Pi as a UPS monitor
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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"
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The file
upsd.conf
does not need modified for a typical standalone setup. -
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
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The file
upsmon.conf
starts to get into the nuts and bolts of setting things up to do things for you.First up will be to uncomment the run as user setting.
RUN_AS_USER nut
Next is creating the monitor line to tell it what system to monitor. This uses the settings from
ups.conf
andupsd.users
that you previously configured.MONITOR bnajaredrouter@localhost 1 bnaupsmon AGoodPassword master
continuing down the file, the next thing to do is to set notifycmd to point to the upssched program
NOTIFYCMD /sbin/upssched
The final part of this file is to uncomment all of the notify flags and add the EXEC flag to the ones you want to fire the above upssched application. Leaving WALL in while testing is useful, but pretty pointless later for me since the goal is a remote alert.
NOTIFYFLAG ONLINE SYSLOG+WALL+EXEC NOTIFYFLAG ONBATT SYSLOG+WALL+EXEC NOTIFYFLAG LOWBATT SYSLOG+WALL NOTIFYFLAG FSD SYSLOG+WALL NOTIFYFLAG COMMOK SYSLOG+WALL NOTIFYFLAG COMMBAD SYSLOG+WALL NOTIFYFLAG SHUTDOWN SYSLOG+WALL NOTIFYFLAG REPLBATT SYSLOG+WALL NOTIFYFLAG NOCOMM SYSLOG+WALL NOTIFYFLAG NOPARENT SYSLOG+WALL
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If you never set any of the flags to EXEC in the previous section, there is nothing to do here, you can stop. But what would be the point of a remote alerting device that does not alert.
So now we come to the last conf file
upssched.conf
. This one is a bit more annoying because the developers intentionally chose to ship this broken to 'force' you to set up a file yourself.
By default, PIPEFN and LOCKFN are commented out and point to the/var/run/nut/upssched
directory that does not exist.# PIPEFN /var/run/nut/upssched/upssched.pipe # LOCKFN /var/run/nut/upssched/upssched.lock
So we make a directory and the pipe file. You are instructed to not make the lock file in the comments.
sudo mkdir /etc/nut/upssched sudo chown nut:nut /etc/nut/upssched sudo touch /etc/nut/upssched/upssched.pipe sudo chown nut:nut /etc/nut/upssched/upssched.pipe
Editing this file, note the location the shell script that will be called. This is the default, and there is an example script already there, ready to be modified.
CMDSCRIPT /bin/upssched-cmd
Uncomment and update the PIPE and LOCK lines.
PIPEFN /etc/nut/upssched/upssched.pipe LOCKFN /etc/nut/upssched/upssched.lock
Now comes the part that does work, the AT commads. You will want to read the comments and likely the documentation to make full use of this. But here are a couple examples of AT commands to get you going.
When the unit goes on battery, call the shell script to start a 30 second timer named 'onbattwarn'. When the power comes back online, cancel the timer.AT ONBATT * START-TIMER onbattwarn 30 AT ONLINE * CANCEL-TIMER onbattwarn AT ONLINE * EXECUTE ongrid
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Now the final bit of editing, and the one a lot of you will have to simply copy examples for. Editing the shell script that does the actual work.
You can look at the default script and see that because there was no default AT command with 'upsgone' as an named trigger, nothing would ever happen. Let's make it useful.
sudo nano /bin/upssched-cmd
#! /bin/sh case $1 in ongrid) logger -t upssched-cmd "The UPS is now on grid power." ;; onbattwarn) logger -t upssched-cmd "The UPS has been on battery power for 30 seconds." ;; *) logger -t upssched-cmd "Unrecognized command: $1" ;; esac
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And something is broke, but since I followed the directions I had previously wrote in October, that I means I left out something I did.
pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:/etc/nut $ tail -f /var/log/syslog Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Starting Network UPS Tools - power device monitor and shutdown controller... Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1284]: fopen /var/run/nut/upsmon.pid: No such file or directory Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1284]: UPS: bnajaredrouter@localhost (master) (power value 1) Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1284]: Using power down flag file /etc/killpower Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1286]: Startup successful Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: Init SSL without certificate database Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: nut-monitor.service: Supervising process 1287 which is not our child. We'll most likely not notice when it exits. Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Started Network UPS Tools - power device monitor and shutdown controller. Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: UPS [bnajaredrouter@localhost]: connect failed: Connection failure: Connection refused Feb 2 04:20:42 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: Communications with UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost lost Feb 2 04:20:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: UPS [bnajaredrouter@localhost]: connect failed: Connection failure: Connection refused Feb 2 04:20:47 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost is unavailable Broadcast message from nut@bna-pwr-pi-01 (somewhere) (Thu Feb 2 04:20:47 2017) UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost is unavailable Feb 2 04:20:52 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: UPS [bnajaredrouter@localhost]: connect failed: Connection failure: Connection refused Feb 2 04:20:57 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: UPS [bnajaredrouter@localhost]: connect failed: Connection failure: Connection refused Feb 2 04:21:02 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: UPS [bnajaredrouter@localhost]: connect failed: Connection failure: Connection refused Feb 2 04:21:07 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[1287]: UPS [bnajaredrouter@localhost]: connect failed: Connection failure: Connection refused
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Manually executed
sudo start upsd
and got a driver error. Fixed typo, rebooted, and it is online.pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ tail -f /var/log/syslog Feb 2 04:27:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Reached target Graphical Interface. Feb 2 04:27:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Starting Update UTMP about System Runlevel Changes... Feb 2 04:27:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[737]: Init SSL without certificate database Feb 2 04:27:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Started Update UTMP about System Runlevel Changes. Feb 2 04:27:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Startup finished in 2.052s (kernel) + 10.336s (userspace) = 12.389s. Feb 2 04:27:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsd[733]: User bnaupsmon@::1 logged into UPS [bnajaredrouter] Feb 2 04:27:31 bna-pwr-pi-01 dhcpcd[698]: wlan0: no IPv6 Routers available Feb 2 04:27:51 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Time has been changed Feb 2 04:27:52 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsd[733]: Data for UPS [bnajaredrouter] is stale - check driver Feb 2 04:27:52 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsd[733]: UPS [bnajaredrouter] data is no longer stale
pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ sudo upsc bnajaredrouter Init SSL without certificate database battery.charge: 100 battery.charge.low: 10 battery.charge.warning: 50 battery.date: 2001/09/25 battery.mfr.date: 2010/12/15 battery.runtime: 14100 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 BR1000G device.serial: 3B1051X20349 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.voltage: 126.0 input.voltage.nominal: 120 ups.beeper.status: disabled ups.delay.shutdown: 20 ups.firmware: 868.L1 .D ups.firmware.aux: L1 ups.load: 3 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: 3B1051X20349 ups.status: OL ups.test.result: No test initiated ups.timer.reboot: 0 ups.timer.shutdown: -1 ups.vendorid: 051d pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $
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Unplugged the power and had some good news, some bad.
The WALL commands spammed me, so I know things fired.
The syslog though showed an error about permissions for PIPE/LOCK. See the message about failed to connect to parent.
Feb 2 04:32:33 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[737]: UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost on battery Feb 2 04:32:41 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched[805]: Failed to connect to parent and failed to create parent: No such file or directory Feb 2 04:33:03 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[737]: UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost on line power Feb 2 04:33:03 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched[811]: Executing command: ongrid Feb 2 04:33:03 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched-cmd: The UPS is now on grid power.
Time to check the permissions.
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Well that would be a problem. Where did the file I made go? I guess the default directory was a bad choice?
pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ sudo ls -l /var/run/nut/ total 12 -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsd.pid -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsmon.pid srw-rw---- 1 nut nut 0 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter.pid pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $
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and there there we go.. changed directory to
/etc/nut/upssched
for PIPE/LOCK (already corrected instructions above)WALL spam...
Broadcast message from nut@bna-pwr-pi-01 (somewhere) (Thu Feb 2 04:44:19 2017) UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost on battery Broadcast message from nut@bna-pwr-pi-01 (somewhere) (Thu Feb 2 04:45:19 2017) UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost on line power
and the SYSLOG showing the trigger and the command from the shell script.
