On 2019-02-16 1:58 p.m., Stuart D. Gathman wrote:
On Sat, 16 Feb 2019, James wrote:
Now it says:
battery.runtime: 1170
The display on the UPS fluctuates between 16-19 minutes.
ups.load says 30 constantly and The display on the UPS says 30% so I
think that is correct.
battery.runtime is in seconds, so that agrees with the UPS display as
well.
How you find out your battery was manufactured in 2012?
APC batteries have a smart chip that records stuff like that and can
be read by the UPS. Another possibility, is that they "refilled"
an old case. The end result was a substandard (but working - and
cheap) battery.
Even aftermarket batteries have those?
The battery I bought was cheap.
I wonder if mine was supposed to have a smart chip and CyberPower
decided not to.
The original battery said:
battery.mfr.date: CPS
How would I know if is the UPS?
That fluctuating runtime sounds suspicious - although the load is also
fluctuating between 32 and 28 in your examples. Maybe the lower
runtime is a consequence of the higher load? Why is your load varying?
It might be something plugged into the UPS. Maybe your server makes
the load difference when CPUs are maxed out?
It is my 8 core desktop computer and not much goes on.
The runtime fluctuates way more than the load.
I'm going to setup upslog.
I couldn't find an easy way to graph the results.
I installed nut-monitor.
The nut website says "NUT-Monitor is part of NUT since NUT v2.4.1. It
will further evolve toward the NUT Control Center." but nut-monitor
hasn't been updated since 2010.
Do you know what happened to the "NUT Control Center"?
It has an interesting name.
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