# Network UPS Tools: Example upsd.users # # This file sets the permissions for upsd - the UPS network daemon. # Users are defined here, are given passwords, and their privileges are # controlled here too. Since this file will contain passwords, keep it # secure, with only enough permissions for upsd to read it. # -------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Each user gets a section. To start a section, put the username in # brackets on a line by itself. To set something for that user, specify # it under that section heading. The username is case-sensitive, so # admin and AdMiN are two different users. # # Possible settings: # # password: The user's password. This is case-sensitive. # # -------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # actions: Let the user do certain things with upsd. # # Valid actions are: # # SET - change the value of certain variables in the UPS # FSD - set the "forced shutdown" flag in the UPS # # -------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # instcmds: Let the user initiate specific instant commands. Use "ALL" # to grant all commands automatically. There are many possible # commands, so use 'upscmd -l' to see what your hardware supports. Here # are a few examples: # # test.panel.start - Start a front panel test # test.battery.start - Start battery test # test.battery.stop - Stop battery test # calibrate.start - Start calibration # calibrate.stop - Stop calibration # # -------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Example: # # [admin] # password = mypass # actions = SET # instcmds = ALL # # # --- Configuring for upsmon # # To add a user for your upsmon, use this example: # # [upsmon] # password = pass # upsmon master # or # upsmon slave # # The matching MONITOR line in your upsmon.conf would look like this: # # MONITOR myups@localhost 1 upsmon pass master (or slave)