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HenryV's avatar
HenryV
Aspirant
Oct 24, 2016
Solved

ReadyNAS Power Management

HI all

 

I have my NAS connnected to a APC UPS with a USB cable. The NAS has detected the UPS.

 

My question is in the NAS menu, under system, shutdown, status, UPS configuration under 'Select shutdown on battery low threshold' what does 'Auto' mean. What does 10% mean, is it 10% left of battery power OR 10% used of battery power

 

Thanks

H


  • HenryV wrote:

     

    So do I understand that I need to use NUT software to accomplish this? How does it work?  On PC's? What about my NAS? Of course its on the network. Does it recognize a signal from NUT?? 

     


    You could use NUT, installing it on your PC.  

     

    There is another option.  Some networked UPS equipment uses a protocol called SNMP to communicate power events.  The ReadyNAS does support SNMP for selected models - there is a list here: http://kb.netgear.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/23121/~/how-do-i-add-a-ups-to-my-readynas-os-6-storage-system  The UPS manufacturer should provide monitoring software for the PCs.

     

    One way or another, you need to make sure the network stays up until the power events are communicated to everything that shuts itself down.  One advantage of sotrack's strategy is that shutting down the servers immediately makes that fairly simple.  The UPS would then keep the network up (router/switches/wifi) until the battery drains.  In my case the network equipment uses quite a bit less power than the various ReadyNAS..

     

    However, if you have a fair amount of equipment to protect (or if that equipment isn't all co-located) you will need more than one UPS anyway.

11 Replies

Replies have been turned off for this discussion
  • You can test one self:

    1. charge battery 100%. 

    2. Put 90% under  'Select shutdown on battery low threshold'

    3. Disconnect UPS from power supply

    4. Wait shutdown or watch UPS status (until 80%)

    5. Turn on NAS and check UPS status. If it is ~10% then 90% under  'Select shutdown on battery low threshold' mean used else left

    • StephenB's avatar
      StephenB
      Guru - Experienced User

      My recollection is that "auto" causes the NAS to shut down then the UPS sends a power-critical event.  So the threshold would be up to the UPS.

       

      The threshold is the amount of power left in the UPS. The manual probably should say this (its a bit surprising that no one has asked this before).

       


      sotrack wrote:

      You can test one self...

       

       

      Note if you have another load (a couple old incandescent light bulbs perhaps) you can also test it with the UPS connected to the load, but the NAS connected to the main power.  You do need to connect the USB to the NAS of course.

       

      Then the NAS won't actually lose power, but should still respond to the power events.

       

       

       

       

      • sotrack's avatar
        sotrack
        Luminary

        StephenB wrote:
        My recollection is that "auto" causes the NAS to shut down then the UPS sends a power-critical event.  So the threshold would be up to the UPS.

         

         

        UPS does not send power-critical event. It send percentage of battery power. NAS check threshold parameter and get shutdown decision. "Auto" is predefined threshold parameter I think 50%.

  • Hello

    Thanks to everyone for your responses. 

    Actually in reading this, I would much rather use a network solution as I have a server and other pc I would also like to shutdown in event of power failure. 

    So do I understand that I need to use NUT software to accomplish this? How does it work?  On PC's? What about my NAS? Of course its on the network. Does it recognize a signal from NUT?? 

    I will do some research into this in the meantime

     

    Thanks

     

    H

    • StephenB's avatar
      StephenB
      Guru - Experienced User

      HenryV wrote:

       

      So do I understand that I need to use NUT software to accomplish this? How does it work?  On PC's? What about my NAS? Of course its on the network. Does it recognize a signal from NUT?? 

       


      You could use NUT, installing it on your PC.  

       

      There is another option.  Some networked UPS equipment uses a protocol called SNMP to communicate power events.  The ReadyNAS does support SNMP for selected models - there is a list here: http://kb.netgear.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/23121/~/how-do-i-add-a-ups-to-my-readynas-os-6-storage-system  The UPS manufacturer should provide monitoring software for the PCs.

       

      One way or another, you need to make sure the network stays up until the power events are communicated to everything that shuts itself down.  One advantage of sotrack's strategy is that shutting down the servers immediately makes that fairly simple.  The UPS would then keep the network up (router/switches/wifi) until the battery drains.  In my case the network equipment uses quite a bit less power than the various ReadyNAS..

       

      However, if you have a fair amount of equipment to protect (or if that equipment isn't all co-located) you will need more than one UPS anyway.

      • HenryV's avatar
        HenryV
        Aspirant

        Thanks Stephen for your latest response

         

        I'll investigate NUT and see how far it gets me.lol

         

        Thanks

        H

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