Difference between revisions of "Home Assistant - NUT UPS Energy Tracking"
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Line 71: | Line 71: | ||
=== Edit configuration.yaml === | === Edit configuration.yaml === | ||
+ | This is where you may have to edit things to your needs. My UPS doesn't have a Watt reading. I take the max load of the UPS which is 600W and multiply it by the percentage given me by sensor.cyberpowerb_load. Note, my load percentage is actually an integer 0-100. To make up for this I multiply by 6 instead of 600 for my watts. | ||
template: | template: | ||
- sensor: | - sensor: | ||
− | - name: UPS | + | - name: UPS Office usage |
unit_of_measurement: kW | unit_of_measurement: kW | ||
− | state: "{{ states('sensor. | + | state: "{{ states('sensor.cyberpowerb_load') | float * 6 / 1000 }}" |
state_class: measurement | state_class: measurement | ||
device_class: power | device_class: power |
Revision as of 18:52, 24 October 2021
If you have a UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) that has either a USB connection or ethernet connection, you can likely add it to Home Assistant Server as an energy tracking device. This guide is generic enough to work with most USB UPS but I am using a Cyberpower CP1000, and have 2 of them showing up as an energy tracking device in my Home Assistant Energy section.
Network UPS Tools
Install Network UPS Tools
Network UPS Tools also called NUT is the tool we run on Linux to track UPS features.
sudo apt update sudo apt install nut
Edit /etc/nut/nut.conf
The default mode is none, so lets change it to standalone in this file
MODE=standalone
Edit /etc/nut/ups.conf
We need to add our UPS to this file so NUT knows what driver to use. Add this section to your ups.conf. Name your ups in the square brackets, it doesn't have to say cyberpowerb, this is just mine.
[cyberpowerb] driver = usbhid-ups port = auto desc = "Cyberpower CP1000 B" pollfreq = 30
If you are having detection problems, add this line to your ups.conf config just under the driver line. Replace with your UPS vendor ID (find via lsusb)
vendorid = 0764
Edit /etc/nut/upsd.conf
Add a LISTEN directive, you can have more than one. Port separated by a space. Default is 3493. You may not want to open your LAN IP here.
LISTEN 192.168.1.100 3493 LISTEN 127.0.0.1 3493
Edit /etc/nut/upsd.users
Add this to create a user that can read UPS stats.
[local_mon] password = mysupersecretpass upsmon master
Edit /etc/nut/upsmon.conf
Add your UPS to the bottom to be monitored
MONITOR cyberpowerb@localhost 1 local_mon mysupersecretpass master
(optional) You may want to change polling to be less frequent
POLLFREQ 15
(optional) If your UPS goes stale, change when it assumes it is dead
DEADTIME 30
(optional) I stopped the computer from turning off the UPS on reboot by adding "no" or anything else to the end
POWERDOWNFLAG /etc/killpowerno
Restart NUT Services
This is for systemctl based distros of course.
systemctl restart nut-driver systemctl restart nut-server systemctl restart nut-monitor
Query NUT Server for info
This will poll the ups for available monitoring stuff.
upsc cyberpowerb@localhost
Home Assistant UPS Energy Tracking
Add a NUT UPS to Home Assistant
Log into your Home Assistant web interface.
- Configuration > Integrations > Add Integration
- Find or search for NUT in the list (Network UPS Tools) and add
- Enter your server information we created above
- Hostname is the ip of the server in the LISTEN line usually
- User is local_mon (from upsd.users)
- Pass is mysupersecretpass (upsd.users)
- For my UPS I track sensor.cyberpowerb_load in the list of sensors to enable
- My Sensor shows up as a load percentage (or really an integer 0-100)
Edit configuration.yaml
This is where you may have to edit things to your needs. My UPS doesn't have a Watt reading. I take the max load of the UPS which is 600W and multiply it by the percentage given me by sensor.cyberpowerb_load. Note, my load percentage is actually an integer 0-100. To make up for this I multiply by 6 instead of 600 for my watts.
template: - sensor: - name: UPS Office usage unit_of_measurement: kW state: "Template:States('sensor.cyberpowerb load')" state_class: measurement device_class: power