![]() Not sure to be honest if there's a solution, you would think it's a common enough scenario that there should be. I had that and had to unplug the UPS that handled the shutdowns, of course it started the shutdown procedures even though the servers could keep running on the redundant power supply. One thing to be careful of, it bit me once but you seem to be aware of it, is having your shutdown's tied to one UPS but the power supplies split between two. Instead of doing it that way again I would just use one SmartUPS with a Network Monitoring Card and the Network Shutdown agent. We had the Business version of Powerchute but I never really liked it. There is some more tweaking I can do but I need to take with my manager. Or I might add that server to one of the others giving me two UPS servers, one monitoring four and the other three. Next I might do the same with the other UPS that has three physical servers on it and leave the last one alone since it only has one server on it that is not very important. setup the console on my desktop to monitor those 3 servers. setup the server to add all the servers that are physically connected to that particular UPS (B) (#5, #6, and #7) even though it can see them all.Ĥ. Installed the Windows server on UPS (B) USB portģ. Reinstalled the latest Windows agent on all the serversĢ. I just got through playing around with the program and did the following:ġ. It has an agent, a server, and a console. ![]() On the install program for the latest version I realized it came with three programs. I remember something about this program will manage 5 servers but I never really looked closer into it. Just writing out my question plus your response got me thinking. You can purchase the Business Deluxe version which will handle up to 25.Įdit: for the the expansion, think maybe the smart signaling cables might be better, but would have to double-check that. For example, my Exchange and ERP rely on AD and I need to kind of time that to the best of my ability. The other thing to be aware of is to consider servers that rely on Active Directory. There are additional procedures to shutdown Exchange (scripts) using PowerChute, so for a server like that my shutdown will be governed by that box even though an additional might shut down faster. For example, a simple file server or maybe a DC might be easier to shut down than an Exchange server. Primarily what I look at is load, run-time, and what it really takes to gracefully shut the servers down. Anyway, with at least the business software (up to 5 servers per management app) you can still manage another server with the agent installed. ![]() I thought with the expansion card and the correct serial cable, you could manage it. ![]()
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