2011-01-26 09:35:08 +00:00
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ifdef::website[]
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Project history
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===============
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endif::website[]
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This page is an attempt to document how everything came together.
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The Network UPS Tools team would like to warmly thank Russell Kroll.
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Russell initially started this project, maintaining and improving it for
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over 8 years (1996 -- mid 2005).
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Prototypes and experiments
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--------------------------
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May 1996: early status hacks
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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APC's Powerchute was running on kadets.d20.co.edu (a BSD/OS box) with
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SCO binary emulation. Early test versions ran in cron, pulled status
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from the log files and wrote them to a .plan file. You could see the
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results by fingering `pwrchute@kadets.d20.co.edu` while it lasted:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Last login Sat May 11 21:33 (MDT) on ttyp0 from intrepid.rmi.net
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Plan:
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Welcome to the UPS monitor service at kadets.d20.co.edu.
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The Smart-UPS attached to kadets generated a report at 14:24:01 on 05/17/96.
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During the measured period, the following data points were taken:
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Voltage ranged from 115.0 VAC to 116.3 VAC.
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The UPS generated 116.3 VAC at 60.00 Hz.
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The battery level was at 27.60 volts.
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The load placed on the UPS was 024.9 percent.
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UPS temperature was measured at 045.0 degrees Celsius.
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Measurements are taken every 10 minutes by the upsd daemon.
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This report is generated by a script written by Russell Kroll<rkroll@kadets>.
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Modified for compatibility with the BSD/OS cron daemon by Neil Schroeder
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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This same status data could also be seen with a web browser, since we
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had rigged up a CGI wrapper script which called finger.
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January 1997: initial protocol tests
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Initial tests with a freestanding non-daemon program provided a few
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basic status registers from the UPS. The 940-0024C cable was not yet
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understood, so this happened over the [attachment:apcevilhack.jpg evil
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two-wire serial hack].
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Communicating with SMART-UPS 700 S/N WS9643050926 [10/17/96]
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Input voltage range: 117.6 VAC - 118.9 VAC
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Load is 010.9% of capacity, battery is charged to 100.0% of capacity
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Note that today's apcsmart driver still displays the serial number when
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it starts, since it is derived from this original code.
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September 1997: first client/server code
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The first split daemon/client code was written. upsd spoke directly to
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the UPS (APC Smart models only) and communicated with upsc by sending
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binary structures in UDP datagrams.
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The first CGI interface existed, but it was all implemented with shell
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scripts. The main script would call upsc to retrieve status values. Then
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it would cat a template file through sed to plug them into the page.
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image::images/old-cgi.png[Old CGI screenshot]
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upsstats actually has since returned to using templates, despite having
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a period in the middle when it used hardcoded HTML.
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The images were also created with shell scripts. Each script would call
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upsc to get the right value (utility, upsload, battcap). It then took
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the value, plugged it into a command file with sed, and passed that into
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'fly', a program which used an interpreted language to create images.
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fly actually uses gd, just like upsimage does today.
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This code later evolved into Smart UPS Tools 0.10.
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Smart UPS Tools
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---------------
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March 1998: first public release
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Version 0.10 was released on March 10, 1998. It used the same design as
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the pre-release prototype. This made expansion difficult as the binary
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structure used for network communications would break any time a new
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variable was added. Due to byte-ordering and struct alignment issues,
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the code usually couldn't talk over the network to a system with a
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different architecture. It was also hopelessly bound to one type of UPS
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hardware.
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Five more releases followed with this design followed. The last was
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0.34, released October 27, 1998.
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June 1999: Redesigned, rewritten
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Following a long period of inactivity and two months of prerelease
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testing versions, 0.40.0 was released on June 5, 1999. It featured a
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complete redesign and rewrite of all of the code. The layering was now
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in three pieces, with the single driver (smartups) separate from the
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server (upsd).
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Clients remained separate as before and still used UDP to talk to the
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server, but they now used a text-based protocol instead of the brittle
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binary structs. A typical request like "REQ UTILITY" would be answered
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with "ANS UTILITY 120.0".
