source: npl/overig/apcupsd/etc/apcupsd.conf @ b4abfab

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Last change on this file since b4abfab was c5c522c, checked in by Edwin Eefting <edwin@datux.nl>, 8 years ago

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1## apcupsd.conf v1.1 ##
2#
3#  for apcupsd release 3.14.3 (20 January 2008) - slackware
4#
5# "apcupsd" POSIX config file
6
7#
8# ========= General configuration parameters ============
9#
10
11# UPSNAME xxx
12#   Use this to give your UPS a name in log files and such. This
13#   is particulary useful if you have multiple UPSes. This does not
14#   set the EEPROM. It should be 8 characters or less.
15#UPSNAME
16
17# UPSCABLE <cable>
18#   Defines the type of cable connecting the UPS to your computer.
19#
20#   Possible generic choices for <cable> are:
21#     simple, smart, ether, usb
22#
23#   Or a specific cable model number may be used:
24#     940-0119A, 940-0127A, 940-0128A, 940-0020B,
25#     940-0020C, 940-0023A, 940-0024B, 940-0024C,
26#     940-1524C, 940-0024G, 940-0095A, 940-0095B,
27#     940-0095C, M-04-02-2000
28#
29UPSCABLE usb
30
31# To get apcupsd to work, in addition to defining the cable
32# above, you must also define a UPSTYPE, which corresponds to
33# the type of UPS you have (see the Description for more details).
34# You must also specify a DEVICE, sometimes referred to as a port.
35# For USB UPSes, please leave the DEVICE directive blank. For
36# other UPS types, you must specify an appropriate port or address.
37#
38# UPSTYPE   DEVICE           Description
39# apcsmart  /dev/tty**       Newer serial character device,
40#                            appropriate for SmartUPS models using
41#                            a serial cable (not USB).
42#
43# usb       <BLANK>          Most new UPSes are USB. A blank DEVICE
44#                            setting enables autodetection, which is
45#                            the best choice for most installations.
46#
47# net       hostname:port    Network link to a master apcupsd
48#                            through apcupsd's Network Information
49#                            Server. This is used if you don't have
50#                            a UPS directly connected to your computer.
51#
52# snmp      hostname:port:vendor:community
53#                            SNMP Network link to an SNMP-enabled
54#                            UPS device. Vendor is the MIB used by
55#                            the UPS device: can be "APC", "APC_NOTRAP"
56#                            or "RFC" where APC is the powernet MIB,
57#                            "APC_NOTRAP" is powernet with SNMP trap
58#                            catching disabled, and RFC is the IETF's
59#                            rfc1628 UPS-MIB. You usually want "APC".
60#                            Port is usually 161. Community is usually
61#                            "private".
62#
63# dumb      /dev/tty**       Old serial character device for use
64#                            with simple-signaling UPSes.
65#
66# pcnet    ipaddr:username:passphrase
67#                            PowerChute Network Shutdown protocol
68#                            which can be used as an alternative to SNMP
69#                            with AP9617 family of smart slot cards.
70#                            ipaddr is the IP address of the UPS mgmt
71#                            card. username and passphrase are the
72#                            credentials for which the card has been
73#                            configured.
74#
75UPSTYPE usb
76DEVICE
77
78
79# LOCKFILE <path to lockfile>
80#   Path for device lock file. Not used on Win32.
81LOCKFILE /var/lock
82
83# SCRIPTDIR <path to script directory>
84#   Directory in which apccontrol and event scripts are located.
85SCRIPTDIR /etc
86
87# PWRFAILDIR <path to powerfail directory>
88#   Directory in which to write the powerfail flag file. This file
89#   is created when apcupsd initiates a system shutdown and is
90#   checked in the OS halt scripts to determine if a killpower
91#   (turning off UPS output power) is required.
92PWRFAILDIR /etc
93
94# NOLOGINDIR <path to nologin directory>
95#   Directory in which to write the nologin file. The existence
96#   of this flag file tells the OS to disallow new logins.
97NOLOGINDIR /etc
98
99
100#
101# ======== Configuration parameters used during power failures ==========
102#
103
104# The ONBATTERYDELAY is the time in seconds from when a power failure
105#   is detected until we react to it with an onbattery event.
106#
107#   This means that, apccontrol will be called with the powerout argument
108#   immediately when a power failure is detected.  However, the
109#   onbattery argument is passed to apccontrol only after the
110#   ONBATTERYDELAY time.  If you don't want to be annoyed by short
111#   powerfailures, make sure that apccontrol powerout does nothing
112#   i.e. comment out the wall.
113ONBATTERYDELAY 6
114
115#
116# Note: BATTERYLEVEL, MINUTES, and TIMEOUT work in conjunction, so
117# the first that occurs will cause the initation of a shutdown.
118#
119
120# If during a power failure, the remaining battery percentage
121# (as reported by the UPS) is below or equal to BATTERYLEVEL,
122# apcupsd will initiate a system shutdown.
123BATTERYLEVEL 5
124
125# If during a power failure, the remaining runtime in minutes
126# (as calculated internally by the UPS) is below or equal to MINUTES,
127# apcupsd, will initiate a system shutdown.
128MINUTES 3
129
130# If during a power failure, the UPS has run on batteries for TIMEOUT
131# many seconds or longer, apcupsd will initiate a system shutdown.
132# A value of 0 disables this timer.
133#
134#  Note, if you have a Smart UPS, you will most likely want to disable
135#    this timer by setting it to zero. That way, you UPS will continue
136#    on batteries until either the % charge remaing drops to or below BATTERYLEVEL,
137#    or the remaining battery runtime drops to or below MINUTES.  Of course,
138#    if you are testing, setting this to 60 causes a quick system shutdown
139#    if you pull the power plug.   
140#  If you have an older dumb UPS, you will want to set this to less than
141#    the time you know you can run on batteries.
142TIMEOUT 0
143
144#  Time in seconds between annoying users to signoff prior to
145#  system shutdown. 0 disables.
146ANNOY 300
147
148# Initial delay after power failure before warning users to get
149# off the system.
150ANNOYDELAY 60
151
152# The condition which determines when users are prevented from
153# logging in during a power failure.
154# NOLOGON <string> [ disable | timeout | percent | minutes | always ]
155NOLOGON disable
156
157# If KILLDELAY is non-zero, apcupsd will continue running after a
158# shutdown has been requested, and after the specified time in
159# seconds attempt to kill the power. This is for use on systems
160# where apcupsd cannot regain control after a shutdown.
161# KILLDELAY <seconds>  0 disables
162KILLDELAY 0
163
164#
165# ==== Configuration statements for Network Information Server ====
166#
167
168# NETSERVER [ on | off ] on enables, off disables the network
169#  information server. If netstatus is on, a network information
170#  server process will be started for serving the STATUS and
171#  EVENT data over the network (used by CGI programs).
172NETSERVER on
173
174# NISIP <dotted notation ip address>
175#  IP address on which NIS server will listen for incoming connections.
176#  This is useful if your server is multi-homed (has more than one
177#  network interface and IP address). Default value is 0.0.0.0 which
178#  means any incoming request will be serviced. Alternatively, you can
179#  configure this setting to any specific IP address of your server and
180#  NIS will listen for connections only on that interface. Use the
181#  loopback address (127.0.0.1) to accept connections only from the
182#  local machine.
183NISIP 0.0.0.0
184
185# NISPORT <port> default is 3551 as registered with the IANA
186#  port to use for sending STATUS and EVENTS data over the network.
187#  It is not used unless NETSERVER is on. If you change this port,
188#  you will need to change the corresponding value in the cgi directory
189#  and rebuild the cgi programs.
190NISPORT 3551
191
192# If you want the last few EVENTS to be available over the network
193# by the network information server, you must define an EVENTSFILE.
194EVENTSFILE /var/log/apcupsd.events
195
196# EVENTSFILEMAX <kilobytes>
197#  By default, the size of the EVENTSFILE will be not be allowed to exceed
198#  10 kilobytes.  When the file grows beyond this limit, older EVENTS will
199#  be removed from the beginning of the file (first in first out).  The
200#  parameter EVENTSFILEMAX can be set to a different kilobyte value, or set
201#  to zero to allow the EVENTSFILE to grow without limit.
