more to protect bedro
>> What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
> I have a Tripp-Lite sitting next to me here that replaced an APC and has
> 2-1/2 times the capabiliity. Been in service several weeks and so far I'm
> pretty happy with it...
Would they accept a warranty claim without having to run some
propri
hw composed on 2024-02-09 12:07 (UTC+0100):
> What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
I bought my first APC just last year, because it was what I found on the shelf
in
WalMart, only 450VA, with "Best-in-class Service and Support", more to protect
bedroom TV and recorder against anomalie
On Friday 09 February 2024 06:07:16 am hw wrote:
> What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
I have a Tripp-Lite sitting next to me here that replaced an APC and has 2-1/2
times the capabiliity. Been in service several weeks and so far I'm pretty
happy with it...
--
Member of the tou
hw wrote:
> On Thu, 2024-02-08 at 15:29 +, Andy Smith wrote:
> > [...]
> That sucks. I didn't know that they don't stand behind their
> products, and it makes APC not recommendable any longer.
>
> What other manufacturers could we buy UPSs from?
Liebert at the high end, CyberPower at the lo
On Thu, 2024-02-08 at 15:29 +, Andy Smith wrote:
> [...]
> Someone on the apcupsd mailing list thinks I have a faulty UPS or
> battery and should get a replacement.
>
> APC refuses to proceed with a warranty claim because they don't
> support apcupsd or nut, onl
#x27;s an option, just return the UPS as a "I changed my
mind". Whether or not it's technically broken, seems to me that it's
clearly not healthy.
--
Michael Kjörling 🔗 https://michael.kjorling.se
“Remember when, on the Internet, nobody cared that you were a dog?”
On 2024-02-08, Charles Curley wrote:
> On Thu, 8 Feb 2024 15:29:21 +
> Andy Smith wrote:
>
>> I do not overly want to buy a Windows licence, run it
>> in a VM and pass USB through to that VM just to try this.
>
> You could try wine. You might need the more recent crossover-office,
> which is
On Thu, 8 Feb 2024 15:29:21 +
Andy Smith wrote:
> I do not overly want to buy a Windows licence, run it
> in a VM and pass USB through to that VM just to try this.
You could try wine. You might need the more recent crossover-office,
which is proprietary (but contributes greatly to wine).
--
models that you can buy today, APC (Schneider Electric) the
company only supports its own Windows-only Powerchute and won't do
a warranty claim unless you can run that. I therefore question the
device's suitability to a Linux environment. ]
Just as an update, I bought the APC Ba
On 1/28/24 13:55, Andy Smith wrote:
Hi,
Thanks, this is very useful.
On Sun, Jan 28, 2024 at 06:58:08PM +0100, hw wrote:
However, stay away from their cheap models as seen on this[1] picture
(Back UPS). They work and you can replace the batteries yourself even
though you're not suppos
Hi,
Thanks, this is very useful.
On Sun, Jan 28, 2024 at 06:58:08PM +0100, hw wrote:
> However, stay away from their cheap models as seen on this[1] picture
> (Back UPS). They work and you can replace the batteries yourself even
> though you're not supposed to. It's a minimu
On Fri, 2024-01-26 at 15:17 +, Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 04:11:39PM +0100, hw wrote:
> > I've never had issues with any UPS due to self tests. The batteries
> > need to be replaced when they are worn out. How often that is
> > req
On Fri, 26 Jan 2024, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 26 Jan 2024 at 19:03:33 (+0100), Roger Price wrote:
I currently have two Eaton Ellipse ECO 1600's. ... The four screws are deeply
recessed and difficult to see. They have different heads: some are Torx 10,
others are a star.
20/20 hindsight m
ghe2001 wrote:
> Take a look at Tripp Lite:
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripp_Lite
>
> I used them for years to back up a small domain -- they make
> sine-wave electricity.
One of the references in the wikipedia article looked interesting:
https://www.computerworld.com/article/2472189/a
On Fri 26 Jan 2024 at 19:03:33 (+0100), Roger Price wrote:
> I currently have two Eaton Ellipse ECO 1600's. I change the batteries
> every 4-5 years, but this is not as easy as it should be. It is not
> evident that only one of the four back panel screws needs to be
> removed. I took me a while
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Take a look at Tripp Lite:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripp_Lite
I used them for years to back up a small domain -- they make sine-wave
electricity.