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The ups-trust425-625 driver appeared shortly after the release of
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0.40.0, marking the first expansion beyond APC hardware.
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Over the months that followed, the backupspro driver would be forked
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from the smartups driver to handle the APC Back-UPS Pro line. Then the
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backups driver was written to handle the APC Back-UPS contact-closure
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models. These drivers would later be renamed and recombined, with
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smartups and backupspro becoming apcsmart, and backups became genericups.
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The drivers stored status data in an array. At first, they passed this data to
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upsd by saving it to a file. upsd would reread this file every few seconds to
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keep a copy for itself. This was later expanded to allow shared memory mode,
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where only a stub would remain on the disk. The drivers and server then passed
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data through the shared memory space.
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upsd picked up the ability to monitor multiple drivers on the system, and the
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"upsname@hostname" scheme was born. Access controls were added, and then the
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network code was expanded to allow TCP communications, which at this point were
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on port 3305.
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Network UPS Tools
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-----------------
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September 1999: new name, new URL
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Several visitors to the web page and subscribers to the mailing lists provided
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suggestions to rename the project. The old name no longer accurately described
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it, and it was perilously close to APC's "Smart-UPS" trademark. Rather than
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risk problems in the future, the name was changed. Kern Sibbald provided the
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winner: Network UPS Tools, which captures the essence of the project and makes
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for great short tarball filenames: nut-x.y.z.tar.gz.
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The new name was first applied to 0.42.0, released October 31, 1999.
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This is also when the web pages moved from the old
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`http://www.exploits.org/~rkroll/smartupstools/` URL to the replacement
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at `http://www.exploits.org/nut/` to coincide with the name change.
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More drivers were written and the hardware support continued to grow. upsmon
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picked up the concepts of what is now known as "primary" and "secondary",
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and could now handle environments where multiple systems get power from a
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single UPS.
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Manager mode was added to allow changing the value of read/write variables
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in certain UPS models.
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June 2001: common driver core
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Up to this point, all of the drivers compiled into freestanding programs, each
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providing their own implementation of main(). This meant they all had to check
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the incoming arguments and act uniformly. Unfortunately, not all of the
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programs behaved the same way, and it was hard to document and use consistently.
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It also meant that startup scripts had to be edited depending on what kind of
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hardware was attached.
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Starting in 0.45.0, released June 11, 2001, there was a new common core for
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all drivers called `main.c`. It provided the main function and called back to
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the `upsdrv_*` functions provided by the hardware-specific part of the drivers.
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This allowed driver authors to focus on the UPS hardware without worrying about
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the housekeeping stuff that needs to happen.
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This new design provided an obvious way to configure drivers from one file, and
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so `ups.conf` was born. This eventually spawned upsdrvctl, and now all drivers
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based on this common core could be started or stopped with one command. Startup
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scripts now could contain "upsdrvctl start", and it didn't matter what kind of
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hardware or how many UPSes you had on one system.
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Interestingly, at the end of this month, Arnaud Quette entered the UPS world,
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as a subcontractor of the now defunct MGE UPS SYSTEMS. This marked the start of
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a future successful collaboration.
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May 2002: casting off old drivers, IANA port, towards 1.0
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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During the 0.45.x series, both the old standalone drivers and the ones which
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had been converted to the common core were released together. Before the
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release of 0.50.0 on May 24, 2002, all of the old drivers were removed.
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While this shrank the list of supported hardware, it set the precedent for
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removing code which isn't receiving regular maintenance. The assumption is
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that the code will be brought back up to date by someone if they actually
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need it. Otherwise, it's just dead weight in the tree.
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This change meant that all remaining drivers could be controlled with the
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`upsdrvctl` and `ups.conf`, allowing the documentation to be greatly
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simplified. There was no longer any reason to say "do this, unless you
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have this driver, then do this".
