The NUT driver only implements the upsmon component. It requires a remote upsd to work with.
Unfortunately, the upsd and SNMP driver components are too complicated to attempt an implementation with Groovy on Hubitat.
The NUT driver only implements the upsmon component. It requires a remote upsd to work with.
Unfortunately, the upsd and SNMP driver components are too complicated to attempt an implementation with Groovy on Hubitat.
I use my NAS (DS1618+) as my home server and have added several HE addons/integrations over the years. I’ll try to remember them all.
Local network backup script
HE auto update script
Mail server for sending mail from HE
NUT server for auto powerdown
Surveillance Station integration - video motion detection
Plus these docker containers
Echo speaks
Prometheus/Grafana for graphing sensor data over time
There’s probably more, but that’s what i can remember right now
I have a Western Digital MyCloud. Is it possible to setup and run Echo Speaks on it? If so, how do I do it?
It's not, that's basically proprietary software on there. The NAS's were talking about here are using windows or a flavor of linux. For instance, my nas is a QNAP TS-832PXU-RP and supports containers and what have you. Sadly it doesn't support VM's as other models do (those models are intel based) but it's still pretty robust. A my book really doesn't have the ability to do onboard programs (perhaps some plug ins from WD but I'm not aware of any). Most of the features on the WD are baked in already. There have been discussions about converting it to debian. I don't know the success rate at all. I would also assume it would all be CLI vs GUI as well. You would probably be better off with a QNAP and SYNOlogy or if you have an old computer you could bake your own. Plenty of linux packages out there to create with a gui that would allow containers and what not.
My Linux based Qnap supports VMs. You need an AMD or Intel processor to support Virtualization Station.
Same i have 5 qnaps in 4 locations. Running 3 windows 10 vms
I should have clarified that... I meant intel not windows. Mine is an arm processor.
I had a 4 bay qnap that ran container station and the majority of things already stated here but when I really looked at my network design, the NAS was a si for point of failure for my smart house with homebridge being my focal point. My storage was just about full so I purchased a 6 bay and upgraded to larger drives. Moved away from using the NAS for anything except storage and added a 3 node proxmox cluster that now runs all those things the NAS did before for redundancy.
This topic was automatically closed 365 days after the last reply. New replies are no longer allowed.