--
Glenn English
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: ProtonMail
wsBzBAEBCAAnBYJltAY/CZCf1
Andy Smith composed on 2024-01-26 10:17 (UTC-0500):
> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 04:11:39PM +0100, hw wrote:
>> I've never had issues with any UPS due to self tests. The batteries
>> need to be replaced when they are worn out. How often that is
>> required depends on the
On Fri, 26 Jan 2024, Andy Smith wrote:
Out of interest what brand of UPS do you recommend for home use that
has easily-replaceable batteries every 3–5 years? For a load of
about 300W.
I currently have two Eaton Ellipse ECO 1600's. I change the batteries every 4-5
years, but this is n
I, too, have always used APC.
I've heard people swear by APC, and I've heard people swear *at* APC.
I've had reason to do both, myself (and I won't elaborate on either).
--
James H. H. Lampert
On Fri, 2024-01-26 at 15:37 +, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> On 26 Jan 2024 15:17 +, from a...@strugglers.net (Andy Smith):
> > Out of interest what brand of UPS do you recommend for home use that
> > has easily-replaceable batteries every 3–5 years? For a load of
> > abo
On 26 Jan 2024 15:17 +, from a...@strugglers.net (Andy Smith):
> Out of interest what brand of UPS do you recommend for home use that
> has easily-replaceable batteries every 3–5 years? For a load of
> about 300W.
I would suggest to look at the free-standing floor-/tower-model APC
On Fri, 26 Jan 2024, Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 04:11:39PM +0100, hw wrote:
>> I've never had issues with any UPS due to self tests. The batteries
>> need to be replaced when they are worn out. How often that is
>> required depends on
Hi,
On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 04:11:39PM +0100, hw wrote:
> I've never had issues with any UPS due to self tests. The batteries
> need to be replaced when they are worn out. How often that is
> required depends on the UPS and the conditions it is working in,
> usually every 3-
Stefan Schumacher wrote:
> Hello
>
> I recently bought a small UPS by Eaton in order to prevent my
> btrfs-fileserver (running Debian 12 Bookworm, which is also the source
> of my nut-installation) from shutting down abruptly while writing
> something important during a power
Hello
I recently bought a small UPS by Eaton in order to prevent my
btrfs-fileserver (running Debian 12 Bookworm, which is also the source
of my nut-installation) from shutting down abruptly while writing
something important during a power loss. I have found very good
documentation on how to set
a 200, and brought
this grandfathered 2970 house service up to code, doing all the
internal
work myself. I have a big ups running everything but the lights and
printers in this room, got rid of the copper telephone because the
cable
was 70 years old, 50 pair paper insulated
have replaceable batteries?
Back-UPS XS 950U, no!
--
John Doe
>> On Tue, 01 Aug 2023 03:47:28 -0400,
>> David may have said:
> What everybody seems to be doing is catering to surge, when a low
> spike can do just as much damage. Both need to be protected against,
> so any protective appliance selection has to consider that.
Liebert protects against powe
;
> I replaced the original 60 amp service in 2008 with a 200, and brought
> this grandfathered 2970 house service up to code, doing all the internal
> work myself. I have a big ups running everything but the lights and
> printers in this room, got rid of the copper telephone because th
On Tue, Aug 1, 2023 at 15:19 Roy J. Tellason, Sr. wrote:
> On Monday 31 July 2023 07:47:14 pm Charles Curley wrote:
> > Replacement batteries from APC are expensive compared to buying
> > elsewhere, but they come with return shipping for the exhausted battery
> > so they can recycle it.
Roy, an
On Monday 31 July 2023 07:47:14 pm Charles Curley wrote:
> Replacement batteries from APC are expensive compared to buying
> elsewhere, but they come with return shipping for the exhausted battery
> so they can recycle it.
OTOH local recycling places give me cash for exhausted lead-acid batteries
is a storm
> coming through - just out of the idea that i don't really
> want things to get fried.
