APCSMART(8) | NUT Manual | APCSMART(8) |
NAME¶
apcsmart - Driver for American Power Conversion Smart Protocol UPS equipmentSYNOPSIS¶
apcsmart -hSUPPORTED HARDWARE¶
The apcsmart driver should recognize (or at the very least work with) majority of Smart-UPS models - which includes Smart-UPS, Matrix-UPS and Back-UPS lineups, among few other ones.These models usually have old APC logo, white
color and no programmable eeprom; You won't find them listed anywhere
on APC’s site either. The support for those will be usually based on
driver's compatibility tables, or if the model (firmware) is not listed in
those - the driver will try to follow the very basic subset of features, while
still trying to remain useful. Despite "smart" tagname, they often
tend to behave in pretty dumb way (see the section below about shutdown
behaviour).
Example models:
"new" models
•Smart-UPS 2000I
•Smart-UPS 900I
These models usually come from late 1990s /
pre-2009 times. They are often referred as "3rd. gen". For the most
part, they have programmable eeprom, report supported commands and
capabilites, and should work just fine with the apcsmart driver.
"microlink" models
WARNING: these are not natively
supported by apcsmart (or apcupsd for that matter, if you’re wondering).
Around 2007 APC (now APC Schneider) decided to go back to its proprietry roots
and all the new models (SMT, SMX, SURTD) use completely different protocol and
cables. If you purchased a new APC UPS, that uses cable with rj45 on the one
end, and db-9 on the other - then you have such model. Your only option to
support it through NUT is to purchase "legacy communications
card" - part #AP9620 (google 'AP9620' for more details). Or if that's not
an option, rely on official software.
CABLING¶
This driver expects to see a 940-0024C cable or a clone by default. You can switch to the 940-0095B dual-mode cable support with the 'cable=' definition described below.EXPLANATION OF SHUTDOWN METHODS SUPPORTED BY APC UPSES¶
APC hardware supports a lot of shutdown methods, that themselves can differ in behaviour quite a bit, depending on the model. S (soft hibernate)This is most basic command present in probably
all APC models. It will hibernate the UPS, and subsequently wake it up when
the mains supply returns. The command doesn't work if UPS is running on
mains.
"old" models
CS (aka "force OB hack")
The behaviour here is unfortunately pretty
primitive - when the power returns, the UPS just wakes up. No grace periods,
no min. battery charge condition, etc. This is probably not what you
want.
"new" models
The behaviour here is as expected - the power
is cut off after the eeprom defined grace period. The UPS will wake up when
the power returns, after the eeprom defined delay AND if the eeprom defined
min. battery charge level is met. The delay is counted from the power's
return.
This is a trick to make UPS power down even if
it's running on mains. Immediately before issuing S, "simulate
power failure" is issued. The remaining behaviour is as in S case.
The name came from APC CS models, where such trick was used to power down UPSes
in consistent fashion using only S. It's better to use @nnn
command if your UPS supports it (and is not too old, see below).
@nnn (hard hibernate)
This is basic command used to hibernate UPS
regardless if it's running on batteries or on mains. The option takes 3 digits
argument which can be used to specify additional wakeup delay (in 6 minute
units).
"old" models
Supposedly there exist models that take 2 digits instead of 3. Just in case, NUT
also supports such variation. You have to provide exactly 2 digits to trigger
it ( awd option, or argument to one of the supported instant
commands).
K (delayed poweroff)
The behaviour is - unfortunately - similary
primitive to S. The UPS unconditionally wakes up after nnn*6 minutes -
it doesn't care if the power returned ! If nnn = 000, then UPS will do
precisely nothing. On those models you're better specifying nnn > 0, if you
can estimate the kind of power problems that might be happening in your
environment. Another thing to consider with "old" models - you might
lose the connection with the UPS, until it wakes up (with S, the serial
connection is kept alive).
"new" models
All the usual variables defined in eeprom are
respected (see S). Additionally, if nnn > 0, the nnn*6 minutes are
added to eeprom defined delay. UPS will not power up if it's running on
batteries, contrary to what "old" models used to do - the combined
delay is counted from the moment of power return.
This is permanent poweroff - the UPS will not
wake up automatically. On newer units, it will respect applicable eeprom
variables.
Z (instant poweroff)
This is also permanent poweroff - the UPS will
not wake up automatically. The poweroff is executed immediately.
SHUTDOWN CONTROL BY NUT¶
There are three options used to control the shutdown behaviour. sdtype=[0-5]This option takes a single digit (0-5) as an
argument. See below for details.
advorder=no|[0-4]+
This option takes string of digits as an
argument. Methods listed are tried in turn until one of them succeedes. Note
that the meaning of digits is different from sdtype. See below for
details.
awd=[0-9]{1,3}
This option lets you specify additional wakeup
delay used by @. If you provide exactly 2 digits, the driver will try 2
digits variation (see previous section for more info). Otherwise standard 3
digits variation is used. Note: the time unit is 6 minutes !
SDTYPE¶
The values permitted are from 0 to 5. Only one can be specified. Anything else will cause apcsmart to exit. 0issue soft hibernate (S) if the UPS is
running on batteries, otherwise issue hard hibernate ( @)
1
issue soft hibernate (S) (if on
batteries), and if it fails (or on mains) - try hard hibernate (
@)
2
issue instant poweroff (Z)
3
issue delayed poweroff (K)
4
issue "force OB hack"
(CS)
5
issue hard hibernate (@)
ADVORDER¶
The argument is either a word 'no', or a string of 1 - 5 digits in [0 - 4] range. Each digit maps to the one of shutdown methods supported by APC UPSes. Methods listed in this way are tried in order, until one of them succedes.0 | soft hibernate (S) |
1 | hard hibernate (@) |
2 | delayed poweroff (K) |
3 | instant poweroff (Z) |
4 | "force OB hack" (CS) |
IGNORING LB STATE¶
APC units - even if they report LB mode - will not go into shutdown automatically. This gives us even more control with reference to "when to actually shutdown psu". Since version 2.6.2, NUT supports ignorelb option in driver's section of ups.conf(5). When such option is in effect, the core driver will ignore LB state as reported by specific driver and start shutdown basing the decision only on two conditions:[apc] ignorelb override.battery.charge.low = 15 override.battery.runtime.low = -1
SUPPORTED INSTANT COMMANDS¶
The apcsmart driver exposes following instant commands: shutdown.returnexecutes soft hibernate
shutdown.return cs
executes "force OB hack"
shutdown.return at:<nbr>
executes "hard hibernate" with
<nbr>*6 minutes additional wakeup delay (<nbr> format is the same
as of awd option)
shutdown.stayoff
executes "delayed poweroff"
load.off
executes "instant poweroff"
•load.on
•test.panel.start
•test.failure.start
•test.battery.start
•test.battery.stop
•bypass.start
•bypass.stop
•calibrate.start
•calibrate.stop
BUGS¶
Some older APC UPS models return bogus data in the status register during a front panel test. This is usually detected and discarded, but some other unexpected values have occasionally slipped through.AUTHOR¶
Nigel Metheringham <Nigel.Metheringham@Intechnology.co.uk> (drawing heavily on the original apcsmart driver by Russell Kroll). This driver was called newapc for a time and was renamed in the 1.5 series. In 2.6.2 it was renamed to apcsmart-old, being superseded by updated version with new features, which is maintained by Michal Soltys <soltys@ziu.info>SEE ALSO¶
nutupsdrv(8), ups.conf(5)Internet resources:¶
The NUT (Network UPS Tools) home page: http://www.networkupstools.org/05/21/2012 | Network UPS Tools |