Seann Clark wrote: > I know others have seen this before, I just never saw any real > resolution to it. I am not a programmer, or at the least a very bad one, > so I don't think this is something I can do properly myself. > > I have a Cyberpower 1500 AVR rack mount that worked good, except for the > output voltage listing, with an older version of NUT (I don't remember > the version of NUT, but the O/s was Fedora Core 6) and with an upgrade I > get this from NUT: > NUT output > > battery.charge: 213 > driver.name: powerpanel > driver.parameter.pollinterval: 2 > driver.parameter.port: /dev/ttyS0 > driver.version: 2.2.0- > driver.version.internal: 0.22 > input.frequency: 70.8 > input.frequency.nominal: 60 > input.transfer.high: 147 > input.transfer.low: 88 > input.voltage: 132 > input.voltage.nominal: 120 > output.voltage: 0 > ups.beeper.status: enabled > ups.firmware: 5.100 > ups.load: 26 > ups.mfr: CyberPower > ups.model: OP1500 > ups.serial: [unknown] > ups.status: OL TRIM > ups.temperature: 144
As you found out already, the 'powerpanel' driver in nut-2.2.0 (and nut-2.2.1 also by the way) didn't have the required conversion functions that are needed to scale the readings from the UPS to reasonable values. This week I took some time to integrate these functions from the 'cyberpower' driver into the 'powerpanel' driver. The way to detect that these functions are needed is rather crude at the moment (first to characters in the model string are "OP") but for starters, this might be good enough. Could you try this version out? It is currently only available through SVN, so you would need to build from the sources. Let us know if you can do that, otherwise one of us may be able to send you a pre-build package if you let us know which kind of system you have. Best regards, Arjen _______________________________________________ Nut-upsuser mailing list Nut-upsuser@lists.alioth.debian.org http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/nut-upsuser