Hi!

I found that if upsd had been running, then another "upsd" was typed. The 
upsd.pid file would be deleted and the previous upsd could not quit normally 
unless using "pkill upsd".

The second upsd detects port conflict, and then deletes the upsd.pid. As a 
result, any further "upsd -c stop" or "upsd -c reload" would detect no upsd.pid 
and simply quit.

I know this operation sequence is not legal and this may not be treated as a 
bug. However is it better to may be better to take a examination after ran as 
"upsd"? Or upsd is just designed to be like that?

If it is designed to be like that, should I execute a "upsd -c stop" every time 
before "upsd"?

Thank you!

--
Andrew Chang
2012-03-22

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