Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches for "pmset".
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2017 Jun 09
2
Apple Mac slave
On Jun 8, 2017, at 4:06 PM, Robbie van der Walle <rvanderwalle at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> 7. No they didn?t restart. I know there is a setting on the NAS to activate this. I will check and try again.
Not sure for the NAS, but for the Mac, it is probably something like this:
sudo pmset -a autorestart 1
There is also usually a checkbox in the Energy Saver panel in the System Preferences GUI.
2017 Jun 09
3
Apple Mac slave
On Jun 9, 2017, at 4:47 AM, Robbie van der Walle <rvanderwalle at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Under System Preferences, Energy Saver, there is a setting Start up automatically after a power failure.
>> Running sudo pmset -a autorestart 1 does the same trick.
>
> But unfortunately Mac stays . Step 7
>
You might want to save off the output of "pmset -g" before experimenting further - that way, after you find a solution, you can run it again to see what changed.
This page implies that the &qu...
2017 Jun 09
0
Apple Mac slave
>> 7. No they didn?t restart. I know there is a setting on the NAS to activate this. I will check and try again.
>
> Not sure for the NAS, but for the Mac, it is probably something like this:
>
> sudo pmset -a autorestart 1
>
> There is also usually a checkbox in the Energy Saver panel in the System Preferences GUI.
Under System Preferences, Energy Saver, there is a setting Start up automatically after a power failure.
Running sudo pmset -a autorestart 1 does the same trick.
But unfortuna...
2017 Jun 09
0
Apple Mac slave
...Lepple <clepple at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Jun 9, 2017, at 4:47 AM, Robbie van der Walle <rvanderwalle at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Under System Preferences, Energy Saver, there is a setting Start up automatically after a power failure.
>>> Running sudo pmset -a autorestart 1 does the same trick.
>>
>> But unfortunately Mac stays . Step 7
>>
>
> You might want to save off the output of "pmset -g" before experimenting further - that way, after you find a solution, you can run it again to see what changed.
>
>...
2017 Jun 08
5
Apple Mac slave
On Thu, 8 Jun 2017, Robbie van der Walle wrote:
> The "upsrw" command contacts upsd, so it sounds like you should be able to add a user to upsd.users on the NAS, and then run something like
> this on the Mac:
>
> ??upsrw -s battery.charge.low=80 -u upsmaster -s sekret UPS at synology
>
> Per?http://networkupstools.org/docs/man/upsd.users.html?,