I replaced the original 60 amp service in 2008 with a 200, and brought
this grandfathered 2970 house service up to code, doing all the internal
work myself. I have a big ups runnin
ome years ago. Consider asking your electrician what options would be
> available in your particular situation and for a cost estimate or
> quote.
>
> Especially if you are in an area that frequently gets lightning, it
> _might_ help the UPS last longer, too, since its protective circu
tning strike. Frightening. Despite two
differential circuit breakers in front of the UPS, it melted the circuit board
in an Eaton Ellipse 1600. The server crashed but no data was lost. Eaton
replaced the UPS.
Roger
On Tue, 2023-08-01 at 03:14 -0400, Karl Vogel wrote:
> Liebert
What everybody seems to be doing is catering to surge, when a low spike
can do just as much damage. Both need to be protected against, so any
protective appliance selection has to consider that.
Cheers!
--
A Kiwi in Australia,
doing
specially if you are in an area that frequently gets lightning, it
_might_ help the UPS last longer, too, since its protective circuitry
then doesn't need to take the brunt of the voltage spike after that is
already well inside your home with all the associated risks.
--
Michael Kjörling
>> On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 13:24:36 -0400,
>> Tom Browder may have said:
> All the reviews I've seen on Amazon for smaller capacity UPSs
> for APC and Tripp Lite are not that great (I usually concentrate
> on the one- and two-star reviews).
> Any recommenndations from fellow Debian folks?
> Thanks.
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 12:23:46 -0500
Tom Browder wrote:
> I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the
> battery. I haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for
> awhile, but electricity (now FPL) is not as reliable in my new
> location and I need
Tom Browder wrote:
> I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the battery. I
> haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for awhile, but
> electricity (now FPL) is not as reliable in my new location and I need one.
>
> All the reviews I've s
On 1/8/23 02:53, Bret Busby wrote:
On 1/8/23 02:41, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Mon, Jul 31, 2023 at 2:13 PM Tom Browder
wrote:
I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the
battery. I haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for
awhile, but electricity (no
On 1/8/23 02:41, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Mon, Jul 31, 2023 at 2:13 PM Tom Browder wrote:
I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the battery. I
haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for awhile, but
electricity (now FPL) is not as reliable in m
On Mon, Jul 31, 2023 at 13:28 john doe wrote:
> On 7/31/23 19:23, Tom Browder wrote:
...
> > Any recommenndations from fellow Debian folks?
>
I have two APC and I'm pretty happy with those.
Would you mind saying the model numbers? Do they have replaceable batteries?
>
What type of recommend
On Mon, Jul 31, 2023 at 2:13 PM Tom Browder wrote:
>
> I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the battery. I
> haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for awhile, but
> electricity (now FPL) is not as reliable in my new location and I need
On 31 Jul 2023 17:35 +, from russ...@rlharris.org (Russell L. Harris):
>> I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the battery.
>
> Experience with APC: every one died emitting smoke
That's not my experience with them (and I have three in current use
On 1/8/23 01:23, Tom Browder wrote:
I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the
battery. I haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for
awhile, but electricity (now FPL) is not as reliable in my new location
and I need one.
All the reviews I've seen
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023, Tom Browder wrote:
I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the battery.
Any recommenndations from fellow Debian folks?
I use Eaton Ellipse ECO 1600's. I have replaced the batteries. The 1600 is
big, but I live in an area with a lot of ligh
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Take a look at:
https://tripplite.eaton.com/products/ups-battery-backup-on-line-single-phase~11-56
I ran a domain for years on older Tripp Lite UPSs like these. They take wall
electricity, rectify it and charge the batteries (lead-acid in mine
On Mon, Jul 31, 2023 at 12:23:46PM -0500, Tom Browder wrote:
I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the battery. I
haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for awhile, but
electricity (now FPL) is not as reliable in my new location and I need one.
Al
On 7/31/23 19:23, Tom Browder wrote:
I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the battery. I
haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for awhile, but
electricity (now FPL) is not as reliable in my new location and I need one.
All the reviews I've seen
I used to use UPS units from APC back when you could replace the battery. I
haven't had an UPS (but always on a surge protecter) for awhile, but
electricity (now FPL) is not as reliable in my new location and I need one.
