65 lines
1.9 KiB
Text
65 lines
1.9 KiB
Text
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# Network UPS Tools: Example upsd.users
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#
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# This file sets the permissions for upsd - the UPS network daemon.
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# Users are defined here, are given passwords, and their privileges are
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# controlled here too. Since this file will contain passwords, keep it
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# secure, with only enough permissions for upsd to read it.
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# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# Each user gets a section. To start a section, put the username in
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# brackets on a line by itself. To set something for that user, specify
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# it under that section heading. The username is case-sensitive, so
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# admin and AdMiN are two different users.
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#
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# Possible settings:
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#
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# password: The user's password. This is case-sensitive.
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#
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# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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#
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# actions: Let the user do certain things with upsd.
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#
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# Valid actions are:
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#
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# SET - change the value of certain variables in the UPS
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# FSD - set the "forced shutdown" flag in the UPS
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#
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# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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#
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# instcmds: Let the user initiate specific instant commands. Use "ALL"
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# to grant all commands automatically. There are many possible
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# commands, so use 'upscmd -l' to see what your hardware supports. Here
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# are a few examples:
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#
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# test.panel.start - Start a front panel test
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# test.battery.start - Start battery test
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# test.battery.stop - Stop battery test
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# calibrate.start - Start calibration
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# calibrate.stop - Stop calibration
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#
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# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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#
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# Example:
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#
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# [admin]
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# password = mypass
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# actions = SET
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# instcmds = ALL
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#
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#
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# --- Configuring for upsmon
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#
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# To add a user for your upsmon, use this example:
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#
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# [upsmon]
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# password = pass
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# upsmon master
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# or
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# upsmon slave
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#
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# The matching MONITOR line in your upsmon.conf would look like this:
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#
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# MONITOR myups@localhost 1 upsmon pass master (or slave)
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