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IANA granted an official port number to the project, and the network code
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switched to port 3493. It had previously been on 3305 which is assigned to
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`odette-ftp`. 3305 was probably picked in 1997 because it was the fifth
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project to spawn from some common UDP server code.
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After 0.50.1, the 0.99 tree was created to provide a tree which would receive
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nothing but bug fixes in preparation for the release of 1.0. As it turned out,
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very few things required fixing, and there were only three releases in this
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tree.
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Leaving 0.x territory
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---------------------
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August 2002: first stable tree: NUT 1.0.0
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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After nearly 5 years of having a 0.x version number, 1.0.0 was released on
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August 19, 2002. This milestone meant that all of the base features that
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you would expect to find were intact: good hardware support, a network
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server with security controls, and system shutdowns that worked.
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The design was showing signs of wear from the rapid expansion, but this was
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intentionally ignored for the moment. The focus was on getting a good version
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out that would provide a reasonable base while the design issues could be
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addressed in the future, and I'm confident that we succeeded.
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November 2002: second stable tree: NUT 1.2.0
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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One day after the release of 1.0.0, 1.1.0 started the new development tree.
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During that development cycle, the CGI programs were rewritten to use template
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files instead of hard-coded HTML, thus bringing back the flexibility of the
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original unreleased prototype from 5 years before. The `multimon` was removed
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from the tree, as the new `upsstats` could do both jobs by loading different
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templates.
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A new client library called upsclient was created, and it replaced upsfetch.
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This new library only supported TCP connections, and used an opaque context
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struct to keep state for each connection. As a result, client programs could
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now do things that used multiple connections without any conflicts. This was
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done primarily to allow OpenSSL support, but there were other benefits from
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the redesign.
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upsd and the clients could now use OpenSSL for basic authentication and
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encryption, but this was not included by default. This was provided as
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a bonus feature for those users who cared to read about it and enable
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the option, as the initial setup was complex.
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After the 1.1 tree was frozen and deemed complete, it became the second
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stable tree with the release of 1.2.0 on November 5, 2002.
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April 2003: new naming scheme, better driver glue, and an overhauled protocol
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Following an extended period with no development tree, 1.3.0 got things
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moving again on April 13, 2003. The focus of this tree was to rewrite
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the driver-server communication layer and replace the static naming
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scheme for variables and commands.
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Up to this point, all variables had names like STATUS, UTILITY, and OUTVOLT.
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They had been created as drivers were added to the tree, and there was little
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consistency. For example, it probably should have been INVOLT and OUTVOLT,
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but there was no OUTVOLT originally, so UTILITY was all we had. This same
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pattern repeated with ACFREQ -- is it incoming or outgoing? -- and many more.
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To solve this problem, all variables and commands were renamed to a
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hierarchical scheme that had obvious grouping. STATUS became ups.status.
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UTILITY turned into input.voltage, and OUTVOLT is output.voltage.
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ACFREQ is input.frequency, and the new output.frequency is also now
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supported. Every other variable or command was renamed in this fashion.
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These variables had been shared between the drivers and upsd as values.
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That is, for each name like STATUS, there was a #define somewhere in the
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tree with an INFO_ prefix that gave it a number. INFO_STATUS was 0x0006,
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INFO_UTILITY was 0x0004, and so on, with each name having a matching number.
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This number was stored in an int within a structure which was part of the
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array that was either written to disk or shared memory.
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That structure had several restrictions on expansion and was dropped as the
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data sharing method between the drivers and the server. It was replaced by
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a new system of text-based messages over Unix domain sockets. Drivers now
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accepted a short list of commands from upsd, and would push out updates
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asynchronously. upsd no longer had to poll the state files or shared memory.
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It could just select all of the driver and client fds and act on events.
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At the same time, the network protocol on port 3493 was overhauled to take
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advantage of the new naming scheme. The existing "REQ STATUS@su700",
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"ANS STATUS@su700 OL" scheme was showing signs of age, and it really
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only supported the UPS name (@su700) as an afterthought. The new protocol
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would now use commands like GET and LIST, leading to exchanges like
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"GET VAR su700 ups.status" and "VAR su700 ups.status OL". These responses
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contain enough data to stand alone, so clients can now handle them
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asynchronously.
