Eaton's Intelligent Power Protector (IPP) software provides graceful, automatic shutdown of network devices during a prolonged power disruption, preventing data loss and saving work-in-progress. As part of Eaton's power network management system, IPP works alongside Eaton Intelligent Power Manager to deliver comprehensive power management and protection.

Once the power goes I would like to shutdown a bunch of rendernodes that aren't really critical for an outage.

Then I want to shutdown some other stuff, also with a script.

Then, when the UPS is getting low on battery I will have to shut down the last items gracefully.


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The sales pamphlets are very nice and basicly says that you can run a step down for instance VMs before their host and so on. but I can not find any good instructions on how to do it from a central location. Or do I have to install a "network shutdown manager" on every computer I wish to manage?

The VMware shutdown is similar, the IPM setup can be used through vCenter to manage multiple hosts, but this is the host level, not VM level. The host will shut down the VM's when it is shutting down. If you want to shut down VM's in a staggered configuration, you will need to load IPP on the VM's that will shut down first.

Not sure what it takes to get your software to do this but, Tripp Lite makes doing this exact thing, really easy using PowerAlert Opens a new windowsoftware Network Shutdown Agent Opens a new window. All you need to do is load the Network Shutdown Agent on each server you'd like to shutdown, in response to power failure, and specify in the SETTINGS section of the PowerAlert Shutdown Console the timing of the shutdown. On your most critical servers that you'd like to run the longest, select the BATTERY LOW option. On the servers that you'd like shudown just a few minutes after power fails, select the ON BATTERY option (you'd have to scroll to see it) and set the delay timer to the number of minutes before shutdown occurs after power fails. No scripts!

For the most it works great to use the built-in maintenance and shutdown features of IPM to manage the VMware hosts, however it seems like whenever we interfer with IPM and perform manual actions, it looses control.

The second option is put the script in the config directory and IPM will call the script at the timing interval set up in the script file. You then have actions in the script file to test if the UPS is on battery and how much time you have, then exeute the shutdown commands.

We have manage to setup a graceful shutdown with script from Matthieu, however a small problem remains: The batch file (which holds the perl commands to shutdown the hosts) that is called from the script is not executed correctly.

One other thing I am curious about: When installing the IPM plugin in Vcenter a new Alarm ist defined ( Host UPS PowerFailure (On Battery) ). I initially thought that alarm could be used to trigger the shutdown process. However the alarm is never triggered when the UPS goes on battery. Any thoughts on this? I couldn't find any info on this elsewhere...

The remote shutdown of Windows boxes can also be accomplished using the free downloadable "PSTools" resource kit from Microsoft and run it in a batch file. The specific module you want is called PsShutdown and is very easy to configure. Good luck with that script!

If your UPS is protecting servers, you can use our software to schedule safe shutdowns and prevent data loss in the event of a prolonged power outage. For an Eaton UPS with a network card, IPP is the Eaton shutdown agent. IPP communicates directly with the network card (or over USB and serial if needed) to register itself and receive alerts to initiate soft shutdown of your IT systems.

Eaton's Intelligent Power Software Suite incorporates two important applications for ensuring quality power and uptime: remote monitoring and management of power devices across the network and automatic, graceful shutdown when faced with an extended power outage.

Intelligent Power Protector protection software provides graceful, automatic shutdown of network devices during a prolonged power disruption, preventing data loss and saving work-in-progress. As part of Eaton's power network management system, these two applications work together to deliver comprehensive power management and protection. Both software programs are compatible with virtualization platforms from VMware, Microsoft, Red Hat and Xen.

Eaton's Intelligent Power Manager brings managing a wide range of power and environmental devices under control through a single, Web-based interface. This versatile software solution is compatible with network-enabled power devices, including Eaton UPSs, non-Eaton UPSs, environmental sensors and ePDUs. In addition, Intelligent Power Manager is the first power management software to not only integrate with VMware's vCenter, letting you manage power to your virtualized environment through the vCenter dashboard, but also to enable the remote shutdown of servers in clusters. Intelligent Power Manager even integrates with several virtualization platforms allowing ease of management and live migration, which will transparently move virtual machines from a server affected by a power interruption to a non-affected server on the network, maintaining data integrity with no downtime.

