Citeren Aldo Caruso <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Nov 12 20:34:18 pc5 upsd[2372]: Data for UPS [gamasonic] is stale - > check driver > Nov 12 20:34:20 pc5 upsd[2372]: UPS [gamasonic] data is no longer stale
This isn't unusual. Unless the driver already noticed that the UPS is running on battery at the time (this would be logged), this is completely harmless. The worst that can happen, is that the upsmon master decides to shutdown the system, but this wouldn't be a hard shutdown. Never versions of the megatec driver will mask out temporary communication problems. [...] > There are two possibilities: the UPS suddenly shut itself down ( very > unlikely as there was no power blackout ) How do you know the power was stable? You may not have noticed a small glitch. If the UPS failed to switch over quickly enough, the system may still have shutdown hard. > or the nut driver mistakenly gave the UPS a power off command. Not likely. The driver will log any shutdown commands to the system log. Unless you ran the megatec driver with the '-k' command or sent it the 'load.off' command, the delay before shutting down the output after sending the command is two minutes, so there would be plenty of time to log this. Instructing the UPS to power off, requires sending it at least four characters, so there is no chance that this happens due to random line noise or something like it. More likely, the UPS switched to battery and failed to deliver power long enough to notice this event. What was the result of the "test.battery.start" command the last time you ran it? If the battery is worn out, you won't notice it until it actually has to power the load. This better be during a test and not an actual mains failure. A recommended way to test this would be to load the UPS with a 2 x 60 W incandescent lamps (adjusting the number of lamps to mimic the load), disconnect the mains and watch how long it takes before the light goes out (don't power a computer from it at the time). If NUT notices the low battery and correctly shuts down the system before the light is out, you're safe. [...] > input.voltage: 215.0 > input.voltage.fault: 165.0 The UPS switched at least once to battery since the last time it was powered on. If this happens regularly, you may wear out batteries more quickly. Best regards, Arjen -- Please keep list traffic on the list _______________________________________________ Nut-upsuser mailing list [email protected] http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/nut-upsuser

