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Forum Discussion
konsum69
Feb 14, 2018Aspirant
Shutdown rules on ReadyNas Duo V2 (arm) with connected APC SmartUPS in power breakdown situation
Hello!
I have a ReadyNAS Duo V2 (arm) with firmware 5.3.13. The NAS is connected via a AP9630 network management card 2 to a APC SmartUPS. In the AP9630 the ReadyNAS Duo V2 is configured as snmp tr...
konsum69
Feb 15, 2018Aspirant
Hi!
I did the test before und now again with pictures
As you can see the UPS and the NAS are running for 30 minutes without any reaction in a power breakdown situation because the batteries of the UPS are nearly full. For the note I sent alert messages 17.55 and 18.25 which can be seen on the pictures. Then I interrupted the test because I do not want to empty my UPS.
Because of no load at the UPS this test can take a long time until the remaining runtime is low enough or the battery capacity falls under a certain treshold or ... so that the NAS get a signal from the AP9630 in the UPS to shut down.
That is why I ask the above questions: on what information or signal and when will the NAS shutdown?
StephenB
Feb 15, 2018Guru - Experienced User
Well, the information is clearly coming through the SNMP MiB defined by APC. You'd have to look at that to see what is sent.
You could also perform your test safely by
- connecting the NAS to the main power (instead of the APC)
- Put a load on the APC
- Disconnect the APC from main power.
- konsum69Feb 16, 2018Aspirant
Yes of course , I can do more tests!
But my questions was if anyone knows???
To test it out by myself than I do not have to ask!
Then I would do it on my own and would report it here!
I ask for support not for more testing procedures. This I can build for my own!
- StephenBFeb 16, 2018Guru - Experienced User
konsum69 wrote:
I ask for support not for more testing procedures.
You aren't talking to support at all. This is a community forum - Netgear does moderate it and does participate, but community members help one another. I don't work for Netgear.
Personally I use UPS that are connected with USB. There are some battery threshold settings when managing over USB, but I have no experience with UPS that use SNMP.
As I tried say above, one of the challenges here is that the information from the UPS varies by manufacturer, and in your case it is defined in the MiB that APC provides. The NAS derives a low battery indication from the specific MiB parameters that APC sends and it also knows when the APC is supplying battery power.
FWIW, when you do use ethernet for UPS monitoring, it is important to protect the switches and routers - either with the same UPS or one that will run longer than the one protecting the NAS. Otherwise the shutdown signal won't reach the NAS, and you will end up with an unclean shutdown when the battery runs out.
- konsum69Feb 17, 2018Aspirant
"You aren't talking to support at all. This is a community forum - Netgear does moderate it and does participate, but community members help one another. I don't work for Netgear."
I know that and I meant that the community could support me! As I support other people in this community with my experiences and posts. In my oppinion "support" is not only "manufacturer support"! So there is a misunderstanding of "support"
What I really meant is that I can create test procedures by myself and need no help there. I need help by my questions!
"As I tried say above, one of the challenges here is that the information from the UPS varies by manufacturer, and in your case it is defined in the MiB that APC provides."
Yes , that is correct. And where is this Mib??? Integrated in the firmware 5.3.13. You can select it in the menu.
And back again: that is why I ask here if someone knows what information is used. May be that a linux professional or someone else logged in via console or ... and read out this information or whatever else. I will not do this because my knowlegde is too bad for this.
"FWIW, when you do use ethernet for UPS monitoring, it is important to protect the switches and routers - either with the same UPS or one that will run longer than the one protecting the NAS. Otherwise the shutdown signal won't reach the NAS, and you will end up with an unclean shutdown when the battery runs out."
Sure and the switches are supported too! Everything else would be nonsens! I am not a beginner und that is why am asking here these questions. A beginner would not think so far!
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