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July 2003: third stable tree: NUT 1.4.0
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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On July 25, 2003, 1.4.0 was released. It contained support for both the
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old "REQ" style protocol (with names like STATUS), and the new "GET" style
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protocol (with names like ups.status). This tree is provided to bridge the
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gap between all of the old releases and the upcoming 2.0.
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2.0 will be released without support for the old REQ/STATUS protocol.
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The hope is that client authors and those who have implemented their own
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monitoring software will use the 1.4 cycle to change to the new protocol.
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The 1.4 releases contain a lot of compatibility code to make sure both
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work at the same time.
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July 2003: pushing towards 2.0
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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1.5.0 forked from 1.4.0 and was released on July 29, 2003. The first changes
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were to throw out anything which was providing compatibility with the older
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versions of the software. This means that 1.5 and the eventual 2.0 will not
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talk to anything older than 1.4.
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This tree continues to evolve with new serial routines for the drivers which
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are intended to replace the aging upscommon code which dates back to the early
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0.x releases. The original routines would call alarm and read in a tight loop
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while fetching characters. The new functions are much cleaner, and wait for
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data with select. This makes for much cleaner code and easier strace/ktrace
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logs, since the number of syscalls has been greatly reduced.
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There has also been a push to make sure the data from the UPS is well-formed
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and is actually usable before sending updates out to upsd. This started
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during 1.3 as drivers were adapted to use the dstate functions and the
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new variable/command names. Some drivers which were not converted to the
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new naming scheme or didn't do sanity checks on the incoming UPS data from
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the serial port were dropped from the tree.
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2011-01-26 09:35:08 +00:00
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This tree was released as 2.0.0.
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networkupstools.org
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-------------------
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November 2003: a new URL
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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|
2022-06-29 10:37:36 +00:00
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The bandwidth demands of a project like this have slowly been forcing me to
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offload certain parts to other servers. The download links have pointed
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offsite for many months, and other large things like certain UPS protocols
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have followed. As the traffic grows, it's clear that having the project
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attached to exploits.org is not going to work.
|
2011-01-26 09:35:08 +00:00
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|
2022-06-29 10:37:36 +00:00
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The solution was to register a new domain and set up mirrors. There are two
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initial web servers, with more on the way. The main project URL has changed
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from `http://www.exploits.org/nut/` to http://www.networkupstools.org.
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The actual content is hosted on various mirrors which are updated regularly
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with rsync, so the days of dribbling bits through my DSL should be over.
|
2011-01-26 09:35:08 +00:00
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|
2022-06-29 10:37:36 +00:00
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This is also when all of the web pages were redesigned to have a simpler
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look with fewer links on the left side. The old web pages used to have 30
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or more links on the top page, and most of them vanished when you dropped
|
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down one level. The links are now constant on the entire site, and the old
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links now live in their own groups in separate directories.
|
2011-01-26 09:35:08 +00:00
|
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|
Second major version
|
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|
|
--------------------
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|
March 2004: NUT 2.0.0
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|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
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|
NUT 2.0.0 arrived on March 23, 2004. The jump to version 2 shows the difference
|
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|
|
in the protocols and naming that happened during the 1.3 and 1.5 development
|
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series. 2.0 no longer ships with backwards compatibility code, so it's smaller
|
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and cleaner than 1.4.
|
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|
The change of leadership
|
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|
------------------------
|
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|
February 2005: NUT 2.0.1
|
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|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
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|
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|
The year 2004 was marked by a release slowdown, since Russell was busy with
|
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|
personal subjects. But the patches queue was still growing quickly.