Most UPS applications are designed to protect your network devices from power anomalies, including surges, sags and frequency variations. But when the power goes out for longer than your available battery runtime, Intelligent Power Protector software facilitates automatic, graceful shutdown of computers, servers and network devices powered by a UPS, saving all work-in-progress and ensuring data integrity.

NetWatch Client 5.0 UPS connectivity software is a critical component of Eaton's network shutdown solution. NetWatch allows users to configure up to 255 network clients to monitor the activity of a single UPS.

During an extended power failure, NetWatch works in conjunction with a ConnectUPS Web/SNMP network card, to enable the automatic and graceful shutdown of UPS-protected devices. NetWatch's robust configuration options also enable scheduled shutdown and restart operations and provide user notifications.

NetWatch Client enables safe, unattended shutdown of Cisco Unified CallManager in the event of a power loss. Used with an Eaton UPS and a ConnectUPS Web/SNMP or MGE Network Management Card, NetWatch Client safely and gracefully shuts down Cisco Unified CallManager and the client operating system to preserve data integrity during an extended power disturbance.

In the event of a power crisis, users also have the ability to set up automatic actions, like automatic PC or server shutdown at the end of the battery runtime or alert notification of any power problem.

The shutdown settings are set to start when redundancy is lost but obviously this isnt ideal as the load can run entirely off of one UPS. We would prefer if the shutdown began when both were on battery.

The problem is that it could be anything from issuing a shutdown command to ESXi directly (as I demonstrated on TechHead, this is very simply and would need the UPS Management Board to send only three packets to the ESXi host) to an ordered guest level shutdown which may itself require special action for running jobs, for example array or snapshot based cross-site replication, database imports or anything else. Then there is the question of when to shutdown, which might depend as much on thernal limits as on battery capacity.

IMHO the UPS implementation in vSphere could have been done better. For a correct shutdown order, we indeed need to pay special attention. And if HA is active the "automatic VM startup/shutdown" feature gets disabled, so you have to enable it again. Also if you create a shutdown order, then VMotion VM's, then order is lost. I mean a VM with priority 1 on host A, becomes a VM in random startup order on any other host.

HP released new software in June called HPPP (HP Power Protector). HPPP is a protection agent that will load on a vMA on a licensed version of an ESXi host. This software works with their new G2 UPS product line 1500 VA through 7000 VA. HPPP is available free of charge, shipped with HP UPSs.

Eaton has a shutdown agent, Intelligent Power Protector (IPM), that installs on an ESXi vMA. Athough this works well with a standalone ESX / ESXi solution, it does not fare well in HA mode. As suggested by one of the VMware tech team members, Eaton uses their Intelligent Power Manager (which plugs in to vCenter) to enable a vMotion and / or a host shutdown from vCenter using VMware APIs as long as the ESXi server is a lecensed server. Intelligent Power Manager can read power input from UPSs through industry standard MIBs. When using IPM plug-in to provide ESXi shutdown, a shutdown agent is not required on the ESXi servers.

I was wondering what software is the best for managing power interruptions. Specifically, I want to get the Ubuntu Server to tell the QNAP to shut down when there is no power, send an email to my gmail, and shutdown.

WinPower is a new software for UPS monitoring, which provides user-friendly interface to monitor and control your UPS. This unique software provides safely auto shutdown for multi-computer systems while power failure. With this software, users can monitor and control any UPS on the same LAN no matter how far from the UPSs.

NMC provides an application program which named SPS (System Protect Software) for multi-servers shutdown purpose. The program provides shutdown function for different operating systems when shutdown events are appearing on UPS. Shutdown events are configurable by user. The shutdown software will proceed the automatic shutdown orderly to prevent the abnormal shut-off of the clients or servers.

Hi Folks;


I have a SU 3000 & Powerchute business edition. Today the power failed and the batteries were exhausted. Much to my surprise I found that the single server being protected reported in the event logs that it didn't shut down gracefully.


I went into PC Business Ed to check the configuration but I can't make heads or tails of the options. I recall that when I installed the unit I found a simple FAQ on the APC site describing the shutdown process and I beleive this was what I used when I originally set it up. I can't seem to find it anywhere and I've gone through the KB etc and all I can seem to find is info on network shutdown.


Does anyone recall the KB article I saw or can someone post up a link to configuring graceful shutdown for a UPS protecting a single machine?


Thanks very much! e24fc04721

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