202EVENTSFILEMAX 10
203
204#
205# ========== Configuration statements used if sharing =============
206#            a UPS with more than one machine
207
208# NETTIME <int>
209#   Interval (in seconds) at which the NIS client polls the server.
210#   Used only when this apcupsd is a network client (UPSTYPE net).
211#NETTIME 60
212
213#
214# Remaining items are for ShareUPS (APC expansion card) ONLY
215#
216
217# UPSCLASS [ standalone | shareslave | sharemaster ]
218#   Normally standalone unless you share an UPS using an APC ShareUPS
219#   card.
220UPSCLASS standalone
221
222# UPSMODE [ disable | share ]
223#   Normally disable unless you share an UPS using an APC ShareUPS card.
224UPSMODE disable
225
226#
227# ===== Configuration statements to control apcupsd system logging ========
228#
229
230# Time interval in seconds between writing the STATUS file; 0 disables
231STATTIME 0
232
233# Location of STATUS file (written to only if STATTIME is non-zero)
234STATFILE /var/log/apcupsd.status
235
236# LOGSTATS [ on | off ] on enables, off disables
237# Note! This generates a lot of output, so if         
238#       you turn this on, be sure that the
239#       file defined in syslog.conf for LOG_NOTICE is a named pipe.
240#  You probably do not want this on.
241LOGSTATS off
242
243# Time interval in seconds between writing the DATA records to
244#   the log file. 0 disables.
245DATATIME 0
246
247# FACILITY defines the logging facility (class) for logging to syslog.
248#          If not specified, it defaults to "daemon". This is useful
249#          if you want to separate the data logged by apcupsd from other
250#          programs.
251#FACILITY DAEMON
252
253#
254# ========== Configuration statements used in updating the UPS EPROM =========
255#
256
257#
258# These statements are used only by apctest when choosing "Set EEPROM with conf
259# file values" from the EEPROM menu. THESE STATEMENTS HAVE NO EFFECT ON APCUPSD.
260#
261
262# UPS name, max 8 characters
263#UPSNAME UPS_IDEN
264
265# Battery date - 8 characters
266#BATTDATE mm/dd/yy
267
268# Sensitivity to line voltage quality (H cause faster transfer to batteries) 
269# SENSITIVITY H M L        (default = H)
270#SENSITIVITY H
271
272# UPS delay after power return (seconds)
273# WAKEUP 000 060 180 300   (default = 0)
274#WAKEUP 60
275
276# UPS Grace period after request to power off (seconds)
277# SLEEP 020 180 300 600    (default = 20)
278#SLEEP 180
279
280# Low line voltage causing transfer to batteries
281# The permitted values depend on your model as defined by last letter
282#  of FIRMWARE or APCMODEL. Some representative values are:
283#    D 106 103 100 097
284#    M 177 172 168 182
285#    A 092 090 088 086
286#    I 208 204 200 196     (default = 0 => not valid)
287#LOTRANSFER  208
288
289# High line voltage causing transfer to batteries
290# The permitted values depend on your model as defined by last letter
291#  of FIRMWARE or APCMODEL. Some representative values are:
292#    D 127 130 133 136
293#    M 229 234 239 224
294#    A 108 110 112 114
295#    I 253 257 261 265     (default = 0 => not valid)
296#HITRANSFER 253
297
298# Battery charge needed to restore power
299# RETURNCHARGE 00 15 50 90 (default = 15)
300#RETURNCHARGE 15
301
302# Alarm delay
303# 0 = zero delay after pwr fail, T = power fail + 30 sec, L = low battery, N = never
304# BEEPSTATE 0 T L N        (default = 0)
305#BEEPSTATE T
306
307# Low battery warning delay in minutes
308# LOWBATT 02 05 07 10      (default = 02)
309#LOWBATT 2
310
311# UPS Output voltage when running on batteries
312# The permitted values depend on your model as defined by last letter
313#  of FIRMWARE or APCMODEL. Some representative values are:
314#    D 115
315#    M 208
316#    A 100
317#    I 230 240 220 225     (default = 0 => not valid)
318#OUTPUTVOLTS 230
319
320# Self test interval in hours 336=2 weeks, 168=1 week, ON=at power on
321# SELFTEST 336 168 ON OFF  (default = 336)
322#SELFTEST 336
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