Feb 2 04:43:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[917]: Startup successful Feb 2 04:43:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[918]: Init SSL without certificate database Feb 2 04:43:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: nut-monitor.service: Supervising process 918 which is not our child. We'll most likely not notice when it exits. Feb 2 04:43:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 systemd[1]: Started Network UPS Tools - power device monitor and shutdown controller. Feb 2 04:43:24 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsd[733]: User bnaupsmon@::1 logged into UPS [bnajaredrouter] Feb 2 04:44:19 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[918]: UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost on battery Feb 2 04:44:19 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched[929]: Timer daemon started Feb 2 04:44:19 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched[929]: New timer: onbattwarn (30 seconds) Feb 2 04:44:49 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched[929]: Event: onbattwarn Feb 2 04:44:49 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched-cmd: The UPS has been on battery power for 30 seconds. Feb 2 04:45:04 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched[929]: Timer queue empty, exiting Feb 2 04:45:19 bna-pwr-pi-01 upsmon[918]: UPS bnajaredrouter@localhost on line power Feb 2 04:45:19 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched[937]: Executing command: ongrid Feb 2 04:45:19 bna-pwr-pi-01 upssched-cmd: The UPS is now on grid power.
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No able to test email right now because there is no way to send SMTP port 25 from my house. I have a VPN to the colo up, and there is a mail relay running there, but it will not accept from outside its LAN.
So I will have to set that up later.
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I'll rewrite this as an actual how to in the next few days.
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@JaredBusch said in Pi as a UPS monitor:
Well that would be a problem. Where did the file I made go? I guess the default directory was a bad choice?
pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ sudo ls -l /var/run/nut/ total 12 -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsd.pid -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsmon.pid srw-rw---- 1 nut nut 0 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter.pid pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $
@scottalanmiller what would be the 'proper' place for these files?
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@JaredBusch said in Pi as a UPS monitor:
Well that would be a problem. Where did the file I made go? I guess the default directory was a bad choice?
pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ sudo ls -l /var/run/nut/ total 12 -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsd.pid -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsmon.pid srw-rw---- 1 nut nut 0 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter.pid pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $
If it's me, that's normally forgetting to add the sudo before my favorite text editor. Anything in /dev or /etc requires root privilege. Besides that, dunno. Nano complains at you saying "read only" when you try to save.... yeah, seen that a few more times than I can count.
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@JaredBusch said in Pi as a UPS monitor:
@JaredBusch said in Pi as a UPS monitor:
Well that would be a problem. Where did the file I made go? I guess the default directory was a bad choice?
pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ sudo ls -l /var/run/nut/ total 12 -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsd.pid -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsmon.pid srw-rw---- 1 nut nut 0 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter.pid pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $
@scottalanmiller what would be the 'proper' place for these files?
Hey @scottalanmiller you never answered this one. What is 'proper' for this kinda thing.
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@JaredBusch said in Pi as a UPS monitor:
@JaredBusch said in Pi as a UPS monitor:
@JaredBusch said in Pi as a UPS monitor:
Well that would be a problem. Where did the file I made go? I guess the default directory was a bad choice?
pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $ sudo ls -l /var/run/nut/ total 12 -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsd.pid -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4 Feb 2 04:27 upsmon.pid srw-rw---- 1 nut nut 0 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter -rw-r--r-- 1 nut nut 4 Feb 2 04:27 usbhid-ups-bnajaredrouter.pid pi@bna-pwr-pi-01:~ $
@scottalanmiller what would be the 'proper' place for these files?
Hey @scottalanmiller you never answered this one. What is 'proper' for this kinda thing.
Should be /etc/nut. The standard is to put config files in /etc. /dev is generally hardware devices.
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You could add this little display on your Pi for local status-
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@gjacobse I like that, it's cute.
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@gjacobse Nice find. And only uses 6 pins? I've got a 2.5" display that uses most of the GPIO block