Some weeks back I had a "bounce" in the power... no biggy in itself, microwave reset which was about the only thing that made it obvious.
The BBS system was up and flying all seemed well with the world...
By the pricking of my thumb, something wicked this way comes...namely HD failure....
pages for the most part. Still no idea what's happened to CRON.
Something I did discover though, probably not related but perhaps so, is
a raft of SMART errors. A mixture of deferred writes, lock outs and more
some ~9 years old. Time to back up whatever appears to be important,
and see about replacing it, and install a new system on it.
Are there any logs from the MTA (Postfix, Exim etc.)? Or perhaps
frozen messages in the outbound mail queue for some reason?
brown outs are really bad for computers heh
maybe it's time for a UPS. or move the BBS to a comparable laptop..
But what was _odd_ about the UPS, is that all the outlets are IEC 13
or 14. So now I have a UPS and nothing to plug into it.
So now I'll wait for 20cm-long converter cords, so that I can plug in
things like it's a normal European outlet.
never be able to use all 6 outlets.
On UPS's that I've seen and delt with, all 6 outlet's wont
be battery backup. Three will be, plus surge protection,
and the other three will be surge protected only.
Is anyone familiar with the "why" for a UPS having IEC outlets? I was not
Is anyone familiar with the "why" for a UPS having IEC outlets?
i remember a lot of server racks having "power strips" of those.
maybe some weird legacy thing or for a specific market..
On UPS's that I've seen and delt with, all 6 outlet's wont
be battery backup. Three will be, plus surge protection,
and the other three will be surge protected only.
Unless you have one of these babies:
https://bbs.lc/uJOMf
Different courses for different horses..... %=-)
I hadn't considered the MTA not starting up. But it certainly wasn't doing its thing. Good call... log wasn't overly helpful though.. its a "mail.log" with combined logs from postfix, dovecot and anything else
tied into the mail system.
Those IEC's are standard outlet's, and as you found out. You'll now need
a converter cable.
never be able to use all 6 outlets.
On UPS's that I've seen and delt with, all 6 outlet's wont be battery backup. Three will be, plus surge protection, and the other three will be surge protected only.
Is anyone familiar with the "why" for a UPS having IEC outlets? I was
i remember a lot of server racks having "power strips" of those. maybe some weird legacy thing or for a specific market..
Well, sure, but for what? Yeah, I have a device or two that has that sort of outlet as part of the cable, but not with a female plug that could
go into the UPS.
But, eh, it seems to work, and hopefully it'll perform if/
when it has to.
Regardless, I think my desktop is reasonably setup, now. The UPS makes
me feel a bit safer about the equipment, even if, obviously, it
wouldn't help much with a direct hit.
Though I also managed to buy a UPS that doesn't have a way to
auto-shut-down the computer. Which is unfortunate, but hopefully
irrelevant. Depends how much I keep it on while I'm not at home, I
suppose.
Even though a lot of manufactors don't include a CD anymore, the controll/monitor software should be downloadable from there site...
Even though a lot of manufactors don't include a CD anymore, the controll/monitor software should be downloadable from there
site...
The UPSes we use at my current job have built in network controllers,
we have them pointed at our internal SMTP server to alert us if
something goes awry.
There's nothing quite like getting to your desk in the morning and
seeing 1200 new messages in a shared mailbox.
We've since pointed that at our ticketing system, so at least now
we'll only get one message about the problem. Logging into the ticket you'll see the thousands of "updates".
Aslong as the internal server isn't AWOL!
Can't the setting be changed to now spew out so many email's?
Aslong as the internal server isn't AWOL!
We have another monitoring system that checks various hosts to make
sure the're up. That one uses the O365 smtp server to send out
alerts.
Can't the setting be changed to not spew out so many email's?
There's not a lot of settings available on these UPSes for whatever
reason, we've reported it to Schneider who "thanked us for our
concern" but nothing ever seemed to get fixed with it.
We generally log into the UPS to shut off monitoring if this
happens until the battery is swapped out, which is usually just a
couple of days. And this only seems to happen if the battery is
end-of-life so not a very frequent occurrence.
There's not a lot of settings available on these UPSes for whatever
reason, we've reported it to Schneider who "thanked us for our
concern" but nothing ever seemed to get fixed with it.
Log a support ticket saying you're going to forward all those emails to them. &-/ That might get some action....
It's still an annoying thing to happen. If the ups's are on the cheap
side
then yeah, ship it and forget about it... If they are the more
expensive type, then the companny should listen to customer feed back...
very disappointed back then. Now, I realized I could fit a
full-size 12V 9AH battery in it and simply let it service my
cordless phone base, answering machine and an LED desk lamp. I
am hoping it would operate over an hour under those small
loads.
While it's on, unplug it from the power and see how it
performs. Might be a good opportunity to figure out how to
silence the alarm if you have to.
[...]Log a support ticket saying you're going to forward all those
emails to them. &-/ That might get some action....
