Another option would be to use a remote rebooter - such as the iboot by
Dataprobe. You can set it to poll an IP address and reboot anything
connected to it after it misses the number of pings you set as the
threshold. You can also reboot it via telnet or
http.
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 3/16/2004 9:02:51 AM
>>>
Thanks
for the tip. Oddly enough, I stumbled across this site on my own and found
the tools and wrote the batch file I needed. It works
great.
Dan Arsenault Network Administrator Siemens VDO Automotive Inc. 700 Park Avenue East Chatham, Ontario, Canada Voice: 519-436-3839 Fax: 519-436-3641 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The message is intended only
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I
mucked around with this a little a few years ago. My intent was to turn
on an outlet in an APC power strip when I wanted to get someone's attention,
then turn it off when they pushed the acknowledge button on the web
page. I could do the former by making a batch file that did an SNMP set
by having a notification execute a batch file. I could not call a batch
file from the web page so I couldn't turn off the outlet with the
acknowledge.
So, if there is a mib value on the UPS to CYCLE the outlet
power, you can do this. Go to: http://net-snmp.sourceforge.net/
and look for
snmpset.
Write a batch file using this program to do the SNMP
set, and have a notification call the batch file.
I can't give you an
example of the batch file because the machine that has it is down with a
hardware problem. I did this on WUG rev 7 but didn't pursue it any further
because I couldn't link the acknowledge to a notification. But the SNMP
set call from the notification did work.
Jay
At 03:24 PM
3/10/2004, you wrote:
xmlns:ns0="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags">
Something you might want to
consider. If you drop the load on an UPS, you will drop everything
that is attached whether it is running or not. APC does have some
network enabled Power Distribution Units (http://www.apc.com/products/family/index.cfm?id=70)
that are Web/Telnet/SNMP friendly. You will still run into the problem
of getting WhatsUp to execute a command. Jason M. Bohreer, MCSA Network
Administrator Nastech
Pharmaceutical 3450 Monte Villa Parkway Bothell, WA 98021 (425)
908-3657 --------------------------- This email
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From:
Arsenault Dan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent:
Wednesday, March 10, 2004 12:25 PM To:
'[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: [WhatsUp Forum]
Rebooting APC UPS Units via script I have a need to do the following: WhatsUP monitors some devices and when these devices
"crash" they need to have their power recycled. Since they are plugged
into APC ups units, it would be handy to simply send a command to the UPS
units to tell them to turn their load off, wait a few seconds, and then turn
their load back on. I can do this using an SNMP browser GUI, but I would
like to simply execute a batch file or executable that does it. In
this manner, I can have WhatsUP detect that the unit has crashed, and then
simply send a command out to it's UPS to reboot it. APC was of no help on this matter. They did agree
that I should be able to do it, but they left me with the
implementation. I will work toward figuring this out, but if anyone has
already done it, "why re-invent the wheel" I say. Thoughts??? Thanks, Dan . . .
Dan Arsenault Network Administrator Siemens VDO Automotive Inc.
700 Park Avenue East
Chatham, Ontario, Canada
Voice: 519-436-3839
Fax: 519-436-3641
Email:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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- -----Original Message-----
- From: Gary Swanton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
- Sent: Monday, March 08, 2004 4:41 PM
- To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Subject: RE: [WhatsUp Forum] Monitoring APC
- How do you guys monitor your APC
UPS units? Do you use SNMP or some other monitoring method? I am
running WUG 8.03 and would be interested to hear how your APC units are
monitored with WUG.
- Regards
- Gary Swanton, MCSE
- IT Systems
Support
- IT Shared Services, Village Roadshow
Limited
- C
Melbourne - Bourke
St Level
3, 206 Bourke Street, Melbourne VIC 3000 PO Box 1411M, Melbourne VIC
3001
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- Sydney -
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- Telephone + 61 2 9552 8777 Facsimile +61 2
9552 2510
- -----Original Message-----
- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On
Behalf Of John Tolmachoff (Lists)
- Sent: Tuesday, 9 March 2004 2:48 AM
- To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Subject: RE: [WhatsUp Forum] Monitoring APC
- Would love to see what APC has
to say about this, as it seems it would be considered a defect.
- John Tolmachoff
- Engineer/Consultant/Owner
- eServices For You
- -----Original Message-----
- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On
Behalf Of Arsenault Dan
- Sent: Monday, March 08, 2004 6:02 AM
- To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
- Subject: RE: [WhatsUp Forum] Monitoring APC
- We monitor for up/down and
internal battery temp.
- The internal batt temp tends to
run high (40 degrees celsius is not uncommon during an intitial charging
cycle). We set threshold alerts at 55C. This is important for
us because we have UPS units in remote closets throughout the
building. In the past, we found that the batteries have developed a
shorted cell, but the charging circuitry just keeps on pumping in the
current, making the batteries very hot. So hot, infact, that you
have to take the UPS apart to get the batteries out because the cases are
all warped and won't slide out as usual. They also start to boil off
the sulphuric acid, leaving both a really bad smell, but also a spark
hazard (can you say BOOM !!). In all cases, this happened with APC
SU700RM as well as 1000 and 1400 models.
- Dan . . .
- Dan Arsenault
- Network Administrator
- Siemens VDO Automotive
Inc.
- 700 Park Avenue East
- Chatham, Ontario,
Canada
- Voice: 519-436-3839
- Fax: 519-436-3641
- Email:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
- The message is
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message in error, please notify the sender immediately by return E-mail
and delete this message.
- -----Original Message-----
- From: Steven Williams [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
- Sent: Friday, March 05, 2004 2:25 AM
- To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Subject: [WhatsUp Forum] Monitoring APC
- Could anyone who monitors APC UPS systems let
me know what they monitor etc?
- Thanks
- Steve
- Steve Williams
- Communications Support
Engineer
- Computershare Technology
Services
- Melbourne
Australia
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5651
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