POWERPANEL(8) | NUT Manual | POWERPANEL(8) |
powerpanel - Driver for serial PowerPanel Plus compatible UPS equipment
This man page only documents the hardware-specific features of the powerpanel driver. For information about the core driver, see nutupsdrv(8).
This driver supports CyberPower BC1200, PR2200 and many other similar devices, both for the text and binary protocols. The driver will autodetect which protocol is used.
If your Cyber Power Systems UPS has a USB port, you may wish to use the usbhid-ups(8) driver. The snmp-ups(8) driver supports several network cards via SNMP.
This driver supports the following optional settings in ups.conf(5):
protocol=[text,binary]
manufacturer=value
model=value
serial=value
ondelay=value
offdelay=value
Depending on the type of your UPS unit, some of the following variables may be changed with upsrw(8). If the driver can’t read a variable from the UPS, it will not be made available.
input.transfer.high
input.transfer.low
battery.charge.low
output.voltage.nominal
ups.start.battery
Depending on the type of your UPS unit, some of the following commands may be available.
On many devices, these commands are unreliable, so before using them you must verify that these work as expected (see Shutdown Issues).
Vendor support is absent for this driver, so if you need some features that are currently not available, provide ample documentation on what the driver should sent to the UPS in order to make this work. If more information would be available on the binary protocol, it would probably be possible to make ondelay and offdelay configurable. So far, nobody has taken the time to investigate what we should tell the UPS to make this work, and CyberPower isn’t willing to share this with us.
If the shutdown.return command on your UPS doesn’t seem to work, chances are that your UPS is an older model. Try a couple of different settings for offdelay. If no value in the range 6..600 works, your UPS likely doesn’t support this. In order to get the expected behaviour, it requires shutdown.stayoff (when on battery) and shutdown.reboot (when on mains). The driver will automatically fallback to these commands if shutdown.return fails, and tries to detect which one should be used when called with the -k option (or through upsdrvctl shutdown).
This isn’t bullet-proof, however, and you should be prepared that the power will either not be shutdown or that it doesn’t return when the power comes back. All models supported by the binary protocol and many supported through the text protocol are affected by this.
The CyberPower OP series don’t offer direct voltage, charge, frequency and temperature readings. Instead, they will return a binary value that needs conversion to the actual value.
The exact conversion needed is unknown at the time of this writing, hence an estimation was made based om readings from actual devices. This may (probably will) be off, possibly a lot. Unless you can tell us the exact mapping between values from the UPS and actual readings, don’t bother to complain. We’ve done the best we can based on the limited information available. Remember, a UPS isn’t a measuring instrument.
Arjen de Korte <arjen@de-korte.org>, Doug Reynolds <mav@wastegate.net>
The NUT (Network UPS Tools) home page: http://www.networkupstools.org/
01/25/2023 | Network UPS Tools 2.8.0 |