Based on our record, Network UPS Tools seems to be a lot more popular than Control Web Panel. While we know about 113 links to Network UPS Tools, we've tracked only 6 mentions of Control Web Panel. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
> what software do you recommend for gnu/linux to take input from the UPS to tell the laptop to shutdown? https://networkupstools.org/. - Source: Hacker News / 8 months ago
The Synology software is based on N.U.T. https://networkupstools.org and the Plus 1100 (listed on NUT as the Easy Power 1200) is supported in the native package with the 'blazer' driver. If you have the skills, I would SSH into the NAS and see if the device is 'noticed' or better yet recognised by the USB sub-system when you plug it it. (Normal Linux would use the lsusb command to see devices but I have no NAS... Source: 11 months ago
Others have answered the hardware part of your question. I have not seen much mention about the software to control graceful shutdowns. For this I suggest you look at the ”Network UPS Tool” (NUT for short) project (https://networkupstools.org/). It is mostly manufacturer agnostic with clients for a vast array of hardware components. Source: 11 months ago
Network UPS Tools is one option: https://networkupstools.org/. Source: 11 months ago
So no, the NAS does not monitor the battery level. The UPS does that. The NAS just acts on the messages it receives from the UPS via Synology's version of NUT - Network UPS Tools (https://networkupstools.org/). The NAS will first receive the ON_BATTERY/POWERFAIL signal. Then, eventually the BATTERY_LOW signal at which time the UPS will shutdown. So you really need to set a time for it to shut down *BEFORE* you get... Source: 12 months ago
Hello. So I am looking into a VPS and it costs an additional $10/ for cpanel. I looked at some free options and zPanel and "control web panel" (https://control-webpanel.com/) seem to look like good free options. What do you think? Could I get some suggestions? I am also concerned with the ease of adding SSL certificates. Source: about 1 year ago
CWP - this ran on centOS, it wanted some weird configs, didn't like it. There's a lot to configure with it. It may be better for some users though. Source: over 1 year ago
Sure, can do. I mean, DIRECTLY from their description (directly from their website):. Source: over 1 year ago
If you aren't in this to learn a lot, you may want to also consider a web hosting control panel like cPanel (not free), DirectAdmin(not free), webmin + virtualmin (free for multiple sites, virtualmin Pro is not free), Centos webpanel (not FOSS but free for non-Pro), Hestia control panel (FOSS), Plesk Obsidian (not free). Source: over 1 year ago
With CentOS you could use CWP https://control-webpanel.com/ (that is a kind of cPanel). Source: over 1 year ago
PowerChute - Realtime UPS Management, Reporting, and Configuration
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