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|
At that time, the development process was still centralized. There was no
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|
revision control system (like the current Subversion repository), nor trackers
|
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|
|
to interact with NUT development.
|
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|
|
Russell was receiving all the patches and requests, and doing all the work on
|
2022-06-29 10:37:36 +00:00
|
|
|
his own, including releases.
|
2011-01-26 09:35:08 +00:00
|
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|
|
Russell was more and more thinking about giving the project leadership to
|
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|
|
Arnaud Quette, which finally happened with the 2.0.1 release in February 2005.
|
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|
|
This marked a new era for NUT...
|
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|
|
|
First, Arnaud aimed at opening up the development by creating a project on the
|
2022-06-29 10:37:36 +00:00
|
|
|
http://www.debian.org/[Debian]
|
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|
|
http://alioth.debian.org/projects/nut/[Alioth Forge].
|
2011-01-26 09:35:08 +00:00
|
|
|
This allowed to build the team of hackers that Russell dreamed about.
|
|
|
|
It also allows to ensure NUT's continuation, whatever happens to
|
2022-06-29 10:37:36 +00:00
|
|
|
the leader. And that would most of all boost the projects contributions.
|
2011-01-26 09:35:08 +00:00
|
|
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|
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|
|
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
|
|
|
|
*sandbox*
|
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|
|
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|
|
TO BE COMPLETED + ADD A LINK TO IDEA / FUTURE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
link on the team + history
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
mention:
|
|
|
|
- MGE supporting officially,
|
|
|
|
- USB / SNMP / XML drivers (first non serial drivers),
|
|
|
|
- Power Management (HAL) bridging,
|
|
|
|
- PDU support,
|
|
|
|
- perl / python support...
|
|
|
|
- client history and evolution (wmnut: 01/01/2002)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
release history
|
|
|
|
<LI>July 7, 2008: Client activity: new client <A HREF="http://www.lestat.st/informatique/projets/nut-monitor-en">NUT-Monitor</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>June 27, 2008: Client activity: new Python class <A HREF="http://www.lestat.st/informatique/projets/pynut-en">PyNUT</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>June 19, 2008: Client activity: <A HREF="http://www.knut.noveradsl.cz/knutclient/">KNutClient 0.9.4</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>May 7, 2008: 2.2.2 released
|
|
|
|
<LI>December 21, 2007: 2.2.1 released
|
|
|
|
<LI>August 31, 2007: Client activity: <A HREF="http://rudd-o.com/projects/ups-monitor/">UPS Monitor</A> link update
|
|
|
|
<LI>August 31, 2007: Client activity: <A HREF="http://sourceforge.net/projects/winnutclient/">Windows NUT client 1.5.0</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>July 5, 2007: 2.2.0 released
|
|
|
|
<LI>June 5, 2007: Client activity: <A HREF="http://collectd.org/">collectd NUT plugin</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>April 10, 2007: Client activity: <A HREF="http://www.knut.noveradsl.cz/knutclient/">KNutClient 0.9.3</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>January 15, 2007: 2.0.5 released
|
|
|
|
<LI>January 8, 2007: Client activity: <A HREF="http://sourceforge.net/projects/winnutclient/">Windows NUT client</A>
|
|
|
|
<!-- LI>July 27, 2006: 2.0.4 released
|
|
|
|
<LI>February 7, 2006: 2.0.3 released
|
|
|
|
<LI>June 27, 2005: 2.0.2 released
|
|
|
|
<LI>June 15, 2005: new <A HREF="lists/index.html">mailing lists</A> ready on <A HREF="http://alioth.debian.org/mail/?group_id=30602">Alioth</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>April 15, 2005: new development infrastructure ready on <A HREF="http://alioth.debian.org/projects/nut/">Alioth</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>March 15, 2005: Client activity: first beta of MGE <A HREF="http://www.mgeups.com/products/pdt230/software/sp97/solpaclinux.htm">Personal Solution Pac</A>
|
|
|
|
<LI>March 11, 2005: Client activity: <A HREF="http://www.amautacorp.com/staff/Rudd-O/projects/pages/ups-front">UPS Monitor</A> 0.8 released
|
|
|
|
<LI>February 24, 2005: 2.0.1 released
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: use the NEWS file!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
|