From Schneider/APC? I've been involved in spending millions with them
over the years and even that doesn't encourage them to be overly
helpful. I avoid buying from them these days - at least for anything
that used to (or still has) an APC name on it.
Does it have a USB or even a serial port?
Even though a lot of manufactors don't include a CD anymore, the controll/monitor software should be downloadable from there site...
Does it have a USB or even a serial port?
Nope. All the UPS has is the six IEC outlets, four battery back up,
two not.
So, yeah, it'll work, but I think I wound up buying a different model
than I probably would have chosen had I realized I needed to think
about it more.
I've not heard of Schneider, but if they got taken over by APC, then that's why.... Bad experiance with APC a *long* time ago, and swore to never use them again.
I've mainly done, Eaton, Powershield, and ION units. These have been office sites and not datacentre based sites.
I've got a Eaton unit under my desk right now. Purchased in 2010, and
only needed it's battery's replaced a couple of years ago. It has been
one of the most reliable unit's I've delt with...
TassieBob wrote to vorlon <=-
I've got a Eaton unit under my desk right now. Purchased in 2010, and
only needed it's battery's replaced a couple of years ago. It has been
one of the most reliable unit's I've delt with...
I've only ever heard good things about Eaton :-)
Looks like you might have to go down that route of just using it on your desktop machine and then manually shutting things down when it starts to beep and go mad... #0-;
[...]that's why.... Bad experiance with APC a *long* time ago, and
swore to never use them again.
I'm mostly in the same boat - except I have one small APC UPS here
that I'm still using, but I will be replacing it at some point. I
some parts from them. I wouldn't even give them away, lest they go up
in smoke in someone else's house.
I've mainly done, Eaton, Powershield, and ION units. These have
been office sites and not datacentre based sites.
Eaton is where I've been looking - I just need to work out what will
be staying here at home and what will end up off-site so I know what
the load will look like longer term.
I've got a Eaton unit under my desk right now. Purchased in 2010,
and only needed it's battery's replaced a couple of years ago. It
has been one of the most reliable unit's I've delt with...
I've only ever heard good things about Eaton :-)
Looks like you might have to go down that route of just using it
on your desktop machine and then manually shutting things down
when it starts to beep and go mad... #0-;
Yeah, that's my plan. The real worry is when I have it on when I'm not
at home.
It screaming for however long it can maintain power will undoubtedly
not be appreciated by neighbors, and not be particularly appreciated by
me, whether I'm there or not.
Really, I'm questioning my decision. Not because of the UPS, but
because, "this device screams loudly with no warning and no ability to adjust it" just is... not ideal.
As it is, I'm also struggling with the short cord and the annoying
green light.
Really, I'm questioning my decision. Not because of the
UPS, but because, "this device screams loudly with no
warning and no ability to adjust it" just is... not ideal.
As it is, I'm also struggling with the short cord and the annoying green light.
Leave a sign at your front door saying "Turn off computer & UPS" %->
It'll only do that when there is no AC, or it's battery dies!
oh! Mine beep, but they are not ear pearcing! Just loud enough to be
Green light means it's working. %-;
Sorry to "hear" that. :/ Maybe put some sound-proofing
around it?
What short cord?
re: green light.. the one on one of my APC ES 750s seems pretty
bright too. But a piece of paper over it is a fine hack.
Green light means it's working. %-;
Yeah... But did they really have to make it a large green
light, plus a little line of green that goes around most of
the front of the unit?
Leave a sign at your front door saying "Turn off computer & UPS"
Hah! Yeah, though interferes with my doing various silly things. I've[..]
a camera with it, because I'm still sending various data to it, and
because I'll probably be messing with it over the next week or two.
Perhaps not entirely reasonable, in this time when there are such big
energy issues, but I have my reasons, at least.
It'll only do that when there is no AC, or it's battery dies!
Yeah. So, if there's a power outage...
oh! Mine beep, but they are not ear pearcing! Just loud enough to
Huh. Yeah, I'm thinking I'll not buy from APC again in the future, if
something quieter is possible. Ideally, for me, it'd beep lightly
once, have a generally-obvious (but not particularly loud) humming
sound, and have a light that flashes, that, if it really bothers me, I
can cover it with a few layers of tape.
Green light means it's working. %-;
Yeah... But did they really have to make it a large green light, plus
a little line of green that goes around most of the front of the unit?
Yeah... But did they really have to make it a large green
light, plus a little line of green that goes around most of
the front of the unit?
What model of the APC is it?
What model of the APC is it?
APC Easy UPS BVX 2200VA/230V IEC
...is what the order says.
Warpslide wrote to fusion <=-
We'd run shorter C13 to C14 cables from the servers to each power
strip. As to why the C14 inlets instead of a standard NEMA 5-15 plug
is anyone's guess.
Sysop: | Gary Ailes |
---|---|
Location: | Pittsburgh, PA |
Users: | 132 |
Nodes: | 5 (0 / 5) |
Uptime: | 123:33:37 |
Calls: | 733 |
Files: | 2,171 |
Messages: | 81,542 |