table of contents
UPSD(8) | NUT Manual | UPSD(8) |
NAME¶
upsd - UPS information server
SYNOPSIS¶
upsd -h
upsd [OPTIONS]
DESCRIPTION¶
upsd is responsible for serving the data from the drivers to the clients. It connects to each driver and maintains a local cache of the current state. Queries from the clients are served from this cache, so delays are minimal.
It also conveys administrative messages from the clients back to the drivers, such as starting tests, or setting values.
Communication between upsd and clients is handled on a TCP port. Configuration details for this port are described in upsd.conf(8).
This program is essential, and must be running at all times to actually make any use out of the drivers and clients.
Controls in the configuration files allow you to limit access to the server, but you should also use a firewall for extra protection. Client processes such as upsmon(8) trust upsd for status information about the UPS hardware, so keep it secure.
OPTIONS¶
-c command
reload
stop
-P pid
-D
-F
-B
-h
-r directory
You must coordinate this with your drivers, as upsd must be able to find the state path within directory. See upsdrvctl(8) and nutupsdrv(8).
-u user
-V
RELOADING¶
upsd can reload its configuration files without shutting down the process if you send it a SIGHUP or start it again with -c reload. This only works if the background process is able to read those files, and if the daemon did save a PID file when it started.
Note
Service instances wrapped by systemd or SMF might not save them by default — use respective reload/refresh framework actions instead then), e.g. systemctl reload nut-server
NUT releases after 2.8.0 define aliases for these units, so if your Linux distribution uses NUT-provided unit definitions, systemctl reload upsd may also work.
If you think that upsd can’t reload, check your syslog for error messages. If it’s complaining about not being able to read the files, then you need to adjust your system to make it possible. Either change the permissions on the files, or run upsd as another user that will be able to read them.
DO NOT make your upsd.conf or upsd.users world-readable, as those files hold important authentication information. In the wrong hands, it could be used by some evil person to spoof your primary-mode upsmon and command your systems to shut down.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
upsd expects the drivers to either update their status regularly or at least answer periodic queries, called pings. If a driver doesn’t answer, upsd will declare it "stale" and no more information will be provided to the clients.
If upsd complains about staleness when you start it, then either your driver or configuration files are probably broken. Be sure that the driver is actually running, and that the UPS definition in ups.conf(5) is correct. Also make sure that you start your driver(s) before starting upsd.
Data can also be marked stale if the driver can no longer communicate with the UPS. In this case, the driver should also provide diagnostic information in the syslog. If this happens, check the serial or USB cabling, or inspect the network path in the case of a SNMP UPS.
ACCESS CONTROL¶
If the server is build with tcp-wrappers support enabled, it will check if the NUT username is allowed to connect from the client address through the /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny files. Note that this will only be done for commands that require to be logged into the server. Further details are described in hosts_access(5).
FILES¶
The general upsd configuration file is upsd.conf(5). The administrative functions like SET and INSTCMD for users are defined and controlled in upsd.users(5). UPS definitions are found in ups.conf(5).
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
NUT_DEBUG_LEVEL sets default debug verbosity if no -D arguments were provided on command line, but does not request that the daemon runs in foreground mode.
NUT_CONFPATH is the path name of the directory that contains upsd.conf and other configuration files. If this variable is not set, upsd uses a built-in default, which is often /usr/local/ups/etc.
NUT_STATEPATH is the path name of the directory in which upsd keeps state information. If this variable is not set, upsd uses a built-in default, which is often /var/state/ups. The STATEPATH directive in upsd.conf(5) overrides this variable.
NUT_ALTPIDPATH is the path name of the directory in which upsd and drivers store .pid files. If this variable is not set, upsd and drivers use either NUT_STATEPATH if set, or ALTPIDPATH if set, or otherwise the built-in default STATEPATH.
SEE ALSO¶
Clients:¶
CGI programs:¶
Driver control:¶
Drivers:¶
Internet resources:¶
The NUT (Network UPS Tools) home page: https://www.networkupstools.org/
09/29/2024 | Network UPS Tools 2.8.2 |