on 11/17/2014 03:06 AM thegeezer wrote the following:
snip
the only way forward that i see would be to get a small device a la
raspberry pi, and have that run apcupsd on it. you can then have that
device run wake on lan if it detects the power is good, and trigger
remote shutdown when not.
On Friday, November 14, 2014 08:53:13 PM Thanasis wrote:
I have an APC SC620I, which in case of power failure, it successfully
initiates a shutdown to the connected (via SMART cable) PC, but if the
mains power returns, the UPS does not recycle the power to the PC, and
consequently the PC stays
On 15/11/2014 16:47, Daniel Frey wrote:
If the above fails (if the above does indeed fail, some troubleshooting
should happen to try to figure out why it doesn't work), KILLDELAY is
the parameter you likely seek, but it is dangerous. If you set this it
will wait x seconds after a shutdown was
On Friday 14 Nov 2014 18:53:13 Thanasis wrote:
I have an APC SC620I, which in case of power failure, it successfully
initiates a shutdown to the connected (via SMART cable) PC, but if the
mains power returns, the UPS does not recycle the power to the PC, and
consequently the PC stays off.
on 11/15/2014 11:35 AM Mick wrote the following:
On Friday 14 Nov 2014 18:53:13 Thanasis wrote:
I have an APC SC620I, which in case of power failure, it successfully
initiates a shutdown to the connected (via SMART cable) PC, but if the
mains power returns, the UPS does not recycle the power to
On 15/11/14 22:52, Thanasis wrote:
on 11/15/2014 11:35 AM Mick wrote the following:
On Friday 14 Nov 2014 18:53:13 Thanasis wrote:
I have an APC SC620I, which in case of power failure, it successfully
initiates a shutdown to the connected (via SMART cable) PC, but if the
mains power returns,
on 11/15/2014 03:54 PM Bruce Schultz wrote the following:
If the UPS battery has not run flat before the mains power is restored,
I see no reason why a UPS should kill the output power.
The PC has an option in BIOS to Power On when the mains power is
restored to it, without any need to press
On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 8:54 AM, Bruce Schultz brul...@gmail.com wrote:
If the UPS battery has not run flat before the mains power is restored, I
see no reason why a UPS should kill the output power. So the BIOS has no
real way of knowing that it should reboot again in that case.
Obviously
On Saturday 15 Nov 2014 14:22:47 Thanasis wrote:
on 11/15/2014 03:54 PM Bruce Schultz wrote the following:
If the UPS battery has not run flat before the mains power is restored,
I see no reason why a UPS should kill the output power.
The PC has an option in BIOS to Power On when the mains
on 11/15/2014 04:40 PM Rich Freeman wrote the following:
On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 8:54 AM, Bruce Schultz brul...@gmail.com wrote:
If the UPS battery has not run flat before the mains power is restored, I
see no reason why a UPS should kill the output power. So the BIOS has no
real way of
on 11/15/2014 04:59 PM Mick wrote the following:
On Saturday 15 Nov 2014 14:22:47 Thanasis wrote:
The PC has an option in BIOS to Power On when the mains power is
restored to it, without any need to press any button.
So, once the UPS has initiated a shutdown to the PC, the PC will
shutdown,
on 11/15/2014 06:47 PM Daniel Frey wrote the following:
On 11/14/2014 10:53 AM, Thanasis wrote:
I have an APC SC620I, which in case of power failure, it successfully
initiates a shutdown to the connected (via SMART cable) PC, but if the
mains power returns, the UPS does not recycle the power to
On 11/15/2014 09:05 AM, Thanasis wrote:
However, in the even that power is restored between the UPS kill and the
time it actually turns off the mains will still not be cycled.
Why would this be so?
That was a musing, it wasn't based on testing. On most UPS systems I've
seen when the power
On Saturday 15 Nov 2014 16:54:26 Thanasis wrote:
on 11/15/2014 04:59 PM Mick wrote the following:
Have you been through them and in particular the Full Power Down Test?
If yes, did you wait long enough after the PC has powered down, for the
UPS to also switch off (you can affect the
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