205 lines
7.3 KiB
Text
205 lines
7.3 KiB
Text
UPSDRVSVCCTL(8)
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===============
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NAME
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----
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upsdrvsvcctl - UPS driver service instance controller
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SYNOPSIS
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--------
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*upsdrvsvcctl* -h
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*upsdrvsvcctl* ['OPTIONS'] {start | stop } ['ups']
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DESCRIPTION
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-----------
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*upsdrvsvcctl* provides a uniform interface for controlling your UPS
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drivers wrapped into service instances on platforms which support that
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(currently this covers Linux distributions with systemd and systems
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derived from Solaris 10 codebase, including proprietary Sun/Oracle
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Solaris and numerous open-source illumos distributions with SMF).
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It may be not installed in packaging for other operating systems.
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When used properly, upsdrvsvcctl lets you maintain identical startup
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scripts across multiple systems with different UPS configurations.
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The goal of this solution is to allow the services of *upsd* data
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server to start up even if some of the power devices are currently
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not accessible, and for NUT drivers to be automatically restarted
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by the system in case of problems (driver bug, startup failure).
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It also allows for faster startup of systems which monitor several
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devices, by letting each driver to start in parallel with others,
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and not with a sequential loop like was done previously.
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Independent service instances for each NUT driver also allow one
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to configure further dependencies, such as that networking must be
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available for SNMP and similar drivers (but is not needed for
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local-medium drivers such as serial or USB).
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The old monolithic "all or nothing" solution requiring that all
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drivers must be running, which sufficed for deployments with a few
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UPSes, did not really work well for monitoring larger deployments.
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It was also not easy to strike a pre-packaged balance between early
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UPS protection for USB/serial home setups vs. waiting for network
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on larger ones.
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*upsdrvsvcctl* is a script which mimics the operation of *upsdrvctl*
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program (where possible) to provide similar end-user experience when
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manipulating drivers wrapped into service instances rather than as
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directly executed daemons. It relies on *nut-driver-enumerator.sh*
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for a large part of actual operations.
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You should use upsdrvsvcctl instead of direct calls to the drivers
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and daemon-based management with *upsdrvctl* whenever possible (that
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is, for "production" use on compatible OSes). Otherwise (testing,
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other OSes) the *upsdrvctl* is a recommended option.
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OPTIONS
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-------
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*-h*::
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Display the help text.
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*-t*::
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Enable testing mode. Testing mode makes upsdrvsvcctl display the actions
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it would execute without actually doing them.
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OPTIONS OF UPSDRVCTL NOT (CURRENTLY) APPLICABLE TO UPSDRVSVCCTL
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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Options like '-r', '-u' or '-D' could be handled by properties of the
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service instances themselves, with this script helping to configure
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them (assuming proper privileges of the user who called it). This is
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not a "production" use case, though, to change such options on a
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configured system -- so for experiments and troubleshooting, it may
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be better to stop the service instance and play with *upsdrvctl*
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directly.
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*-r* 'directory'::
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If starting a driver, this value will direct it to *chroot*(2) into
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'directory'. This can be useful when securing systems.
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This may be set in the ups.conf with "chroot" in the global section.
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*-u* 'username'::
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If starting a driver, this value will direct it to *setuid*(2) to
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the user id associated with 'username'.
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If the driver is started as root without specifying this value, it will
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use the username that was compiled into the binary. This defaults to
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"nobody", and is far from ideal.
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This may be set in ups.conf with "user" in the global section.
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*-D*::
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Raise the driver debug level. Use this multiple times for additional
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details.
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COMMANDS
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--------
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*upsdrvsvcctl* supports three of the commands processed by *upsdrvctl* --
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start, stop and shutdown. They take an optional argument which is a UPS
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name from linkman:ups.conf[5]. Without that argument, they operate on
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every UPS that is currently configured.
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Note: shutdown is currently supported by stopping the driver service
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instances to release the potentially held ports etc., calling the
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*upsdrvctl* directly for issuing the shutdown command, and restarting
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the driver service instances to reconnect when the device comes back
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online.
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*start*::
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Start the UPS driver(s). In case of failure, further attempts may be executed
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by using the 'maxretry' and 'retrydelay' options - see linkman:ups.conf[5].
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*stop*::
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Stop the UPS driver(s).
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*upsdrvsvcctl* also supports further operations for troubleshooting the
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mapping of NUT driver section names to the service instance names (which
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may differ due to limitations of various systems).
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*list*::
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list the currently active mapping of service instances to device sections
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*resync*::
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update the mapping of service instances for NUT drivers to device section
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names used in 'ups.conf' (register new instances, tear down obsoleted ones).
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COMMANDS OF UPSDRVCTL NOT (CURRENTLY) APPLICABLE TO UPSDRVSVCCTL
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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*shutdown*::
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Command the UPS driver(s) to run their shutdown sequence. Drivers are
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stopped according to their sdorder value - see linkman:ups.conf[5].
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WARNING: this will probably power off your computers, so don't
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play around with this option. Only use it when your systems are prepared
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to lose power.
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NOTE: refer to linkman:ups.conf[5] for using the *nowait* parameter.
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ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
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---------------------
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*NUT_CONFPATH* is the path name of the directory that contains
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`upsd.conf` and other configuration files. If this variable is not set,
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*upsdrvsvcctl* (or rather *nut-driver-enumerator.sh*) would use a built-in
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default, which is often `/usr/local/ups/etc`.
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DIAGNOSTICS
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-----------
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upsdrvsvcctl will return a nonzero exit code if it encounters an error
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while performing the desired operation. This will also happen if a
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driver takes longer than the 'maxstartdelay' period to enter the
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background.
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Any messages issued by the *upsdrvctl* program used to start the NUT
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drivers as part of the service instances' implementations, or by the
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drivers themselves, will be logged by the service management framework
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facilities and will not appear in your interactive terminal used to
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manage the driver.
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Use `upsdrvsvcctl list` or `upsdrvsvcctl list NUT-device` to find out
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the service instance name for the NUT driver (section name) you are
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interested in. Then look up the service logs (where the outputs of the
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service implementation program as well as the framework messages about
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this service are stored), as suggested below:
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*Linux systemd*::
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Messages will normally be kept in the service journal, so:
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journalctl -lu nut-driver@instance-name
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Note that your local system configuration may be impacted by such
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nuances as passing the journal data to a standard syslog server,
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and/or by having a small cache for locally stored journal messages
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(so older entries would disappear). There may also be or not be a
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copy of the journals stored in the filesystem.
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*Solaris SMF*::
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Look for `/var/svc/log/system-power-nut-driver:instance-name.log` file.
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AUTHOR
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------
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Jim Klimov <jimklimov+nut@gmail.com>
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SEE ALSO
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--------
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linkman:upsdrvctl[8], linkman:nutupsdrv[8], linkman:upsd[8],
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linkman:nut-driver-enumerator[8], linkman:ups.conf[5]
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Internet resources:
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The NUT (Network UPS Tools) home page: http://www.networkupstools.org/
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