Synology plus APC Easy UPS (power chute)

jet@hackertalks.com to Selfhosted@lemmy.world – 5 points –

Setting up a Synology server, I made the mistake of just buying a UPS that had a USB plug on the back thinking oh this is a solved problem, it must just work. No no far from it.

So the UPS I mistakenly purchased is not compatible with Synology. SRV1KI-E wants to run this weird program called PowerChute.

Anyone have success marrying this into the Synology ecosystem?

It also has a RS 232 serial port, I wonder if there's an off-the-shelf device that would speak serial but output power state via the network or USB.

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Well I'm ranting about this process, I have other complaints.

Synology.com - if you want to add a second factor to your account, requires a phone number to be the master factor, in case you lose your second factor. So if you're worried about Sim jacking, or even just not having a consistent phone number for the lifetime of the deployment, it's kind of a terrible practice. There's no way to unlink all phone numbers from an account, you can only replace them with a new phone number.

Synology does actually support hardware USB keys, but only as a secondary factor behind SMS... Ai ya.

So… I use a physical passkey as a second factor on top of username and password on all three of my Synology-boxes. I have TOTP as backup in case I should lose my passkey.

Anyways - synology has no clue about my phone number, so I’m not sure I agree with your sentiment that it’s a requirement.

The synology.com account, not the NAS account

Ah! Misread your comment in that case.

AND their Synology drive client requires administrative permission to install on Mac OS, and on Windows. Why? Why.....

I'd guess that those OSes may not permit arbitrary software without administrative privileges to initiate shutdowns. That's the case on Linux.

Oh the synology drive is a file system syncing utility, it provides local caching of a remote file system and then syncs the files back. It's not the software that shuts down the computer

To run a service outside the user context, probably.