TRIPPLITE_USB(8) NUT Manual TRIPPLITE_USB(8)

tripplite_usb - Driver for older Tripp Lite USB UPSes (not PDC HID)

tripplite_usb -h

tripplite_usb -a UPS_NAME [OPTIONS]

This driver should work with older Tripp Lite UPSes which are detected as USB HID-class devices, but are not true HID Power-Device Class devices. So far, the devices supported by tripplite_usb have product ID 0001, and the newer units (such as those with "LCD" in the model name) with product ID 2001 require the usbhid-ups(8) driver instead.

Please report success or failure to the nut-upsuser mailing list. A key piece of information is the protocol number, returned in ups.firmware.aux. Also, be sure to turn on debugging (-DDD) for more informative log messages.

If your Tripp Lite UPS uses a serial port, you may wish to investigate the tripplite(8) or tripplitesu(8) drivers.

This driver has been tested with the following models:

•INTERNETOFFICE700
•OMNIVS1000
•OMNIVS1500XL (some warnings)
•SMART700USB
•SMART1500RM2U
•SMART2200RMXL2U
•SMART3000RM2U

If you have used Tripp Lite’s PowerAlert software to connect to your UPS, there is a good chance that tripplite_usb will work if it uses one of the following protocols:

•Protocol 0004
•Protocol 1001
•Protocol 2001
•Protocol 3003
•Protocol 3005

On the other hand, if the web page for your UPS on the Tripp-Lite website says "HID-compliant USB port also enables direct integration with built-in power management and auto-shutdown features of Windows and MAC OS X", then you should use the usbhid-ups(8) driver instead.

This driver supports the following optional settings in the ups.conf(5) file (or with -x on the command line):

port = string

Some value must be set, typically auto.

Note
This could be a device filesystem path like /dev/usb/hiddev0 but current use of libusb API precludes knowing and matching by such identifiers. They may also be inherently unreliable (dependent on re-plugging and enumeration order). At this time the actual value is ignored, but syntactically some port configuration must still be there.

It is possible to control multiple UPS units simultaneously by running several instances of this driver, provided they can be uniquely distinguished by setting some combination of the vendor, product, vendorid, productid, serial, bus and/or device options detailed below. For devices or operating systems that do not provide sufficient information, the allow_duplicates option can be of use (limited and risky!)

vendorid = regex, productid = regex, vendor = regex, product = regex, serial = regex

Select a specific UPS, in case there is more than one connected via USB. Each option specifies an extended regular expression (see regex(7) for more information on regular expressions), which must match the UPS’s entire respective vendor/product/serial string (minus any surrounding whitespace), or the whole 4-digit hexadecimal code for vendorid and productid.

Try lsusb(8) or running this NUT driver with -DD command-line argument for finding out the strings to match.

Examples:

•-x vendor="Foo.Corporation.*"
•-x vendorid="051d*" (APC)
•-x product=".*(Smart|Back)-?UPS.*"

bus = regex

Select a UPS on a specific USB bus or group of buses. The argument is a regular expression that must match the bus name where the UPS is connected (e.g. bus="002" or bus="00[2-3]") as seen on Linux in /sys/bus/usb/devices or lsusb(8); including leading zeroes.

device = regex

Select a UPS on a specific USB device or group of devices. The argument is a regular expression that must match the device name where the UPS is connected (e.g. device="001" or device="00[1-2]") as seen on Linux in /sys/bus/usb/devices or lsusb(8); including leading zeroes.

Note
device numbers are not guaranteed by the OS to be stable across re-boots or device re-plugging.

busport = regex

If supported by the hardware, OS and libusb on the particular deployment, this option should allow to specify physical port numbers on an USB hub, rather than logical device enumeration values, and in turn — this should be less volatile across reboots or re-plugging. The value may be seen in the USB topology output of lsusb -tv on systems with that tool, for example.

Note
this option is not practically supported by some NUT builds (it should be ignored with a warning then), and not by all systems that NUT can run on.

allow_duplicates

If you have several UPS devices which may not be uniquely identified by the options above (e.g. only VID:PID can be discovered there), this flag allows each driver instance where it is set to take the first match if available, or proceed to try another.

