Using this UPS in the UK on 240V mains. Connected via USB: Bus 001 Device 002: ID 09ae:0001 Tripp Lite
Requires tripplite_usb driver as it is (Product ID: 0001). There is an entry in the compatibity list for OMNIVS800 USB (protocol 2012) using usbhid-ups which is little misleading (although I guess maybe correct for some instances of the UPS). OMNIVS1000 USB (older; product ID: 0001) is shown correctly so maybe the OMNIVSING800 just needs to be added to the list next to it. UDEV Rules are showing it correctly when decoding the USB ID as above. Seems to work as far as I have tested so far but upsc reports: upsc reports battery.charge: 100 battery.voltage: 14.56 battery.voltage.nominal: 12 device.mfr: Tripp Lite device.model: OMNIVSINT800 device.type: ups driver.name: tripplite_usb driver.parameter.pollinterval: 2 driver.parameter.port: auto driver.version: 2.6.4 driver.version.internal: 0.20 input.voltage: 124.00 <============ WRONG input.voltage.nominal: 230 output.voltage: 120.0 <============ WRONG ups.debug.load_banks: 0 ups.debug.V: 32 30 32 58 58 58 0d '202XXX.' ups.delay.shutdown: 64 ups.firmware: F1145.A ups.firmware.aux: protocol 1001 ups.mfr: Tripp Lite ups.model: OMNIVSINT800 ups.power.nominal: 800 ups.productid: 0001 ups.status: OL ups.vendorid: 09ae Note the two wrong values being reported. They are, in fact out, by a factor of just over 2 (2.04 measured for output voltage and 1.95 for input voltage as reported by my main UPS). Whether there is anything being returned that helps differentiate its a 240v model I dont know. This is, at least, consistent with decode_v() in the driver src: void decode_v(const unsigned char *value) { unsigned char ivn, lb; int bv = hex2d(value+2, 2); ivn = value[1]; lb = value[4]; switch(ivn) { case '0': input_voltage_nominal = input_voltage_scaled = 100; break; case '1': input_voltage_nominal = input_voltage_scaled = 120; break; case '2': input_voltage_nominal = input_voltage_scaled = 230; break; case '3': input_voltage_nominal = 208; input_voltage_scaled = 230; break; default: upslogx(2, "Unknown input voltage range: 0x%02x", (unsigned int)ivn); break; } ... given ups.debugV[1] has the value 0. Anyway I can sort of live with it as it is and apply the correction factor externally. Dave _______________________________________________ Nut-upsuser mailing list Nut-upsuser@lists.alioth.debian.org http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nut-upsuser