On 9/1/21 1:27 AM, bobby via Nut-upsuser wrote:> I am running nut server on a raspberry pi.? Doing a status after
> bootup, I see this:
> ? nut-server.service - Network UPS Tools - power devices information
> server
> ? ?Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/nut-server.service; enabled;
> vendor preset: enabled)
> ? ?Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Tue 2021-08-31 18:11:54
> EDT; 48s ago
> ? Process: 448 ExecStart=/sbin/upsd (code=exited, status=1/FAILURE)
>
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT upsd[448]: not listening on 192.168.2.105 port 3493
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT upsd[448]: listening on 127.0.0.1 port 3493
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT upsd[448]: no listening interface available
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT upsd[448]: not listening on 192.168.2.105 port 3493
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT upsd[448]: listening on 127.0.0.1 port 3493
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT upsd[448]: no listening interface available
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT upsd[448]: Network UPS Tools upsd 2.7.4
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT systemd[1]: nut-server.service: Control process
> exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT systemd[1]: nut-server.service: Failed with result
> 'exit-code'.
> Aug 31 18:11:54 NUT systemd[1]: Failed to start Network UPS Tools -
> power devices information server.
>
> To try to fix this, I added to (root's) crontab:
> @reboot? ??upsdrvctl start && upsd && systemctl start
nut-server.service
This is completely useless.
- first of all that's not how you (re)start nut services on a machine
that uses systemd;
- second the "&&" you used mean that should any of the early
commands
fail, the rest would not get executed at all ( And I am pretty sure that
the "upsdrvctl start" fails spectacularly ; you should start the
nut-driver service if you insist on doing that manually rather than
letting systemd start it via the requirements enforced by the nut-server
service) ;
- and last but not least,? starting upsd ( ... with proper arguments )
is exactly what nut-server.service is supposed to do.
>
> But it still fails to start on boot up.
Because you did not fix the underlying issue. The " no listening
interface available" lines seem to indicate that either your network
does not start at all or you have configured nut to use incorrect IP
addresses. Start debugging by checking the parts from the boot logs that
mention the network interfaces.