On Tue, 2013-07-16 at 23:09 -0400, Charles Lepple wrote:> On Jul 16, 2013, at 11:30 AM, Matt Ivie wrote:
>
> > I'm sure this has been asked before and I did search the list
archives
> > but anything I did find looked to be older.
> >
> > I'm looking at buying some UPS and I'm not sure how to tell
which
> > currently sold models are supported by NUT. I know that not every new
> > model will be supported but there has to be some right?
>
> Generally, we find this out when someone posts to the list asking for help
with a new UPS.
>
> > Is there a specific designation I can look for in the technical specs
> > that should help me determine this?
>
> Here are some general thoughts on why this is a difficult question to
answer:
>
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.monitoring.nut.user/7987
>
> > Are there some manufacturers that
> > are friendly to the project and make devices that work well with NUT?
>
> This is a little easier to answer. For the Eaton and Powerware brands, we
can often ask the company to help out with technical information. Several other
companies have provided tech support or protocol information. Some of this is
visible if you choose either "****" or "*****" from the
"Support Level" dropdown on this page:
>
> http://www.networkupstools.org/stable-hcl.html
>
> (Sorry, the 4-star rating is strictly 4-star, and does not include 5-star
by default. JavaScript help is welcome here.)
>
> On the other hand, I personally can't recommend new APC equipment now
that they have started using a proprietary protocol that several customers have
been unable to obtain documentation for. I have an old APC USB HID UPS, and it
works well, but their new equipment is apparently more limited in what it can
monitor.
>
> > Any help on this would be great because the worst thing would be to
buy
> > a nice new UPS for a server and then find out that it is not supported
> > by NUT.
>
>
> Short answer: buy from a distributor that allows open-box returns. The NUT
project can't be liable for recommendations based on old information.
>
> If you can provide a little more information about the kind of UPS that you
are looking for, I'm sure we could narrow things down a little. Are you
protecting desktops or small servers? A whole machine room?
>
I'm really just looking for a UPS that might run a couple of small
servers and other small devices(routers or switches). If I could get
15-30 minutes of runtime from the batts and o course run the automated
shutdown and reboot sequence through nut that would be great. The server
I'm looking at has a PSU capable of 200W but I don't expect to be maxing
out the system capabilities at all. I'll be running either Debian
Wheezy(most likely) or Trisquel 6.0 and I'd like to just use the
pre-packaged version of NUT rather than building a new package if I can.
I don't know if that's enough information to point me in the right
direction or not.
Thanks