All the reviews I've seen on Amazon for smaller capacity UPSs f
On Wed, 31 Mar 2021, Dan Ritter wrote:
Roger Price wrote:
On Wed, 31 Mar 2021, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 04:51:55PM +0200, Roger Price wrote:
Has any reader of this list ever used IANA port ups/401
"Uninterruptible Power Supply" (other than the One Windows Tr
Roger Price wrote:
> On Wed, 31 Mar 2021, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 04:51:55PM +0200, Roger Price wrote:
> > > Has any reader of this list ever used IANA port ups/401
> > > "Uninterruptible Power Supply" (other than the On
On Wed, 31 Mar 2021, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 04:51:55PM +0200, Roger Price wrote:
Has any reader of this list ever used IANA port ups/401
"Uninterruptible Power Supply" (other than the One Windows Trojan)?
I'm looking for protocol documentation or report
On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 04:51:55PM +0200, Roger Price wrote:
> Has any reader of this list ever used IANA port ups/401
> "Uninterruptible Power Supply" (other than the One Windows Trojan)?
> I'm looking for protocol documentation or reports of usage. The port
> was assi
Has any reader of this list ever used IANA port ups/401 "Uninterruptible Power
Supply" (other than the One Windows Trojan)? I'm looking for protocol
documentation or reports of usage. The port was assigned in 2008 to Mr. Charles
Bennett as both assignee and contact. Mr. Bennett
On Sun, 28 Mar 2021, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
I am on an ups box so I don't understand how this happened.
Hello Maureen, The UPS will protect your stuff from external power supply
problems, but not from internal deterioration.
Have you checked that your UPS is doing it's job corr
Oops, fixing a typo, below
On Sunday, February 02, 2020 04:18:39 PM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Thanks to all who replied!
>
> Everybody had good points. I ended up putting the unit on the non-battery
> side of the UPS (just because I was out of outlets on the battery side and
>
Thanks to all who replied!
Everybody had good points. I ended up putting the unit on the non-battery
side of the UPS (just because I was out of outlets on the battery side and
didn't want to take the time / space to add a powerstrip or such (space is
tight behind / under my desk)). I us
On Thu, 30 Jan 2020, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
Anybody have experience with the Belkin F1DS10[2 4]J KVMs?
My question: Does that mean I need to put the KVM on the UPS as well?
Speaking from experience, another reason to put the KVM switch on the UPS is
protection from power surges. I live
On Thu, 30 Jan 2020, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I just bought a used KVM switch (Belkin F1DS104J) and it requires power (9VDC
(and has a power brick)), but the instructions say that it
should be powered up before the attached PCs.
My computers (at least the CPUs) are on a UPS to guard against
be powered up before the attached PCs.
>
>
>
> My computers (at least the CPUs) are on a UPS to guard against brief
> power outages (thankfully fairly rare -- knock on wood).
>
>
>
> My question: Does that mean I need to put the KVM on the UPS as well?
> If I don&
Anybody have experience with the Belkin F1DS10[2 4]J KVMs?
I just bought a used KVM switch (Belkin F1DS104J) and it requires power (9VDC
(and has a power brick)), but the instructions say that it should be powered
up before the attached PCs.
My computers (at least the CPUs) are on a UPS to
Sójka wrote:
>>>> Hi there,
>>>>
>>>> Ups is connected via usb:
>>>>
>>>> Bus 003 Device 002: ID 051d:0002 American Power Conversion
>>>> Uninterruptible Power Supply
>>>>
>>>> Recently I noticed that n
I corrected the subject. It was Sid but it should be stretch.
Sorry, to many computers.
On 2/12/19 10:54 AM, Grzesiek Sójka wrote:
On 2/11/19 1:56 PM, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
On 11.02.2019 16:20, Grzesiek Sójka wrote:
Hi there,
Ups is connected via usb:
Bus 003 Device 002: ID 051d
On 2/11/19 1:56 PM, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
On 11.02.2019 16:20, Grzesiek Sójka wrote:
Hi there,
Ups is connected via usb:
Bus 003 Device 002: ID 051d:0002 American Power Conversion
Uninterruptible Power Supply
Recently I noticed that nut stopped to recognize it (probably after
some
On 11.02.2019 16:20, Grzesiek Sójka wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> Ups is connected via usb:
>
> Bus 003 Device 002: ID 051d:0002 American Power Conversion
> Uninterruptible Power Supply
>
> Recently I noticed that nut stopped to recognize it (probably after
> some update):
&
Hi there,
Ups is connected via usb:
Bus 003 Device 002: ID 051d:0002 American Power Conversion
Uninterruptible Power Supply
Recently I noticed that nut stopped to recognize it (probably after some
update):
# /lib/nut/usbhid-ups -a APC
Network UPS Tools - Generic HID driver 0.41 (2.7.4
Goran wrote:
> Yes, I checked with a simple wattmeter and it's correct.
>
> [send by mobile device]
ahh, those mobile devices... you top posted
What exactly did you check, so that it is correct ... I'm a simple man and
can not read minds yet.
regards
gt; >
> > > is the key. My UPC has a max power of 900 watt. RETPCT shows 30.0%. So:
> > >
> > > 900w x 0.30 = 270w
> > >
> > > 270 watt is the actual power draw of my server.
> >
> > Maybe I'm misreading it -- but it sounds like
> Maybe I'm misreading it -- but it sounds like "RETPCT" is the required
> battery charge level before the UPS will restore power to connected
> devices, assuming the battery runs flat.
Yeah. I think that LOADPCT * NOMPOWER gives you the actual
usage.
-dsr-
the key. My UPC has a max power of 900 watt. RETPCT shows 30.0%. So:
>
> 900w x 0.30 = 270w
>
> 270 watt is the actual power draw of my server.
Maybe I'm misreading it -- but it sounds like "RETPCT" is the required
battery charge level before the UPS will restore power to
shows 30.0%. So:
900w x 0.30 = 270w
270 watt is the actual power draw of my server.
Regards
Am Donnerstag, den 27.07.2017, 20:46 +0200 schrieb Jörg-Volker Peetz:
> Maybe this is helpful
> APC UPS - ArchWiki https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/APC_UPS
> Please report back if an
Maybe this is helpful
APC UPS - ArchWiki https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/APC_UPS
Please report back if and how it works.
Regards,
jvp.
g composed on 2017-07-27 12:27 (UTC+0200):
> Hi all, I want to get the power draw from a APC USB UPS. I have managed
> to run apcusbd and apctest. But how to invoke these tools to get the
> actual power draw in Watt x Ampere?
> I've found this page which describes how to read it
On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 12:27:14PM +0200, g wrote:
Hi all, I want to get the power draw from a APC USB UPS. I have managed
to run apcusbd and apctest. But how to invoke these tools to get the
actual power draw in Watt x Ampere?
What model of UPS is it? Many of the newer models use a protocol
On 27/07/2017 11:27, g wrote:
Hi all, I want to get the power draw from a APC USB UPS. I have managed
[...]
But I dont't have such a port neither a cable.
Our APC UPSs included a USB cable in the box. The cable uses a USB
plug at one end (into the linux machine) and a different pl
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On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 12:27:14PM +0200, g wrote:
> Hi all, I want to get the power draw from a APC USB UPS. I have managed
> to run apcusbd and apctest. But how to invoke these tools to get the
> actual power draw in Watt x Ampere?
>
Hi all, I want to get the power draw from a APC USB UPS. I have managed
to run apcusbd and apctest. But how to invoke these tools to get the
actual power draw in Watt x Ampere?
I've found this page which describes how to read it via RS232 serial
port.
https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/g
Also, something important to me is for each seat to be able to go
into init 5 under its own locale
Say, one seat would be running under a French locale and the other
one a German one.
lbrtchx
I would like to know the reason for the following note:
~
https://wiki.debian.org/Multi_Seat_Debian_HOWTO
NOTE: Only the user on the first monitor has the use of vt consoles
and can use Ctrl+Alt+F to select them. The other users have a gdm
login screen and can use X normally, but have no vt's.
On 1/25/15, Darac Marjal wrote:
> On Fri, 23 Jan 2015 20:43:56 -0600
> Melvin Call wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I have two computers, both running Wheezy and the
>> XFCE4 Desktop. Both have attached UPS devices, and
>> lsusb shows the UPS attached to each ma
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