Normally the driver initialization would abort at this point claiming "Resource busy" or similar error, assuming that the otherwise properly matched device is unique — and some other process already handles it.


Warning
This feature is inherently non-deterministic! The association of driver instance name to actual device may vary between runs!

If you only care to know that at least one of your no-name UPSes is online, this option can help.

If you must really know which one, it will not!

usb_set_altinterface = bAlternateSetting

Force redundant call to usb_set_altinterface(), especially if needed for devices serving multiple USB roles where the UPS is not represented by the interface number 0 (default).
•-x upsid="12345"

Select a specific UPS by its unique UPS ID. The argument is a regular expression that must match the UPS ID string. This allows for precise identification of UPS devices when multiple devices of the same make and model are connected. See below regarding how to read and write the ups id (unit id) using upsrw(8).


Notes for tripplite_usb driver handling of common USB matching settings:
product is a regular expression to match the product string for the UPS. This would be useful if you have two different Tripp Lite UPS models connected to the same monitoring system, and you want to be sure that you shut them down in the correct order.

This regex is matched against the full USB product string as seen in lsusb(8). The ups.model in the upsc(1) output only lists the name after TRIPP LITE, so to match a SMART2200RMXL2U, you could use the regex .*SMART2200.*.

•The productid is a regular expression which matches the UPS PID as four hexadecimal digits. So far, the only known devices that work with this driver have PID 0001.
•The serial option may be or not be helpful: it does not appear that these particular Tripp Lite UPSes supported by this driver use the iSerial descriptor field to return a serial number. However, in case your unit does, you may specify it here.

offdelay

This setting controls the delay between receiving the "kill" command (-k) and actually cutting power to the computer.

battery_min, battery_max

These floating-point values correspond to the "empty" (10%) and "full" (100%) voltages of the battery. They are used for an approximation of the battery state-of-charge. The calculated battery.charge value will be clamped to the range of 10% through 100%, so the resting voltage of the charged battery can be used for battery_max, and the higher float charge voltage should not cause problems.

ups.delay.shutdown

This variable is the same as the offdelay setting, but it can be changed at runtime by upsrw(8).

ups.id

Some SMARTPRO models feature an Unit ID (ups.id) that can be set and retrieved. If your UPS supports this feature, this variable will be listed in the output of upsrw(8).

outlet.1.switch

Some Tripp Lite units have a switchable outlet (usually outlet #1) which can be turned on and off by writing 1 or 0, respectively, to outlet.1.switch with upsrw(8).

If your unit has multiple switchable outlets, substitute the outlet number for 1 in the variable name. Be sure to test this first — there is no other way to be certain that the number used by the driver matches the label on the unit.

The driver was not developed with any official documentation from Tripp Lite, so certain events may confuse the driver. If you observe any strange behavior, please re-run the driver with -DDD to increase the verbosity.

So far, the Tripp Lite UPSes do not seem to have a serial number or other globally unique identifier accessible through USB. Thus, when monitoring several Tripp Lite USB UPSes, you should use either the bus, device or product configuration options to uniquely specify which UPS a given driver instance should control.

For instance, you can easily monitor an OMNIVS1000 and a SMART1500RM2U at the same time, since they have different USB Product ID strings. If you have two SMART1500RM2U units, you would have to find which USB bus and device number each unit is on (via lsusb(8)).

Some of the SMART*2U models have a configurable Unit ID number, and you can now use the upsid config argument to uniquely specify which UPS a given driver instance should control. This allows for precise identification of UPS devices when multiple devices are connected. To retrieve or set the upsid use the upsrw(8) utility.

Written by Charles Lepple, based on the tripplite(8) driver by Rickard E. (Rik) Faith and Nicholas Kain.

Please do not email the authors directly - use the nut-upsdev mailing list.

A Tripp Lite OMNIVS1000 was graciously donated to the NUT project by Bradley Feldman (http://www.bradleyloritheo.com)

nutupsdrv(8)

tripplite(8), tripplitesu(8), usbhid-ups(8)

regex(7), lsusb(8)

The NUT (Network UPS Tools) home page: https://www.networkupstools.org/

03/15/2024 Network UPS Tools 2.8.1