108 lines
3.3 KiB
Text
108 lines
3.3 KiB
Text
UPSRW(8)
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========
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NAME
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----
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upsrw - UPS variable administration tool
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SYNOPSIS
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--------
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*upsrw* 'ups'
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*upsrw* -h
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*upsrw* -s 'variable' [-u 'username'] [-p 'password'] 'ups'
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DESCRIPTION
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-----------
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*upsrw* allows you to view and change the read/write variables inside your UPS.
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It sends commands via the server linkman:upsd[8] to your driver, which
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configures the hardware for you.
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The list of variables that allow you to change their values is based on
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the capabilities of your UPS equipment. Not all models support this
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feature. Typically, cheaper hardware does not support any of them.
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Run upsrw with a UPS identifier to see what will work for you.
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OPTIONS
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-------
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*-h*::
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Display the help message.
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*-s* 'variable'::
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Specify the variable to be changed inside the UPS. For unattended
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mode such as in shell scripts, use the format VAR=VALUE to specify both
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the variable and the value, for example:
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-s input.transfer.high=129
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+
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Without this argument, upsrw will just display the list of the variables
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and their possible values.
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+
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Some variables are strings, and can be set to any value within the
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length limit. Others are enumerated types and can only be set to one of
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those values. Others may be within an allowed range of values. Refer to
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the list to know what's available in your hardware.
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*-u* 'username'::
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Set the NUT username for the connection to the server. This is optional,
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and you will be prompted for this when using the -s option if you don't
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specify -u on the command line. NUT usernames are defined in
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linkman:upsd.users[5], and are not linked to system usernames.
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*-p* 'password'::
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Set the password to authenticate to the server. This is also optional
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like -u, and you will be prompted for it if necessary.
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'ups'::
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View or change the settings on this UPS. The format for this option is
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`upsname[@hostname[:port]]`. The default hostname is "localhost".
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UNATTENDED MODE
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---------------
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If you run this program inside a shell script or similar to set
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variables, you will need to specify all of the information on the
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command line. This means using `-s VAR=VALUE`, `-u` and `-p`. Otherwise it
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will put up a prompt and your program will hang.
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This is not necessary when displaying the list, as the username and
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password are not required for read-only mode.
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Moreover, if you run this program inside a shell script or similar, you
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should only consider using output from stdout, not stderr.
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DIAGNOSTICS
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-----------
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*upsrw* can't set variables on your UPS unless you provide a valid
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username and password. If you get "access denied" errors, make sure
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that your linkman:upsd.users[5] has an entry for you, and that the
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username you are using has permissions to SET variables.
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VALUE FORMAT
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------------
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When using *upsrw* to modify a numeric float value, that values must be given
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using decimal (base 10) english-based representation, so using a dot, in
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non-scientific notation. So hexadecimal, exponents, and comma for thousands
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separator are forbiden.
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For example: "1200.20" is valid, while "1,200.20" and "1200,20" are invalid.
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HISTORY
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-------
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This program used to be called upsct2, which was ambiguous and
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confusing.
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SEE ALSO
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--------
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linkman:upsd[8], linkman:upscmd[8]
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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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