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# Network UPS Tools: example upsmon configuration
#
# This file contains passwords, so keep it secure.
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# RUN_AS_USER <userid>
#
# By default, upsmon splits into two processes. One stays as root and
# waits to run the SHUTDOWNCMD. The other one switches to another userid
# and does everything else.
#
# The default nonprivileged user is set at compile-time with
# 'configure --with-user=...'.
#
# You can override it with '-u <user>' when starting upsmon, or just
# define it here for convenience.
#
# Note: if you plan to use the reload feature, this file (upsmon.conf)
# must be readable by this user! Since it contains passwords, DO NOT
# make it world-readable. Also, do not make it writable by the upsmon
# user, since it creates an opportunity for an attack by changing the
# SHUTDOWNCMD to something malicious.
#
# For best results, you should create a new normal user like "nutmon",
# and make it a member of a "nut" group or similar. Then specify it
# here and grant read access to the upsmon.conf for that group.
#
# This user should not have write access to upsmon.conf.
#
# RUN_AS_USER nutmon
RUN_AS_USER admin
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# MONITOR <system> <powervalue> <username> <password> ("master"|"slave")
#
# List systems you want to monitor. Not all of these may supply power
# to the system running upsmon, but if you want to watch it, it has to
# be in this section.
#
# You must have at least one of these declared.
#
# <system> is a UPS identifier in the form <upsname>@<hostname>[:<port>]
# like ups@localhost, su700@mybox, etc.
#
# Examples:
#
# - "su700@mybox" means a UPS called "su700" on a system called "mybox"
#
# - "fenton@bigbox:5678" is a UPS called "fenton" on a system called
# "bigbox" which runs upsd on port "5678".
#
# The UPS names like "su700" and "fenton" are set in your ups.conf
# in [brackets] which identify a section for a particular driver.
#
# If the ups.conf on host "doghouse" has a section called "snoopy", the
# identifier for it would be "snoopy@doghouse".
#
# <powervalue> is an integer - the number of power supplies that this UPS
# feeds on this system. Most computers only have one power supply, so this
# is normally set to 1. You need a pretty big or special box to have any
# other value here.
#
# You can also set this to 0 for a system that doesn't supply any power,
# but you still want to monitor. Use this when you want to hear about
# changes for a given UPS without shutting down when it goes critical,
# unless <powervalue> is 0.
#
# <username> and <password> must match an entry in that system's
# upsd.users. If your username is "monmaster" and your password is
# "blah", the upsd.users would look like this:
#
# [monmaster]
# password = blah
# allowfrom = (whatever applies to this host)
# upsmon master (or slave)
#
# "master" means this system will shutdown last, allowing the slaves
# time to shutdown first.
#
# "slave" means this system shuts down immediately when power goes critical.
#
# Examples:
#
# MONITOR myups@bigserver 1 monmaster blah master
# MONITOR [email='su700@server.example.com'][/email] 1 upsmon secretpass slave
MONITOR qnapups@0.0.0.0 1 admin 123456 slave
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# MINSUPPLIES <num>
#
# Give the number of power supplies that must be receiving power to keep
# this system running. Most systems have one power supply, so you would
# put "1" in this field.
#
# Large/expensive server type systems usually have more, and can run with
# a few missing. The HP NetServer LH4 can run with 2 out of 4, for example,
# so you'd set that to 2. The idea is to keep the box running as long
# as possible, right?
#
# Obviously you have to put the redundant supplies on different UPS circuits
# for this to make sense! See big-servers.txt in the docs subdirectory
# for more information and ideas on how to use this feature.
MINSUPPLIES 1
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# SHUTDOWNCMD "<command>"
#
# upsmon runs this command when the system needs to be brought down.
#
# This should work just about everywhere ... if it doesn't, well, change it.
SHUTDOWNCMD "/sbin/shutdown -h +0"
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