On Sun, Mar 1, 2009 at 5:43 PM, Joseph L. Casale <JCasale@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>I need to do a >>simulated power failure, to verify that it will in fact shutdown the >>box after 2 minutes! > > Plug the PC into a stable power source, let the same PC monitor the UPS. > Unplug the UPS and place a load on it, watch what it instructs the PC to > do :) I plugged the UPS into a surge protector and after awhile, I cut the power to the UPS. The UPS continued to supply power to the box and monitor and the alarm beeped. All OK. But, the WinPower software supplied for the UPS did *not* shut the box down, after 2 minutes of power failure, as I expected. The reason I installed the WinPower SW was so it could shut down the box.... Here's the output: [lanny@dell2400 Winpower]$ ./monitor Starting Winpower Manager: Done [lanny@dell2400 Winpower]$ Broadcast message from root (Sun Mar 1 18:03:28 2009): /usr/local/Winpower/UPSPILOT.TRA Broadcast message from root (Sun Mar 1 18:03:28 2009): Winpower Message: LINE-INT in /dev/ttyS0 input power failed Broadcast message from root (Sun Mar 1 18:08:52 2009): Winpower Message: LINE-INT in /dev/ttyS0 input power restored. Broadcast message from root (Sun Mar 1 18:08:52 2009): /usr/local/Winpower/UPSPILOT.TRA As you can see, I killed the power to the UPS for 5 minutes, but the WinPower SW did *not* shut down the box. The monitoring part of the WinPower SW works well, but their default settings are for it to shutdown the box if the battery is low or after a 2 minute power failure. I will RFM the WinPower manual, but if I don't find a solution there, there's nobody to contact, so then nut and apcupsd become much more interesting, again..... <snip> > bios powers up after power returns so when the outage is over, everything > returns to normal. BIOS is set to power up the box when power is restored. <snip. > I would be as well:) Apcupsd and NUT are both stable, popular and well > documented projects. I am not sure about the one you are using... The WinPower software for the UPS is apparently proprietary and I don't see a way to contact them. That's the best way for them to do it. If users have problems, the problems are for the users and they don't have to support the users. :-) _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos