Independent Submission                                     R. Price, Ed.
Request for Comments: 9271                     Network UPS Tools Project
Category: Informational                                      August 2022
ISSN: 2070-1721


Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) Management Protocol -- Commands and
                              Responses

Abstract

  This document describes the command/response protocol currently used
  in the management of Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) units and
  other power devices often deployed in small offices and in IT
  installations subject to an erratic public power supply.  The UPS
  units typically interface to an Attachment Daemon in the system they
  protect.  This daemon is in turn polled by a Management Daemon that
  notifies users and system administrators of power supply incidents
  and automates system shutdown decisions.  The commands and responses
  described by this document are exchanged between the UPS Attachment
  Daemon and the Management Daemon.  The practice current when this
  protocol was first developed risks weak security, and this is
  addressed in the Security Considerations sections of this document.

Status of This Memo

  This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
  published for informational purposes.

  This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other
  RFC stream.  The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at
  its discretion and makes no statement about its value for
  implementation or deployment.  Documents approved for publication by
  the RFC Editor are not candidates for any level of Internet Standard;
  see Section 2 of RFC 7841.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9271.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2022 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction
    1.1.  Current Practice
      1.1.1.  NUT Project
      1.1.2.  The Shutdown Story
      1.1.3.  How to Read this Document
    1.2.  Additional Information
    1.3.  Requirements Language
  2.  Terminology
    2.1.  Administrative User
    2.2.  Attachment Daemon
    2.3.  Driver
    2.4.  Event
    2.5.  Instant Command
    2.6.  Management Daemon
    2.7.  Primary
    2.8.  Secondary
    2.9.  Session
    2.10. UPS Status
    2.11. UPS Variable
  3.  Protocol Overview
  4.  Protocol Specification
    4.1.  Notation Used in this Specification
    4.2.  Commands
      4.2.1.  ATTACH
      4.2.2.  DETACH
      4.2.3.  FSD
      4.2.4.  GET
        4.2.4.1.  GET CMDDESC
        4.2.4.2.  GET DESC
        4.2.4.3.  GET NUMATTACH
        4.2.4.4.  GET TYPE
        4.2.4.5.  GET UPSDESC
        4.2.4.6.  GET VAR
      4.2.5.  HELP
      4.2.6.  INSTCMD
      4.2.7.  LIST
        4.2.7.1.  LIST CLIENT
        4.2.7.2.  LIST CMD
        4.2.7.3.  LIST ENUM
        4.2.7.4.  LIST RANGE
        4.2.7.5.  LIST RW
        4.2.7.6.  LIST UPS
        4.2.7.7.  LIST VAR
      4.2.8.  PASSWORD
      4.2.9.  PRIMARY
      4.2.10. PROTVER
      4.2.11. SET
      4.2.12. STARTTLS
        4.2.12.1.  Key Infrastructure and Self-Signed Certificates
      4.2.13. USERNAME
      4.2.14. VER
    4.3.  Summary of Responses
      4.3.1.  Response When Command Succeeds
      4.3.2.  Error Responses
    4.4.  An ABNF of the Commands
      4.4.1.  Responses to Commands
  5.  Statuses and Events
    5.1.  Status Symbols
    5.2.  Events
  6.  Security Considerations
    6.1.  Current General Security Practice
    6.2.  Communication Security Requirements
      6.2.1.  Certificate Security
    6.3.  Attacks and Defenses
      6.3.1.  Eavesdropping
        6.3.1.1.  Misplaced Declarations Requiring TLS
        6.3.1.2.  Weak Protection in Previous Version 2.7.4
      6.3.2.  Man-in-the-Middle
      6.3.3.  Masquerade Attack: Agent Verification
      6.3.4.  Message Insertion, Deletion, and Modification
      6.3.5.  Replay
      6.3.6.  Denial of Service
  7.  IANA Considerations
  8.  Implementation Status
    8.1.  Inclusion in Software Distributions
    8.2.  Recommended Minimum Support
      8.2.1.  Desktop PC Variables
      8.2.2.  Unattended Servers and Additional Variables
      8.2.3.  Commands and Other Technical Terms
      8.2.4.  Support for Earlier Versions
  9.  References
    9.1.  Normative References
    9.2.  Informative References
  Appendix A.  Variables
    A.1.  Typical UPS Variables
    A.2.  Typical UPS Readable and Writable Variables
    A.3.  Typical UPS Instant Commands
  Appendix B.  The Shutdown Story for System and UPS
  Appendix C.  Technical Terms: Historical Differences
  Appendix D.  Security Defenses in Release 2.7.4
    D.1.  Shims
      D.1.1.  Attachment Daemon Shim
      D.1.2.  Management Daemon Shim
    D.2.  TLS Tunnels
    D.3.  VPN
    D.4.  VLAN
  Appendix E.  Administrative Security
    E.1.  Management of Administrative Users
    E.2.  An Administrative User of a Client Management Daemon
      E.2.1.  An Administrative User Logs into a Short Session
      E.2.2.  An Administrative User Logs into a Long Session
  Acknowledgments
  Author's Address

1.  Introduction

1.1.  Current Practice

  This document describes UPS management techniques and current UPS
  management practice published by the Network UPS Tools (NUT) Project.
  The document is based on version 2.8.0 of the NUT Project software,
  which supports version 1.3 of the NUT protocol.

  Since May 2002, the protocol described by this document has been
  operating on IANA port 3493/TCP (nut).

1.1.1.  NUT Project

  The primary goal of the Network UPS Tools (NUT) Project software
  [NUT] is to provide support for power devices, such as UPSs.  The
  project has been in operation since 1998, with a major rework in
  2003.  It operates through a user mailing list [nut-upsuser], a
  developer mailing list [nut-upsdev], a website [NUT], and a GitHub
  repository [nut-repository].  See [githist] and Appendix J of
  [History] for a history of the project.

1.1.2.  The Shutdown Story

  The Shutdown Story section (see Appendix B) describes the current UPS
  management practice for performing a managed shutdown of unattended
  infrastructure after an unscheduled failure of the public power
  supply in order to minimize the risk of corruption to data processed
  by this infrastructure.

1.1.3.  How to Read this Document

  As a simplification to ease reading, the term "UPS" is used when
  "Managed Power Device" would be more complete.  The reader should
  understand the simple "UPS" to include other managed power devices.

  The statuses and events appearing in this document are named with
  short text-form names, some of which are abbreviations.  A full list
  of the statuses can be found in Section 5.1, while the events are
  listed in Section 5.2.

  This document refers to the "public power supply".  Other texts
  frequently refer to "utility power", "input source power", or even
  "wall power".

1.2.  Additional Information

  Additional information about the NUT Project is available in the
  project documentation [Documentation].  Requests for further
  information about this protocol and related technical matters may be
  addressed to the mailing list [nut-upsuser] of the NUT Project.

1.3.  Requirements Language

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
  "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
  BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
  capitals, as shown here.

2.  Terminology

  The following technical terms appear in this document.  They are
  listed in alphabetical order.

2.1.  Administrative User

  In current practice, the commands and other functions offered by the
  Attachment Daemon are made available to a set of users known as
  Management Daemons.  These Management Daemons authenticate to the
  Attachment Daemon with basic credentials (username and password).
  Although called "users", the administrative users are not system
  users; they are specific to an Attachment Daemon and are listed in a
  text file (currently upsd.users) that is read by the Attachment
  Daemon and that assigns to each of them the password, Instant
  Commands, and actions that are allowed, together with the Primary or
  Secondary status of the Management Daemon.  For details, see
  Appendix E.1.  For details of the Primary, see Section 2.7; for
  details of the Secondary, see Section 2.8.  Typically, a high-level
  user will be able to send command FSD, but a low-level user might
  only be allowed to access the test panel.  The security provisions
  for administrative users are discussed in Appendix E.

2.2.  Attachment Daemon

  The Attachment Daemon retrieves the status from the UPS and sends
  commands to it often through a Driver specific to the hardware model
  and the connection medium, e.g., USB, serial.  See Section 2.3.  It
  maintains an abstracted view of the hardware through the use of
  hardware statuses.  See Section 2.10.  A Management Daemon may
  consult the abstracted view using the commands described in this
  document.

  See Section 8.2 for details of the recommended minimum support of
  variables, which calls for Attachment Daemon support of statuses OB,
  OL, LB, and FSD.

  The NUT Project has implemented an Attachment Daemon as program upsd
  and a set of hardware-specific Drivers, all written in K&R C
  [C2ndEd].  The Attachment Daemon is launched as system user "root"
  but for better security; then, it drops the privilege to run as a
  detached software service.

2.3.  Driver

  A Driver is that part of an Attachment Daemon that is specific to the
  UPS hardware, the connection medium, and the connection protocol,
  e.g., USB, serial.  In current practice, the Attachment Daemon has a
  Driver for each hardware interface type it supports.  Although this
  document considers the Driver to be part of the Attachment Daemon,
  current practice is to see it as a separate software unit running as
  a daemon "in front of" the Attachment Daemon.  The protocol for data
  exchange between the Driver and the Attachment Daemon is outside the
  scope of this document.

2.4.  Event

  A UPS event occurs in the Management Daemon when a change in the UPS
  status is received from the Attachment Daemon.  This event is
  internal to the Management Daemon.  See Section 5.2.

2.5.  Instant Command

  An Instant Command is a command that, when sent to the Attachment
  Daemon, is passed to the Driver and sent to the hardware without any
  configured delay to perform a function.  For example, INSTCMD su700
  test.panel.start.  See Section 4.2.6.

2.6.  Management Daemon

  The Management Daemon is primarily responsible for managing the
  hardware and orchestrating system-wide actions after a power event.
  Using commands sent to the Attachment Daemon, it follows the status
  of the UPS and determines when UPS events occur.  It takes decisions
  based on the events, such as calling for a system shutdown.  See
  Appendix B.  Although the term includes the word "Daemon", nothing
  requires that it be implemented as a detached software service.  The
  Management Daemon may also provide administrative functions, such as
  a graphic interface to view the hardware activity.

  There are several examples of a Management Daemon: the NUT Project
  provides upsmon, which takes the system shutdown decision when the
  public power supply fails.  Further configuration options, such as
  timers, are provided by the helper program upssched.

  Other programs represent the Management Daemon:

  *  upsc reports the values of the variables defined for a given UPS;
     see Table 6.
  *  upsrw reports on and changes the values of the readable and
     writable configuration variables defined for a given UPS; see
     Appendix A.2.
  *  upscmd reports on and executes the instant action commands defined
     for a given UPS; see Section 4.2.6.
  *  UPSmon.py is an experimental Python3 rewrite of upsmon and
     upssched that includes support for TLS 1.3 [RFC8446].

2.7.  Primary

  When a power device, such as a UPS unit, supplies power to more than
  one system, the computer running the Driver is known as the Primary.
  The others are Secondaries.  See Figure 4.  Common current practice
  for system administrators is to consider the Management Daemon in the
  Primary to be the Primary Management Daemon that is in charge of the
  shutdown of all the systems powered by the UPS.  The Primary
  Management Daemon sets status symbol FSD to order the Secondaries to
  shut down.

     |  Note: Historically, the Primary was known as the "Master".

2.8.  Secondary

  When a hardware device, such as a UPS unit, supplies power to more
  than one system, the system that communicates directly with the UPS
  unit, e.g., using a USB, RS-232, or a network connection, is known as
  the Primary.  The others are Secondaries.  There is no Attachment
  Daemon in a Secondary.  See Figure 4.  Common current practice for
  system administrators is to consider the Management Daemon in a
  Secondary to be a Secondary Management Daemon that understands status
  symbol FSD as an order to shut down.

     |  Note: Historically, the Secondary was known as the "Slave".

2.9.  Session

  The Management Daemon may initiate a TCP session with a specified
  device, such as a UPS known to the Attachment Daemon.  The session
  structure provides for audit and security, as well as access to
  mission-critical UPS functions.  For example, good practice requires
  password protection for an Instant Command that turns off a UPS
  outlet.  Other than the commands and responses used, the details of
  session management are outside the scope of this document.

2.10.  UPS Status

  The status of a hardware device, such as a UPS unit, is a symbolic
  description of the state of the unit.  It consists of a space-
  separated list of symbols from the set {ALARM BOOST BYPASS CAL CHRG
  COMM DISCHRG FSD LB NOCOMM OB OFF OL OVER RB TEST TRIM}.  The symbols
  TICK and TOCK are experimental additions to the statuses and are not
  in common current practice.  See Section 5.1, which specifies each of
  these symbols.

  See Section 8.2 for details of the recommended minimum support of
  status symbols OB, OL, LB, and FSD.

2.11.  UPS Variable

  The metrics and identifiers provided by each UPS are represented by
  variables giving the value representing that metric or identifier.
  The UPS variable is an abstraction of the UPS hardware configuration
  and activity maintained by the Attachment Daemon.  See Appendix A,
  which provides examples of variables.  For example, the variable
  battery.charge contains the current charge of the UPS battery as a
  percentage value.

  Note: Some variables are constants, e.g., battery type and
  manufacturer.

  See Section 8.2 for details of the recommended minimum support of
  variables.  A full list of possible variables is available in source
  code file docs/nut-names.txt [gitvars], which serves as the Recording
  Document.

3.  Protocol Overview

  Figure 1 shows a reference configuration in which the command/
  response protocol applies.  The UPS shown is representative of all
  managed power devices.

                                                   "The client"
                  ,--------------,               ,--------------,
        ,-----,   |     UPS      | <-Commands    |     UPS      |
        | UPS |---|  Attachment  |---------------|  Management  |
        |     |===|    Daemon    |   Responses-> |    Daemon    |
        /-----\   '--------------'               '--------------'
                   UPS Attachment                 UPS Management
                       System        Network          System

                    Figure 1: Reference Configuration

  The reference configuration in Figure 1 shows a single UPS unit that
  has a power supply link (===) and a data link (---) attached to a
  system running an Attachment Daemon.  The UPS provides power supply
  protection to the system running the Attachment Daemon.

  In practice, there may be more than one UPS unit, and a unit may
  provide power protection to more than one system.  The figure also
  shows a single Management Daemon.  In practice, there may be more
  than one Management Daemon, and any one Management Daemon may manage
  more than one UPS Attachment Daemon.

  The protocol applies to connections between the Attachment Daemon and
  the Management Daemon, which act as the *server* and *client*,
  respectively.  The Management Daemon sends commands over TCP to the
  Attachment Daemon and receives responses over TCP from that daemon.

  The two daemons may run in the same system or may be connected
  through a local or wide area network.  In simple cases, as shown in
  Figure 2, the Attachment Daemon and the Management Daemon are in the
  same system, the one protected by the UPS.  The commands and
  responses are exchanged through an internal loopback interface.

                                                  "The client"
                    ,--------------------,---------------------,
          ,-----,   |     UPS       <-Commands        UPS      |
          | UPS |---|  Attachment        |         Management  |
          |     |===|    Daemon       Responses->    Daemon    |
          /-----\   '--------------------'---------------------'
                                      Internal
                                      Loopback
                      UPS Attachment and Management System

             Figure 2: Simplified Single-System Configuration

  The reference configuration does not require any specific design.
  For example, Figure 3 shows an arrangement in which the Attachment
  Daemon is closely associated with, or even included in, the UPS
  system setup.  This is becoming more prevalent with the availability
  of low-cost processors able to run the Attachment Daemon, thereby
  effectively creating a network-attached UPS running a published
  protocol.

                                                "The client"
           ,-----,------------,               ,--------------,
           |     |    UPS     | <-Commands    |     UPS      |
           | UPS - Attachment |---------------|  Management  |
           |     |   Daemon   |   Responses-> |    Daemon    |
           /-----'------------\               '--------------'
              UPS Attachment                   UPS Management
                  System           Network          System

             Figure 3: UPS and Attachment Daemon Integration

  As the power requirements for processors decrease, it is becoming
  increasingly common to use a single UPS to protect multiple systems,
  as shown in Figure 4.  However, there is only one data line (---)
  from the UPS to the Primary system.  The others have only power
  connections (===) to the UPS and are known as Secondaries.  A
  Secondary does not run an Attachment Daemon; it connects over a
  network to the Attachment Daemon in the Primary.  Figure 4 shows the
  Attachment Daemon and the Primary Management Daemon in the same
  system.  This is common practice, but it is not a technical
  requirement.

                                         "The client"
              ,--------------------,---------------------,
    ,-----,   |     UPS       <-Commands      Primary    |
    |     |---|  Attachment        |         Management  |   Primary
    |     |===|    Daemon       Responses->    Daemon    |
    |     |   '--------------------'---------------------'
    | UPS |            ^
    |     |            '<-Commands---Responses->,
    |     |                                     v
    |     |            ,--------------,-----------------,
    |     |============|              |     Secondary   |
    /-----\            |              |     Management  |   Secondary
                       |              |       Daemon    |
                       '--------------'-----------------'

                 Figure 4: UPS Protects Multiple Systems

     |  Note: Should the Primary fail or go offline, the fate of the
     |  Secondaries depends on the UPS status when the Primary failed.
     |  If the UPS had status OL, the Secondary continues operation,
     |  but if the UPS had status OB, the Secondary may choose to shut
     |  down as a precaution.

4.  Protocol Specification

  This specification includes only the commands and their responses.
  An implementation of the Attachment Daemon has an internal state
  machine, and some complex implementations of the Management Daemon
  include an internal state machine, for example, to assist the system
  shutdown of a complex installation.  The Management Daemon is
  required to remember the previous ups.status value it received from
  the Attachment Daemon and compare it with the next.  Other than that,
  the management protocol used between them is effectively stateless.

  For example, see Section 5.2, which shows a map of the new ups.status
  response and the previous ups.status response to an event, which is
  taken as the basis for Management Daemon action.

4.1.  Notation Used in this Specification

  The character set used for commands and responses is US-ASCII; see
  [RFC0020].

  Multi-word elements are contained between quotation mark characters
  for easier parsing, e.g., "UPS on fire".  Embedded quotation marks
  are escaped with reverse slant (\), often known as backslashes.
  Embedded backslashes are also escaped by representing them as \\.

  Commands and responses have no leading or trailing blank space and
  are terminated with a single new line character line feed (LF).

  Blank space within commands and responses is reduced to one space
  (SP).

4.2.  Commands

  The commands address the UPS to which they apply by <upsname>, where

  *  <upsname> ::= <ups>[@<hostname>[:<port>]]
  *  <ups> is defined by the Attachment Daemon configuration files.
  *  The default <hostname> is localhost.
  *  The <port> is the number of the TCP port on which the Attachment
     Daemon is listening.  The default is 3493.  This is supported by
     all current Management Daemons.

  Examples: myups, [email protected]

  ABNF: See variable upsname in Figure 5.

  Note: Experimental Management Daemons use an extended form of
  <upsname> in configuration files and in program parameters, where:

  *  <upsname> ::= [<group>:]<ups>[@<hostname>[:<port>]]
  *  <group> is an experimental extension to provide for groups of
     UPSs.  It is not in common current practice.
  *  <ups> is defined by the Attachment Daemon configuration files.
  *  The default <hostname> is localhost.

  Examples: [email protected]:3493, HB:[email protected]:3493

     |  _Implementation note:_ In the current implementation, the names
     |  of commands and subcommands are not case sensitive.  For
     |  example, GET VAR may be written as Get var, but in this
     |  specification, they are always written in uppercase.
     |  Similarly, <upsname> and <varname> are not case sensitive.  For
     |  example, UPS341 ups.id may be written as ups341 Ups.Id, but in
     |  this specification, <varname> is always written in lower case.

4.2.1.  ATTACH

  In a configuration like the one shown in Figure 4, in which a UPS
  protects more than one system, the Primary Management Daemon needs to
  know how many Secondaries are currently _active_, i.e., powered by
  the UPS, either from the public power supply or from battery power.
  The Attachment Daemon supports this by keeping a count of all the
  _active_ systems powered by a UPS.  The count is initialized, one
  Secondary at a time by the ATTACH command, which should be understood
  as _count this Secondary as active_.  ATTACH is one of three commands
  for Secondary counting.  Additionally, command DETACH decrements the
  count, and a Management Daemon may read the count at any time using
  the command NUMATTACH.

  The ATTACH command is also sent to the Attachment Daemon for the
  Primary, so during normal, fully protected operation, the count is 1
  for the Primary + the number of Secondaries.  During a full system
  shutdown, the count drops as each Secondary Management Daemon
  executes command DETACH during its own shutdown.  When the count
  drops to 1, only the Primary is _active_, and it knows that all the
  Secondaries have shut down.

  Command: ATTACH <upsname>

  If the command succeeds, the response is OK; otherwise, see the error
  responses in Section 4.3.2.

  ABNF: See variable attach in Figure 5.

     |  Note: Historically, this command was known as LOGIN.  However,
     |  because LOGIN was not the conventional user access to a shell
     |  or program, the name was changed to avoid confusion.

4.2.2.  DETACH

  This companion command to ATTACH reduces the count of "active"
  Secondaries.  It should be understood as _this Secondary is no longer
  active_ and is usually used during system shutdown to decrement a
  count of how many Secondaries are still _active_.

  Command: DETACH

  If the command succeeds, the response is OK Goodbye; otherwise, see
  the error responses in Section 4.3.2.

  ABNF: See variable detach in Figure 5.

     |  Note: Historically, this command was known as LOGOUT.

4.2.3.  FSD

  A Management Daemon that is Primary and has the required authority
  uses this command to set status symbol FSD, meaning "Forced
  Shutdown", in the Attachment Daemon.  In current practice, the
  Primary Management Daemon uses the symbol to tell the Secondaries to
  shut down.

  Command: FSD <upsname>

  If the command succeeds, the response is OK FSD-SET; otherwise, see
  the error responses in Section 4.3.2.

  ABNF: See variable fsd in Figure 5.

  In current practice, commands such as FSD are made available only to
  a privileged administrative user authorized to send such a mission-
  critical command.  The security provisions for administrative users
  are discussed in Appendix E.

  Note: The symbol FSD is also used for an event.  See Table 5.

4.2.4.  GET

  Retrieve a single response from the Attachment Daemon.

  ABNF: See variable get in Figure 5.

  The possible subcommands are listed in the sections below.

4.2.4.1.  GET CMDDESC

  Retrieve a text description of a command.

  Command: GET CMDDESC <upsname> <cmdname>

  Response: CMDDESC <upsname> <cmdname> "<description>"

  For example: command GET CMDDESC su700 load.on and response CMDDESC
  su700 load.on "Turn on the load immediately"

  This is like GET DESC, but it applies to an Instant Command.  See
  Section 4.2.4.2.

4.2.4.2.  GET DESC

  Retrieve a text description of a UPS variable.  See Section 2.11.

  Command: GET DESC <upsname> <varname>

  Response: DESC <upsname> <varname> "<description>"

  <description> is a string that gives a brief explanation of the named
  variable.  The Attachment Daemon MAY return "Unavailable" if the file
  that provides this description is not installed.

  For example: command GET DESC su700 ups.status and response DESC
  su700 ups.status "UPS status"

4.2.4.3.  GET NUMATTACH

  Retrieve the count kept by the Attachment Daemon of all the _active_
  systems protected by this UPS.

  Command: GET NUMATTACH <upsname>

  Response: NUMATTACH <upsname> <value>

  <value> is a count of the Primary and the number of Secondaries
  currently powered by this UPS.

  For example: command GET ATTACH su700 and response NUMATTACH su700 1

  This information is needed by the Management Daemon to determine how
  many Secondaries are still connected during the system shutdown
  process.

     |  Note: Historically, this subcommand was known as NUMLOGINS.
     |  Since LOGIN was not the conventional user access to a shell or
     |  program, the name was changed to avoid confusion.

4.2.4.4.  GET TYPE

  Retrieve the type of a UPS variable.  See Section 2.11.

  Command: GET TYPE <upsname> <varname>

  Response: TYPE <upsname> <varname> <type>...

  <type>... can be one or more of the following tokens.  Multiple types
  may be returned.

  For example: command GET TYPE su700 input.transfer.low and response
  TYPE su700 input.transfer.low ENUM

     +==============+==============================================+
     |     Type     |                   Meaning                    |
     +==============+==============================================+
     | RW           | This is a read/write variable.  It may be    |
     |              | read with command GET VAR (see               |
     |              | Section 4.2.4.6) and set to a different      |
     |              | value with command SET (see Section 4.2.11). |
     +--------------+----------------------------------------------+
     | ENUM         | This is an enumerated type, which supports   |
     |              | specific predetermined values.               |
     +--------------+----------------------------------------------+
     | STRING:n     | This is a string of maximum length n.        |
     +--------------+----------------------------------------------+
     | RANGE        | This is a number, either integer or float,   |
     |              | comprised in the range that may be seen with |
     |              | the command LIST RANGE (see                  |
     |              | Section 4.2.7.4).                            |
     +--------------+----------------------------------------------+
     | NUMBER       | This is a single numeric value, either       |
     |              | integer or float.                            |
     +--------------+----------------------------------------------+

                         Table 1: Variable Types

  Notes:

  *  ENUM, STRING:n, and RANGE are usually associated with RW but not
     always.  The default <type>, when omitted, is numeric, so either
     integer or float.  Each Driver is then responsible for handling
     values as either integer or float.

  *  Current practice is to represent floating point values using a
     decimal (base 10) English-based representation.  Hexadecimals,
     exponents, and commas used as separators for thousands are not
     allowed.  For example, "1200.20" is valid, while "1,200.20" and
     "1200,20" are not valid.

4.2.4.5.  GET UPSDESC

  Retrieve a text description of a UPS.

  Command: GET UPSDESC <upsname>

  Response: UPSDESC <upsname> "<description>"

  <description> is defined by the Attachment Daemon configuration.  If
  it is not set, current practice is for the Attachment Daemon to
  return "Unavailable".

  For example: command GET UPSDESC su700 and response UPSDESC su700
  "Development box"

  This can be used to provide human-readable descriptions, instead of a
  cryptic ups@hostname string.

4.2.4.6.  GET VAR

  Retrieve the value of a UPS variable.  See Section 2.11.

  Command: GET VAR <upsname> <varname>

  Response: VAR <upsname> <varname> "<value>"

  For example: command GET VAR su700 ups.status and response VAR su700
  ups.status "OB LB"

4.2.5.  HELP

  Return a list of the commands supported by the Attachment Daemon.
  This command is intended for human, as well as program, use.

  Command: HELP

  For example: the following command line sequence executed on an
  Attachment Daemon

  netcat localhost 3493
  HELP
  Commands: HELP VER GET LIST SET INSTCMD ATTACH DETACH
      USERNAME PASSWORD STARTTLS

  ABNF: See variable help in Figure 5.

     |  Note: Historically, this command also returned LOGIN and
     |  LOGOUT.  Because LOGIN was not the conventional user access to
     |  a shell or program, the command names were changed to ATTACH
     |  and DETACH to avoid confusion.

4.2.6.  INSTCMD

  Send an Instant Command to the UPS.

  Command: INSTCMD <upsname> <cmdname>

  <upsname> is the name of the UPS, and <cmdname> is the Instant
  Command to be issued to that UPS.  See Appendix A.3 for examples of
  Instant Commands.

  If the command succeeds, the response is OK; otherwise, see the error
  responses in Section 4.3.2.

  For example: command INSTCMD su700 test.panel.start and response OK

  ABNF: See variable instcmd in Figure 5.

4.2.7.  LIST

  All the LIST commands produce a response with a common format.  The
  response begins with BEGIN LIST and then repeats the initial query.
  A list then follows, with as many lines as are necessary.  The
  response ends with END LIST, followed by the initial query.

  The formatting may seem a bit redundant, but it makes a different
  form of client possible.  A client can send a LIST command and then
  wait for the response.  When it arrives, the Management Daemon
  doesn't need a complicated state machine to remember which list is
  which.

  Note: The current NUT Project implementation of the Attachment
  Daemon, upsd, sends back the response to the LIST command as a
  sequence of messages.  The Management Daemon should continue reading
  these messages until it receives the line beginning END LIST.

  ABNF: See the variable list in Figure 5.

  The possible subcommands are listed in the sections below.

4.2.7.1.  LIST CLIENT

  The command calls for the Attachment Daemon to report all the current
  Management Daemon clients of a given UPS.

  Command: LIST CLIENT <upsname>

  Response:

  BEGIN LIST CLIENT <upsname>
  CLIENT <upsname> <client_IP_address>
  ...
  END LIST CLIENT <upsname>

  For example: command LIST CLIENT ups1 and response

  BEGIN LIST CLIENT ups1
  CLIENT ups1 ::1
  CLIENT ups1 203.0.113.1
  END LIST CLIENT ups1

4.2.7.2.  LIST CMD

  The command calls for the Attachment Daemon to report a list of the
  Instant Commands that the Management Daemon may send to the
  Attachment Daemon.  This Instant Command list is the abstracted view
  of the UPS hardware capabilities.  An economical UPS will support few
  or no Instant Commands, but a professional model should support more.

  Command: LIST CMD <upsname>

  Response:

  BEGIN LIST CMD <upsname>
  CMD <upsname> <cmdname>
  ...
  END LIST CMD <upsname>

  <upsname> is the name of the UPS, and <cmdname> is the name of the
  Instant Command that may be issued to the UPS.

  For example: command LIST CMD su700 and response

  BEGIN LIST CMD su700
  CMD su700 load.on
  CMD su700 test.panel.start
  ...
  END LIST CMD su700

4.2.7.3.  LIST ENUM

  The command calls for the Attachment Daemon to report the set of
  possible values of a UPS variable that has predetermined values.

  Command: LIST ENUM <upsname> <varname>

  Response:

  BEGIN LIST ENUM <upsname> <varname>
  ENUM <upsname> <varname> "<value>"
  ...
  END LIST ENUM <upsname> <varname>

  <upsname> is the name of the UPS, <varname> is the UPS variable, and
  <value> is one of the possible values of that UPS variable.  Note
  that, in current practice, the output is an unordered list.  Also
  note that the quotation marks are part of the response.

  For example: command LIST ENUM su700 input.transfer.low and response

  BEGIN LIST ENUM su700 input.transfer.low
  ENUM su700 input.transfer.low "103"
  ENUM su700 input.transfer.low "100"
  ...
  END LIST ENUM su700 input.transfer.low

4.2.7.4.  LIST RANGE

  The command calls for the Attachment Daemon to report the interval in
  which valid values of UPS variable lie.

  Command: LIST RANGE <upsname> <varname>

  Response:

  BEGIN LIST RANGE <upsname> <varname>
  RANGE <upsname> <varname> "<min>" "<max>"
  ...
  END LIST RANGE <upsname> <varname>

  <upsname> is the name of the UPS, <varname> is the UPS variable, and
  {<min>,<max>} is the interval of valid values of that UPS variable.
  Note that the quotation marks are part of the response.

  For example: command LIST RANGE su700 input.transfer.low and response

  BEGIN LIST RANGE su700 input.transfer.low
  RANGE su700 input.transfer.low "90" "105"
  END LIST RANGE su700 input.transfer.low

4.2.7.5.  LIST RW

  The command calls for the Attachment Daemon to report a list of the
  UPS variables associated with a given UPS that may be read and
  written by the Management Daemon.  These variables are the abstracted
  view of the UPS hardware capabilities.  An economical UPS may support
  few variables, but a professional model should support at least the
  variables that are needed for an automatic shutdown and restart; see
  Appendix B.  Also, see Section 8.2 for details of the recommended
  minimum support of variables.  A full list of variables is available
  in source code file docs/nut-names.txt [gitvars], which serves as the
  Recording Document.

  Command: LIST RW <upsname>

  Response:

  BEGIN LIST RW <upsname>
  RW <upsname> <varname> "<value>"
  ...
  END LIST RW <upsname>

  <upsname> is the name of the UPS, <varname> is the UPS variable, and
  <value> is the value of that UPS variable.  Note that the quotation
  marks are part of the response.

  For example: command LIST RW su700 and response

  BEGIN LIST RW su700
  RW su700 output.voltage.nominal "115"
  RW su700 ups.delay.shutdown "020"
  ...
  END LIST RW su700

4.2.7.6.  LIST UPS

  The command calls for the Attachment Daemon to report a list of the
  UPS units to which it is attached.

  Command: LIST UPS

  Response:

  BEGIN LIST UPS
  UPS <upsname> "<description>"
  ...
  END LIST UPS

  <upsname> is the name of a UPS, and <description> is the description
  maintained by the Attachment Daemon, if available.  It is set to
  "Unavailable" otherwise.  Note that the quotation marks are part of
  the response.

  This command can also be used to determine what values of <upsname>
  are valid before calling other functions on the server.  This is also
  a good way to handle situations where a single Attachment Daemon
  supports multiple UPSs.  It is also useful for clients that perform a
  UPS discovery process.

  For example: response

  BEGIN LIST UPS
  UPS su700 "Development box"
  END LIST UPS

4.2.7.7.  LIST VAR

  The command calls for the Attachment Daemon to report a list of all
  the UPS variables that it maintains for a given UPS and the values of
  those UPS variables.

  Command: LIST VAR <upsname>

  Response:

  BEGIN LIST VAR <upsname>
  VAR <upsname> <varname> "<value>"
  ...
  END LIST VAR <upsname>

  <upsname> is the name of the UPS, <varname> is the UPS variable, and
  <value> is the value of that variable.  Note that the quotation marks
  are part of the response.

  The response to this command lists the UPS variables available for
  this UPS and their current values.

  For example: command LIST VAR su700 and response

  BEGIN LIST VAR su700
  VAR su700 ups.mfr "Example Mfg"
  VAR su700 ups.mfr.date "10/17/96"
  ...
  END LIST VAR su700

  See Section 8.2 for details of the recommended minimum support of
  variables.  A full list of variables is available in source code file
  docs/nut-names.txt [gitvars], which serves as the Recording Document.

4.2.8.  PASSWORD

  This command is a companion to USERNAME and is used by a Management
  Daemon to specify the password required to enter a session with the
  Attachment Daemon; see Section 2.9.

  Command: PASSWORD <password>

  If the command succeeds, the response is OK; otherwise, see the error
  responses in Section 4.3.2.

  For examples of the use of commands USERNAME and PASSWORD by
  administrative users, see Appendix E.2.

  ABNF: See variable session-password in Figure 5.

4.2.9.  PRIMARY

  In current practice, the Attachment Daemon records in local file
  upsd.users that an administrative user is a Primary.  See
  Appendix E.1 for an example.  When a Management Daemon starts up and
  opens a session with the Attachment Daemon, it lays claim to being a
  Primary by sending command PRIMARY to the Attachment Daemon, thus
  claiming that it has the required authority to perform critical
  actions, such as setting status symbol FSD.

  Command: PRIMARY <upsname>

  <upsname> is the name of the UPS.

  If the Attachment Daemon has the authority, the response is OK;
  otherwise, see the error responses in Section 4.3.2.

     |  Note: Historically, this command was known as MASTER.

4.2.10.  PROTVER

  Return the version of the command/response protocol used by the
  Attachment Daemon.  This command is intended for human, as well as
  program, use.

  Command: PROTVER

  For example: the following command line sequence in the Attachment
  Daemon

  netcat localhost 3493
  PROTVER
  1.3

  Notes:

  1.  There are no quotation marks in the response.
  2.  The version of the protocol returned by PROTVER is different than
      the implementation version of the Attachment Daemon returned by
      VER.
  3.  To ease migration, NUT version 2.8.0 also supports the equivalent
      NETVER command used in previous releases.  See Section 8.2.4.

  ABNF: See variable protver in Figure 5.

4.2.11.  SET

  The command calls for the Attachment Daemon to set a UPS variable to
  a given value.  Whether this has an effect on the UPS hardware is
  specific to the Driver and the UPS model.  Some variables are read-
  only due to the design of the UPS or its Driver.

  Command: SET VAR <upsname> <varname> "<value>"

  <upsname> is the name of the UPS, <varname> is the UPS variable, and
  <value> is the value to be assigned to that variable.  Note that the
  quotation marks are part of the command.

  If the command succeeds, the response is OK; otherwise, see the error
  responses in Section 4.3.2.

  For example: command SET VAR su700 ups.id "My UPS" and response OK

  ABNF: See the variable set in Figure 5.

4.2.12.  STARTTLS

  The client tells the Attachment Daemon to switch to communication
  encrypted by TLS [RFC8446].  When the client receives OK, it also
  switches to TLS encryption.

  Command: STARTTLS

  If the command succeeds, the response is OK STARTTLS; otherwise, see
  the error responses in Section 4.3.2.

  If the client does not send command STARTTLS to the Attachment
  Daemon, communication continues unencrypted; however, an Attachment
  Daemon MAY refuse unencrypted communication.

  NUT 2.8.0 supports the encryption of communications between the
  Attachment Daemon and the Management Daemon using TLS 1.3 [RFC8446]
  with X.509 v3 certificates, as defined by [RFC5280] and updates.  See
  Appendix D for details of the encryption of communications in
  previous release 2.7.4.

  ABNF: See variable starttls in Figure 5.

4.2.12.1.  Key Infrastructure and Self-Signed Certificates

  _The very restricted nature of UPS management makes it of interest to
  consider self-signed certificates._

  In the World Wide Web, there are millions of servers and hundreds of
  millions of potential clients for each one.  The servers do not know
  who their clients will be, so they entrust the management of a Public
  Key Infrastructure (PKI) to Certificate Authorities that they trust.
  The encryption of communications between the client and server
  requires that the browsers carry a list of Certificate Authorities
  that the clients have to trust.  _This is a many-to-many
  relationship._

  The management of UPS units is not a many-to-many relationship; it is
  frequently one to one.  In the closely restrained world of UPS
  management, there are a very limited number of clients for each
  server, rarely more than three, and unlike the World Wide Web, the
  server administrators know exactly who they are.  These clients visit
  very few servers, typically one only.  This situation is totally
  different from the World Wide Web.  The use of external Certificate
  Authorities is a potential security weakness that must be accepted
  for the World Wide Web but which can be avoided for UPS management by
  either generating the private and public keys locally or, for larger
  organizations, using a PKI.

  The security policies for UPS management may be subordinate to an
  organization's own internal IT security plans and procedures,
  possibly based on [RFC7030] and [RFC8894], but in simple cases, it is
  possible to obtain better security using self-signed certificates.

4.2.13.  USERNAME

  The Attachment Daemon limits access to clients whose credentials
  match those in the file upsd.users.  There is no anonymous access.  A
  Management Daemon program or script uses command USERNAME and its
  companion command PASSWORD to open a session with the Attachment
  Daemon for an administrative user.  Note that this command is for
  program or script use and is not the familiar login command typed on
  a command line to gain access to a shell.

  Command: USERNAME <username>

  If the command succeeds, the response is OK; otherwise, see the error
  responses in Section 4.3.2.

  For examples of the use of commands USERNAME and PASSWORD by
  administrative users, see Appendix E.2.

  ABNF: See variable session-username in Figure 5.

4.2.14.  VER

  Return the implementation version of the Attachment Daemon.  This
  command is intended for human, as well as program, use.

  Command: VER

  For example: the following command line sequence

  netcat localhost 3493
  VER
  Network UPS Tools upsd 2.8.0 - http://www.networkupstools.org/

  Notes:

  1.  There are no quotation marks in the response.
  2.  The implementation version of the Attachment Daemon returned by
      VER is different than the protocol version returned by PROTVER.

  ABNF: See variable ver in Figure 5.

4.3.  Summary of Responses

4.3.1.  Response When Command Succeeds

  If the command succeeds, the response has the following command-
  dependent form:

    +==========+=====================+================+============+
    | Command  | Response            | Reference      | Note       |
    +==========+=====================+================+============+
    | ATTACH   | OK                  | Section 4.2.1  | Was LOGIN  |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | DETACH   | OK Goodbye          | Section 4.2.2  | Was LOGOUT |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | FSD      | OK FSD-SET          | Section 4.2.3  |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | GET      | Subcommand specific | Section 4.2.4  |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | HELP     | List of commands    | Section 4.2.5  |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | INSTCMD  | OK                  | Section 4.2.6  |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | LIST     | Subcommand specific | Section 4.2.7  |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | PASSWORD | OK                  | Section 4.2.8  |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | PRIMARY  | OK                  | Section 4.2.9  |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | PROTVER  | Protocol version    | Section 4.2.10 | Was NETVER |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | SET      | OK                  | Section 4.2.11 |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | STARTTLS | OK STARTTLS         | Section 4.2.12 |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | USERNAME | OK                  | Section 4.2.13 |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+
    | VER      | Program version     | Section 4.2.14 |            |
    +----------+---------------------+----------------+------------+

                 Table 2: Response If Command Succeeds

4.3.2.  Error Responses

  Error responses have the following format:

  ERR <error-name> [<extra>]

  <error-name> is a single word token taken from the 27 characters A-Z
  and hyphen (-).  Implementations MAY, if needed, add an additional,
  optional <extra>.  Current practice does not make use of this
  possibility.

  The <error-name> may have one of the following values:

   +==============================+==================================+
   |   The Error Name Token       |             Meaning              |
   |         <error-name>         |                                  |
   +==============================+==================================+
   | ACCESS-DENIED                | The client's host and/or         |
   |                              | authentication details supplied  |
   |                              | by USERNAME and PASSWORD are not |
   |                              | sufficient to execute the        |
   |                              | requested command.               |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | ALREADY-ATTACHED             | The client has already sent a    |
   |                              | successful ATTACH command for a  |
   |                              | given UPS and can't do it again. |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | ALREADY-SET-PASSWORD         | The client has already supplied  |
   |                              | a PASSWORD and is attempting to  |
   |                              | repeat the command in the same   |
   |                              | session.                         |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | ALREADY-SET-USERNAME         | The client has already supplied  |
   |                              | a USERNAME and is attempting to  |
   |                              | repeat the command within the    |
   |                              | same session.                    |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | CMD-NOT-SUPPORTED            | The specified UPS doesn't        |
   |                              | support the Instant Command.     |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | DATA-STALE                   | The Attachment Daemon is         |
   |                              | connected to the Driver for the  |
   |                              | UPS, but that Driver isn't       |
   |                              | providing regular updates or has |
   |                              | specifically marked the data as  |
   |                              | stale.  Current practice is for  |
   |                              | the Attachment Daemon to refuse  |
   |                              | to provide the Management Daemon |
   |                              | with variables on stale units to |
   |                              | avoid false readings.            |
   |                              |                                  |
   |                              | This generally means that the    |
   |                              | Driver is running, but it has    |
   |                              | lost communication with the      |
   |                              | hardware.  Check the physical    |
   |                              | connection to the equipment.     |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | DRIVER-NOT-CONNECTED         | The Attachment Daemon can't      |
   |                              | perform the requested command,   |
   |                              | since the Driver for that UPS is |
   |                              | not connected.  This usually     |
   |                              | means that the Driver is not     |
   |                              | running or, if it is, is         |
   |                              | misconfigured.                   |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | FEATURE-NOT-CONFIGURED       | This instance of the Attachment  |
   |                              | Daemon hasn't been configured    |
   |                              | properly to allow the requested  |
   |                              | feature to operate.  In current  |
   |                              | practice, this error response is |
   |                              | possible only for command        |
   |                              | STARTTLS.                        |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | FEATURE-NOT-SUPPORTED        | This instance of Attachment      |
   |                              | Daemon does not support the      |
   |                              | requested feature.  In current   |
   |                              | practice, this error response is |
   |                              | possible only for command        |
   |                              | STARTTLS.                        |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | INSTCMD-FAILED               | The Attachment Daemon failed to  |
   |                              | deliver the Instant Command      |
   |                              | request to the Driver.  No       |
   |                              | further information is available |
   |                              | to the client.  This typically   |
   |                              | indicates a dead or broken       |
   |                              | Driver.                          |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | INVALID-ARGUMENT             | The client sent an argument to a |
   |                              | command that is not recognized   |
   |                              | or is otherwise not valid in     |
   |                              | this context.  This is typically |
   |                              | caused by sending a valid        |
   |                              | command, such as GET, with a     |
   |                              | subcommand that is not valid.    |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | INVALID-PASSWORD             | The client sent a nonvalid       |
   |                              | PASSWORD.                        |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | INVALID-USERNAME             | The client sent a nonvalid       |
   |                              | USERNAME.                        |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | INVALID-VALUE                | The value specified in the       |
   |                              | request is not valid.  This      |
   |                              | usually applies to a SET of an   |
   |                              | ENUM type that is using a value  |
   |                              | not in the list of allowed       |
   |                              | values.  See Section 4.2.7.3.    |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | PASSWORD-REQUIRED            | The command requires a PASSWORD  |
   |                              | for authentication, but the      |
   |                              | client hasn't provided one.      |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | READONLY                     | The requested variable in a SET  |
   |                              | command is not writable.         |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | SET-FAILED                   | The Attachment Daemon failed to  |
   |                              | deliver the SET request to the   |
   |                              | Driver.  This is similar to      |
   |                              | INSTCMD-FAILED.                  |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | TLS-ALREADY-ENABLED          | TLS mode is already enabled on   |
   |                              | this connection, so the          |
   |                              | Attachment Daemon can't start it |
   |                              | again.                           |
   |                              |                                  |
   |                              | Note: Historically, this message |
   |                              | was ALREADY-SSL-MODE.            |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | TLS-NOT-ENABLED              | TLS mode is required but has not |
   |                              | yet been enabled on this         |
   |                              | connection, so the Attachment    |
   |                              | Daemon can't send commands.      |
   |                              |                                  |
   |                              | Note: This message is            |
   |                              | experimental and not in current  |
   |                              | common use.                      |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | TOO-LONG                     | The requested value in a SET     |
   |                              | command is too long.             |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | UNKNOWN-COMMAND              | The Attachment Daemon doesn't    |
   |                              | recognize the command.           |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | UNKNOWN-UPS                  | The UPS specified in the request |
   |                              | is not known to the Attachment   |
   |                              | Daemon.  This usually means that |
   |                              | it didn't match anything in the  |
   |                              | Attachment Daemon configuration. |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | USERNAME-REQUIRED            | The command requires a USERNAME  |
   |                              | for authentication, but the      |
   |                              | client hasn't provided one.      |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+
   | VAR-NOT-SUPPORTED            | The specified UPS doesn't        |
   |                              | support the UPS variable in the  |
   |                              | command.                         |
   +------------------------------+----------------------------------+

                         Table 3: Error Responses

     |  Note: Historically, this error response was ALREADY-LOGGED-IN.

4.4.  An ABNF of the Commands

  This section repeats the syntax of Section 4.2 but in Augmented
  Backus-Naur Form (ABNF).  It does not define any additional features.
  For further details of each command and the response, see
  Section 4.2.

  The commands may be presented in ABNF [RFC5234] [RFC7405] and
  represented using US-ASCII [RFC0020].

  Current practice tolerates mixed-case command names, but it is
  RECOMMENDED to use uppercase only for commands.  See Figure 5.

  ;-------------------------------------------------------------------
  ; This grammar is case sensitive. Terminal keywords SHOULD be
  ; written in uppercase, as shown.
  ; The following basic rules written with uppercase names are
  ; taken from RFC 5234, Appendix B.1.
     SP = 1*%x20                  ; At least one SPACE
     LF = %x0A                    ; Linefeed
     DIGIT = %x30-39              ; Digit 0 through 9
     ALPHA =  %x41-5A / %x61-7A   ; A-Z / a-z
     DQUOTE = %x22                ; Double quote "
     VCHAR = %x21-7E              ; Visible (printing) characters
  ; Additional basic rules needed by this grammar
     LC = %x61-7A                 ; Letter a through z
     DOT = 1%x2E                  ; Exactly one .
     COLON = 1%x3A                ; Exactly one :
     AT = 1%x40                   ; Exactly one @
     SEP = 1"-" / 1"_" / 1"."     ; A single - or _ or .
     JOIN = COLON / AT            ; A single : or @
  ; Frequently used in this grammar
     cmdname = 1*LC *62(DOT 1*LC) ; E.g., load.off.delay
     upschar = DIGIT / ALPHA / SEP
     ups = 1*ALPHA *62upschar     ; E.g., Example-Mfg-999
     group = ups                  ; E.g., HB  (Not in common use)
     hostname = ups               ; E.g., example.com
     port = 1*5DIGIT              ; E.g., 3493
     upsname = [group COLON] ups [AT hostname [COLON port]]
                                  ; Fully Qualified UPS name
                                  ; E.g.,
                                  ; HB:[email protected]:3493
     username = ups               ; E.g., Power-Dept.6
     varname = 1*LC *62( DOT 1*(DIGIT / LC) )
                                  ; E.g., outlet.1.status
  ;-------------------------------------------------------------------
     commandLine = command LF     ; LF is a single %x0A
     command = attach / detach / fsd / get / help / instcmd /
               list / password / primary / protver / set /
               starttls / username / ver
  ;
     attach  = "ATTACH" SP upsname
  ;
     detach = "DETACH"
  ;
     fsd = "FSD" SP upsname
  ;
     get = "GET" SP getsubcommnd
     getsubcommand = getcmddesc / getdesc / getnumattach /
                     gettype / getupsdesc / getvar
  ;
     getcmddesc =   "CMDDESC" SP upsname SP cmdname
     getdesc =      "DESC" SP upsname SP varname
     getnumattach = "NUMATTACH" SP upsname
     gettype =      "TYPE" SP upsname SP varname
     getupsdesc =   "UPSDESC" SP upsname
     getvar =       "VAR" SP upsname SP varname
  ;
     help = "HELP"
  ;
     instcmd = "INSTCMD" SP upsname SP cmdname
  ;
     list = "LIST" listsubcommand
     listsubcommand = listclient / listcmd / listenum / listrange /
                      listrw / listups / listvar
  ;
     listclient = "CLIENT" SP upsname
     listcmd =    "CMD" SP upsname
     listenum =   "ENUM" SP upsname SP varname
     listrange =  "RANGE" SP upsname SP varname
     listrw =     "RW" SP upsname
     listups =    "UPS"
     listvar =    "VAR" SP upsname
  ;
     session-password = "PASSWORD" SP *63VCHAR
                           ; A sequence of printable characters defined
                           ; in a server configuration file.  Local
                           ; security practices may mandate a minimum
                           ; and maximum number of characters.
  ;
     primary = "PRIMARY" SP upsname
  ;
     protver = "PROTVER"
  ;
     value = *63VCHAR      ; Local practices may limit the choice of
                           ; characters and require non-US-ASCII.
     set = "SET" SP %s"VAR" SP upsname SP varname SP
           DQUOTE value DQUOTE
  ;
     starttls = "STARTTLS"
  ;
     session-username = "USERNAME" SP username
  ;
     ver = "VER"
  ;-------------------------------------------------------------------

                     Figure 5: ABNF for the Commands

  Notes:

  1.  _Implementation note:_ The ABNF is written using the provisions
      of [RFC5234] and [RFC7405], which are US-ASCII based [RFC0020].

  2.  The grammar is case sensitive.  The terminal key words SHOULD be
      written in uppercase, as specified.

  3.  The repetition factor in front of an expression has the form
      <min>*<max>, where <min> is the minimum number of repetitions,
      and <max> is the maximum number.

  4.  If <min> is omitted, its value is 0.  If <max> is omitted, its
      value is infinity.

  5.  The notation n*n, meaning "exactly n copies", may be written as
      n.

  6.  Square brackets around an expression mean that the expression is
      optional.  This could be written as 0*1.

4.4.1.  Responses to Commands

  The responses to the commands are encoded in US-ASCII [RFC0020] and
  fall into two groups:

  1.  Short replies to action commands; see Section 4.3.

  2.  Long replies to requests for information.  In this case, the
      reply is sent in a sequence of messages.  The last message will
      contain a line beginning END LIST . For example, see
      Section 4.2.7.1.

5.  Statuses and Events

5.1.  Status Symbols

  These symbols resume the abstracted view of the UPS hardware
  maintained by the Attachment Daemon.  The variable ups.status
  contains one or more space-separated status symbols, which together
  describe the UPS state at that instant.  In current practice, the
  Management Daemon will poll variable ups.status every 5 seconds with
  a command, such as GET VAR su700 ups.status, and a response, such as
  VAR su700 ups.status "OB LB", to discover changes in the UPS status.
  These changes will indicate UPS events.

   +=========+======================================================+
   |  Status |                       Meaning                        |
   |  Symbol |                                                      |
   +=========+======================================================+
   | ALARM   | The UPS reports that it requires intervention.       |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | BOOST   | The UPS has determined that the voltage level of the |
   |         | public power supply is too low and is boosting it to |
   |         | the required level.  The UPS continues to supply the |
   |         | protected system from the public power supply.       |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | BYPASS  | The UPS is feeding current directly from the public  |
   |         | power supply to the protected system.  The backup    |
   |         | facilities are disconnected.  This state allows      |
   |         | maintenance personnel to change the batteries        |
   |         | without interrupting the protected system.           |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | CAL     | The UPS is calibrating itself, for example, to       |
   |         | determine at what charge the LB status is raised or  |
   |         | lowered.                                             |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | CHRG    | The UPS battery is charging.  This usually implies   |
   |         | that the UPS also has status OL but may not be the   |
   |         | case if the UPS also has status OFF.                 |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | COMM    | The Attachment Daemon has effective contact with the |
   |         | UPS.                                                 |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | DISCHRG | The UPS battery is discharging.  This usually        |
   |         | implies that the UPS also has status OB but may not  |
   |         | be the case if the UPS also has status OFF.          |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | FSD     | This "Forced Shutdown" status signals that the final |
   |         | shutdown sequence has begun.                         |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | LB      | Low Battery.  The battery level of the UPS is below  |
   |         | a chosen limit.  The UPS may be in status OL or OB.  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | NOCOMM  | The Attachment Daemon has no effective contact with  |
   |         | the UPS.                                             |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | OB      | On Battery.  The UPS is taking energy from its       |
   |         | battery.  The battery is discharging.  A UPS must    |
   |         | have status OB or OL; otherwise, it is deemed dead.  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | OFF     | The UPS is in state "Off".  It does not react to     |
   |         | failure in the public power supply.  The exact       |
   |         | meaning depends on the model.                        |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | OL      | Online.  The UPS is online, receiving energy from    |
   |         | the public power supply.  The battery is charging.   |
   |         | A UPS must have status OB or OL; otherwise, it is    |
   |         | deemed dead.                                         |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | OVER    | Overloaded.  The UPS reports that the load on it is  |
   |         | beyond its normal operating maximum.                 |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | RB      | Replace battery.  The UPS reports that its battery   |
   |         | or batteries should be replaced.                     |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | TEST    | Under test.  The UPS is currently undergoing a test  |
   |         | that may have been requested manually or internally. |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | TICK    | Heartbeat.  A software UPS in the Attachment Daemon  |
   |         | provides a regular signal monitored by the           |
   |         | Management Daemon as a way of verifying effective    |
   |         | end-to-end management.  TICK and TOCK are            |
   |         | companions; they are considered experimental.        |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | TOCK    | Heartbeat.  See TICK                                 |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+
   | TRIM    | The UPS has determined that the voltage level of the |
   |         | public power supply is too high and is reducing it   |
   |         | to the required level.  The UPS continues to supply  |
   |         | the protected system from the public power supply.   |
   +---------+------------------------------------------------------+

                      Table 4: UPS Status Symbols

5.2.  Events

  A Management Daemon detects the occurrence of a UPS event from a
  change in the UPS status received from the Attachment Daemon.  The
  following table summarizes the process.  A status of "none" means
  that the status symbol is not present in the variable ups.status.

  The Management Daemon should retrieve the variable ups.status from
  the Attachment Daemon at regular intervals.  If the interval is too
  short, compute and network resources will be wasted, but if the
  interval is too large, the Management Daemon risks missing short-
  lived changes in the UPS status.

  A default value of 5 seconds is RECOMMENDED, but an implementation
  MAY make this value configurable.  By default, the "old" status is
  therefore the previous value retrieved 5 seconds ago.

  Current practice is for the Management Daemon to assign names to
  certain events.  These are shown in the table in parentheses.

  +=======+=========+===============++=========+========+=============+
  |Old    | New     |Event          || Old     | New    |Event        |
  |Status | Status  |               || Status  | Status |             |
  +=======+=========+===============++=========+========+=============+
  |none   | ALARM   |Alarm on       || ALARM   | none   |Alarm off    |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | BOOST   |Boosting       || BOOST   | none   |Not boosting |
  |       |         |voltage        ||         |        |             |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | BYPASS  |Bypass on      || BYPASS  | none   |Bypass off   |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | CAL     |Calibrating    || CAL     | none   |Not          |
  |       |         |               ||         |        |calibrating  |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | CHRG    |Charging       || CHRG    | none   |Not charging |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | COMM    |UPS            || COMM    | none   |See note 4   |
  |       |         |communicating  ||         |        |             |
  |       |         |(event COMMOK) ||         |        |             |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | DISCHRG |Discharging    || DISCHRG | none   |Not          |
  |       |         |               ||         |        |discharging  |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | FSD     |System shutdown|| FSD     | none   |Shutdown     |
  |       |         |(events FSD,   ||         |        |abandoned.   |
  |       |         |SHUTDOWN)      ||         |        |See note 1   |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | LB      |Low battery.   || LB      | none   |Battery not  |
  |       |         |See note 2     ||         |        |low          |
  |       |         |(event LOWBATT)||         |        |             |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | NOCOMM  |UPS dead?  See || NOCOMM  | none   |See note 4   |
  |       |         |note 4         ||         |        |             |
  |       |         |(events        ||         |        |             |
  |       |         |COMMBAD,       ||         |        |             |
  |       |         |NOCOMM)        ||         |        |             |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | OFF     |UPS turned off || OFF     | none   |UPS not      |
  |       |         |               ||         |        |turned off   |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |OB     | OL      |Receiving power|| OL      | OB     |Power lost   |
  |       |         |(event ONLINE) ||         |        |(event       |
  |       |         |               ||         |        |ONBATT)      |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | OVER    |UPS overloaded || OVER    | none   |Overload gone|
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | RB      |Replace battery|| RB      | none   |Replacement  |
  |       |         |(event         ||         |        |canceled     |
  |       |         |REPLBATT)      ||         |        |             |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | TEST    |Test starts    || TEST    | none   |Test finished|
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | TICK    |Heartbeat      || TICK    | none   |No heartbeat.|
  |       |         |event.  See    ||         |        |See note 3   |
  |       |         |note 3         ||         |        |             |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | TOCK    |Heartbeat      || TOCK    | none   |No heartbeat.|
  |       |         |event.  See    ||         |        |See note 3   |
  |       |         |note 3         ||         |        |             |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+
  |none   | TRIM    |Trimming       || TRIM    | none   |Not trimming |
  |       |         |voltage        ||         |        |             |
  +-------+---------+---------------++---------+--------+-------------+

               Table 5: Event Deduction from Status Changes

  Notes:
     1.  Current practice does not include this event.
     2.  If the status OB is present, current practice takes Management
         Daemon reception of LB as an order to perform an emergency
         system shutdown.
     3.  The use of a software-defined UPS to provide a heartbeat is
         experimental and is not part of common current practice.
     4.  Current practice is the following: if the UPS has not
         responded for 15 seconds, the Management Daemon assumes that
         the UPS is _dead_ (event NOCOMM), and if the last known OL/OB
         status was OB, a system shutdown (command FSD) is requested.

6.  Security Considerations

6.1.  Current General Security Practice

  Experience over the last 20 years shows that new UPS management
  software releases are not frequent and, when installed, stay
  unmodified for some years.  This is probably because UPS management
  is a mature activity, part of site management.  A limited number of
  system administrators have access to the UPS hardware and software
  and tend to assume a certain "security by obscurity" since many
  installations have a configuration like the one shown in Figure 6,
  which uses port 3493/TCP (nut) between the two daemons running in the
  same system.  The traffic is often not encrypted, and when it is
  encrypted, it uses deprecated early versions of SSL/TLS.

          ,-----,   ,--------------------,---------------------,
          | UPS |---|  Attachment   <-Commands     Management  |
          |     |===|    Daemon       Responses->    Daemon    |
          /-----\   '--------------------'---------------------'
                       Listens on
                      port 3493/TCP
                      for localhost

               Figure 6: Common Single-System Configuration

  This situation is now changing as low-cost processors become
  available, costing significantly less than a UPS unit.  This
  evolution makes it interesting to shift to a configuration like the
  one shown in Figure 7, but it also exacerbates the security weakness
  of Figure 6, since the traffic between the daemons is now over an
  exposed network.

           ,-----,------------,               ,--------------,
           | UPS - Attachment | <-Commands    |  Management  |
           |     |   Daemon   |   Responses-> |    Daemon    |
           /-----'------------\               '--------------'
                   Listens on
                  port 3493/TCP

            Figure 7: Integration of UPS and Attachment Daemon

  These security issues raised by UPS management are those of the power
  industry in general; they are addressed in detail in IEC Technical
  Specification 62351 [IEC62351-1].  In addition to equipment security,
  cyber security is now an essential consideration.

  Quoting from IEC 62351-1[IEC62351-1], Introduction to the standard,
  clause 5.2.3.5:

  |  With the computer systems for power operations presumably kept
  |  isolated from the Internet, many utility personnel do not see any
  |  reason for adding security measures to these systems.  However, as
  |  clearly seen from these Subclauses, this may not be true anymore
  |  as networking becomes more prevalent and additional information
  |  access requirements grow.

  In IEC 62351-1[IEC62351-1], clause 5.3.5 lists typical security
  attacks: Eavesdropping, Masquerade, Man-in-the-Middle, Replay, and
  Resource Exhaustion.  [RFC3552] adds message insertion/deletion/
  modification and denial of service.

  Let's look more closely at these requirements:

  *  Eavesdropping; see Section 6.3.1

  *  Man-in-the-Middle; see Section 6.3.2

  *  Masquerade; see Section 6.3.3

  *  Message insertion, deletion, and modification; see Section 6.3.4

  *  Replay; see Section 6.3.5

  *  Resource Exhaustion and Denial of Service; see Section 6.3.6

6.2.  Communication Security Requirements

  Enforcing secure communication requires tightening up the Attachment
  Daemon to require the use of command STARTTLS for commands sent over
  the global Internet.  In such a situation, an Attachment Daemon
  listening for traffic other than from localhost:

  1.  SHOULD require and accept command STARTTLS,

  2.  MUST encrypt all communication with a Management Daemon, and

  3.  SHALL refuse all non-encrypted commands, except an initial
      STARTTLS.

  Notes:

  *  The SHOULD, rather than MUST, in Section 6.2, Paragraph 2, Item 1
     above allows system administrators to enforce secure communication
     using other techniques that do not involve the STARTTLS command.

  *  If an Attachment Daemon requires that all commands be encrypted as
     required by the MUST in Section 6.2, Paragraph 2, Item 2 above,
     then, automatically, each Management Daemon MUST encrypt as well,
     since it has to do so in order to gain access.

  *  The SHALL in Section 6.2, Paragraph 2, Item 3 above applies to
     traffic from the global Internet.  An Attachment Daemon MAY accept
     unencrypted commands from localhost if the local installation's
     security practices allow it, for example, in a dedicated
     appliance.

  Firewalls SHOULD be used to restrict the communication between the
  Attachment Daemon and the accepted Management Daemons, prohibiting
  and discarding traffic from any systems that are not part of the
  envisioned power management setup.  Note: See Section 6.2, Paragraph
  4, Item 1 above on the use of SHOULD.

6.2.1.  Certificate Security

  In long-lived installations, such as those found in UPS management,
  careful certificate management is essential, whether the certificate
  is provided by a Certificate Authority or is a self-signed
  certificate.  For example, the expiration times of both the
  certificate containing the public key and the signing certificate
  should be specified.

6.3.  Attacks and Defenses

6.3.1.  Eavesdropping

  The defense against eavesdropping is encryption of the commands and
  responses passed between the client Management Daemon and server
  Attachment Daemon.  The protocol provides command STARTTLS, see
  Section 4.2.12, which calls on the Attachment Daemon to support TLS
  encryption of the communication.  If this command is accepted, the
  Management Daemon also encrypts.

  In current NUT Project practice, the use of TLS is optional; however,
  a Management Daemon may refuse to accept unencrypted communication.
  This is done by setting declarations FORCESSL to 1 and CERTVERIFY to
  1 in the Management Daemon configuration file.

6.3.1.1.  Misplaced Declarations Requiring TLS

  A further weakness is that the FORCESSL and CERTVERIFY declarations,
  which enforce use of encryption, are in the client Management Daemon
  configuration file and not in the Attachment Daemon.  Secure practice
  requires enforcement by the server Attachment Daemon, rather than a
  possibly rogue client Management Daemon out on the Internet.

  This weakness may be mitigated with strict firewall rules that would
  prevent the rogue client Management Daemon from accessing the
  Attachment Daemon.

6.3.1.2.  Weak Protection in Previous Version 2.7.4

  Although version 2.8.0 of NUT supports TLS 1.3 [RFC8446] with X.509
  v3 certificates as defined by [RFC5280], previous version 2.7.4 only
  supported earlier SSL/TLS versions.  To overcome this weakness, The
  following techniques have been used:

  *  Shims; see Appendix D.1

  *  TLS tunnel; see Appendix D.2

  *  Virtual Private Network (VPN); see Appendix D.3

  *  Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN); see Appendix D.4

6.3.2.  Man-in-the-Middle

  The protocol relies on TLS encryption to prevent man-in-the-middle
  attacks.  See Appendix D for defense methods used for previous NUT
  version 2.7.4.

6.3.3.  Masquerade Attack: Agent Verification

  The protocol allows a malicious client acting as a Management Daemon
  to send command FSD to an Attachment Daemon to shut down a working
  system and its power supply, as described in The Shutdown Story
  section (see Appendix B).  Similarly, a malicious client could turn
  off the UPS power outlets, causing the system to fail.

  The protocol provides commands USERNAME (see Section 4.2.13) and
  PASSWORD (see Section 4.2.8), which allow an administrative user in a
  Management Daemon to authenticate itself to the Attachment Daemon, as
  a defense against masquerade attacks.  The administrative username
  and password need protection against local malicious users.  This is
  done by restricting access to the configuration files.

6.3.4.  Message Insertion, Deletion, and Modification

  The protocol relies on TLS encryption to prevent message insertion,
  deletion, and modification attacks.  See Appendix D for defense
  methods used for previous NUT version 2.7.4.

6.3.5.  Replay

  There are two cases:

  1.  The replay is from a system other than an approved Management
      Daemon, i.e., the protocol relies on a firewall to block the
      traffic.

  2.  The replay is from an approved Management Daemon. i.e., the
      protocol relies on the Management Daemon's own security to
      prevent unauthorized access.

6.3.6.  Denial of Service

  The protocol relies on a very tightly specified firewall to prevent
  denial-of-service attacks.  Only designated client Management Daemons
  should be able to reach the server Attachment Daemon.

7.  IANA Considerations

  The protocol specified by this text runs over port 3493/TCP (nut),
  which is registered by the Network UPS Tools (NUT) Project.

  This document has been added to the registration's Reference field in
  the "Service Name and Transport Protocol Port Number Registry"
  [Registry].

8.  Implementation Status

  This section presents a very short summary of the status of the
  Network UPS Tools project.

  *  May 1996: The first hack as a cron job.
  *  September 1997: The first server-client code.
  *  March 1998: First public release.
  *  June 1999: Code rewrite with a UPS Driver smartups, an Attachment
     Daemon upsd, and a simple Management Daemon.
  *  September 1999: The project became "Network UPS Tools".  The
     Management Daemon upsmon supported Primary/Secondary
     configurations.
  *  June 2001: Common core for multiple Drivers.
  *  May 2002: IANA granted port 3493/TCP (nut).  August: release
     1.0.0.  November: OpenSSL support.
  *  April 2003: The initial set of command and variable names was
     designed.
  *  February 2005: Arnaud Quette took over the project lead from
     Russell Kroll.
  *  March 2016: Version 2.7.4 released, supported over 100 device
     manufacturers and hundreds of UPS models.
  *  November 2020: Evgeny "Jim" Klimov took over project lead from
     Arnaud Quette.
  *  May 2022: Version 2.8.0 released, supporting protocol version 1.3.

  See [githist] and Appendix J [History] for a detailed history of the
  NUT Project.

8.1.  Inclusion in Software Distributions

  The programs upsd, upsmon, upssched, upsc, upscmd, and upsrw have
  been included in the package known as "nut" in the package systems of
  many distributions, i.e., all the major Linux distributions and Unix
  distributions, such as OpenBSD and OpenSolaris.  A Microsoft Windows
  version has been developed but was not maintained.

8.2.  Recommended Minimum Support

  The features provided by current UPS units vary widely.  However,
  experience shows that a minimum feature set is needed for
  satisfactory use of the NUT Project software.  A full list of
  variables is available in source code file docs/nut-names.txt
  [gitvars], which serves as the Recording Document.

8.2.1.  Desktop PC Variables

  The following variables form a minimum set suitable for a desktop PC.
  It is expected that, on public power supply failure, the PC will be
  halted.  It will not restart automatically when power returns.

  *  battery.charge

  *  battery.charge.low

  *  device.mfr

  *  device.model

  *  ups.status with the minimum status symbol set OL OB LB FSD; see
     Section 5.1

8.2.2.  Unattended Servers and Additional Variables

  The following additional variables are needed in a minimum set
  suitable for an unattended server.  It is expected that, on public
  power supply failure, the server will be halted.  It will restart
  automatically when power returns.

  *  battery.date

  *  device.serial

  *  ups.delay.shutdown

  *  ups.delay.start

8.2.3.  Commands and Other Technical Terms

  Satisfactory use of the NUT Project software requires support for all
  the commands specified in protocol version 1.3, software version
  2.8.0.

8.2.4.  Support for Earlier Versions

  In order to ease migration from software version 2.7.4, which
  supported protocol version 1.2, software version 2.8.0 also supports
  the technical terms used in protocol version 1.2.  See Appendix C for
  the differences.

9.  References

9.1.  Normative References

  [RFC0020]  Cerf, V., "ASCII format for network interchange", STD 80,
             RFC 20, DOI 10.17487/RFC0020, October 1969,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc20>.

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

  [RFC5234]  Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
             Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.

  [RFC7405]  Kyzivat, P., "Case-Sensitive String Support in ABNF",
             RFC 7405, DOI 10.17487/RFC7405, December 2014,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7405>.

  [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
             2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
             May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

9.2.  Informative References

  [C2ndEd]   Kernighan, B. and D. Ritchie, "The C Programming
             Language", 2nd edition, Prentice Hall Software Series,
             ISBN 0-13-110362-8, 1988.

  [devguide] Kroll, R., Quette, A., Lepple, C., and P. Selinger,
             "Network UPS Tools Project Developer Guide",
             <https://networkupstools.org/docs/developer-guide.chunked/
             ar01s09.html>.

  [Documentation]
             "Network UPS Tools Documentation",
             <https://networkupstools.org/documentation.html>.

  [githist]  "The Network UPS Tools repository, project history", July
             2022,
             <https://github.com/networkupstools/nut/blob/master/docs/
             history.txt>.

  [gitvars]  "The Network UPS Tools repository, variable names", April
             2022,
             <https://github.com/networkupstools/nut/blob/master/docs/
             nut-names.txt>.

  [History]  Kroll, R., Quette, A., and A. de Korte, "Network UPS Tools
             User Manual", May 2022,
             <https://networkupstools.org/docs/user-manual.pdf>.

  [HyTimeA]  ISO/IEC, "Information technology -- Hypermedia/Time-based
             Structuring Language (HyTime)", ISO/IEC 10744:1997, August
             1997.

  [IEC62351-1]
             IEC, "Power systems management and associated information
             exchange -- Data and communications security.  Part 1:
             Communication network and system security -- Introduction
             to security issues", 35 pages, TC 57 - Power systems
             management and associated information exchange, IEC TS
             62351-1:2007, May 2007, <https://nanopdf.com/download/
             technical-iec-specification-ts-62351-1_pdf>.

  [Library]  "Devices Dumps Library",
             <https://networkupstools.org/ddl/>.

  [NUT]      "Network UPS Tools, Devices Dumps Library",
             <https://www.networkupstools.org>.

  [nut-repository]
             "The Network UPS Tools repository",
             <https://github.com/networkupstools/nut/>.

  [nut-upsdev]
             NUT, "Network UPS Tools (NUT) Project Mailing List for
             Developers", <https://alioth-lists.debian.net/cgi-
             bin/mailman/listinfo/nut-upsdev>.

  [nut-upsuser]
             NUT, "Network UPS Tools (NUT) Project Mailing List for
             Users", <https://alioth-lists.debian.net/cgi-
             bin/mailman/listinfo/nut-upsuser>.

  [Registry] IANA, "Service Name and Transport Protocol Port Number
             Registry", <https://www.iana.org/assignments/service-
             names-port-numbers/service-names-port-numbers.xhtml>.

  [RFC3552]  Rescorla, E. and B. Korver, "Guidelines for Writing RFC
             Text on Security Considerations", BCP 72, RFC 3552,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC3552, July 2003,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3552>.

  [RFC5280]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
             Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
             Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
             (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, DOI 10.17487/RFC5280, May 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5280>.

  [RFC7030]  Pritikin, M., Ed., Yee, P., Ed., and D. Harkins, Ed.,
             "Enrollment over Secure Transport", RFC 7030,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7030, October 2013,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7030>.

  [RFC7991]  Hoffman, P., "The "xml2rfc" Version 3 Vocabulary",
             RFC 7991, DOI 10.17487/RFC7991, December 2016,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7991>.

  [RFC8446]  Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
             Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8446>.

  [RFC8894]  Gutmann, P., "Simple Certificate Enrolment Protocol",
             RFC 8894, DOI 10.17487/RFC8894, September 2020,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8894>.

  [SGML]     Goldfarb, C., "The SGML Handbook", Oxford University
             Press, ISBN-10 0-19-853737-9, 1990.

  [sgmlnorm] OpenJade Project, "OpenJade Distribution Page",
             <http://openjade.sourceforge.net/>.

  [stunnel]  "Stunnel", <https://www.stunnel.org/>.

Appendix A.  Variables

  The UPS variables represent the abstracted state of the UPS unit.
  Certain variables represent not only the state of some hardware
  feature but also provide tunable values and Instant Commands; see
  Section 2.5.  The full set of variables is recorded in the reference
  document for variable names [gitvars].

  The number of variables used in a given deployment depends on the
  sophistication of the UPS product; this annex shows a typical example
  of the subset of variables used for a reasonably complete "consumer
  grade" UPS.  The NUT Project maintains a large library of the
  variable subsets [Library] used by different UPS models.

  Note that successive versions of a given product may add or delete
  features, causing a change in the subset of variables used.  An
  example is the removal of ups.delay.start from a "consumer grade"
  UPS.  The manufacturer reserves the feature for the "professional"
  product.

  An implementation of a Management Daemon acting as a utility program
  may provide a listing of the variables available for a given product,
  for example, utility program upsc, as included in the NUT package;
  see Section 2.6, Paragraph 3.

  The following sections illustrate the use of variables by taking the
  values associated with a typical product.  The example is a 1600 Va
  1000 W UPS.

A.1.  Typical UPS Variables

   +===============================+============+====================+
   |            Variable           |  Typical   |      Default       |
   |                               |   Value    |    Description     |
   +===============================+============+====================+
   | battery.charge                | 100        | "Battery charge    |
   |                               |            | (percent of full)" |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | battery.charge.low            | 20         | "Remaining battery |
   |                               |            | level when UPS     |
   |                               |            | switches to LB     |
   |                               |            | (percent)"         |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | battery.runtime               | 1481       | "Battery runtime   |
   |                               |            | (seconds)"         |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | battery.type                  | PbAc       | "Battery           |
   |                               |            | chemistry"         |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | device.mfr                    | Example    | ""                 |
   |                               | Mfg        |                    |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | device.model                  | Economy    | ""                 |
   |                               | 1600       |                    |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | device.serial                 | 1234567890 | ""                 |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | device.type                   | ups        | ""                 |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.name                   | usbhid-ups | "Driver name"      |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.parameter.lowbatt      | 37         | "Driver parameter: |
   |                               |            | <name>"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.parameter.offdelay     | 30         | "Driver parameter: |
   |                               |            | <name>"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.parameter.ondelay      | 40         | "Driver parameter: |
   |                               |            | <name>"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.parameter.pollfreq     | 30         | "Driver parameter: |
   |                               |            | <name>"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.parameter.pollinterval | 2          | "Driver parameter: |
   |                               |            | <name>"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.parameter.port         | auto       | "Driver parameter: |
   |                               |            | <name>"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.parameter.synchronous  | no         | "Driver parameter: |
   |                               |            | <name>"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.parameter.vendorid     | 0999       | "Driver parameter: |
   |                               |            | <name>"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.version                | 2.8.0      | "Driver version -  |
   |                               |            | NUT release"       |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.version.data           | HID 1.39   | ""                 |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | driver.version.internal       | 0.41       | "Internal driver   |
   |                               |            | version"           |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | input.transfer.high           | 264        | "High voltage      |
   |                               |            | transfer point     |
   |                               |            | (V)"               |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | input.transfer.low            | 184        | "Low voltage       |
   |                               |            | transfer point     |
   |                               |            | (V)"               |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.1.desc                 | PowerShare | "Outlet            |
   |                               | Outlet 1   | description"       |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.1.id                   | 2          | "Outlet system     |
   |                               |            | identifier"        |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.1.status               | on         | "Outlet switch     |
   |                               |            | status"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.1.switchable           | no         | "Outlet switch     |
   |                               |            | ability"           |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.2.desc                 | PowerShare | "Outlet            |
   |                               | Outlet 2   | description"       |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.2.id                   | 3          | "Outlet system     |
   |                               |            | identifier"        |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.2.status               | on         | "Outlet switch     |
   |                               |            | status"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.2.switchable           | no         | "Outlet switch     |
   |                               |            | ability"           |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.desc                   | Main       | "Outlet            |
   |                               | Outlet     | description"       |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.id                     | 1          | "Outlet system     |
   |                               |            | identifier"        |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.power                  | 25         | ""                 |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | outlet.switchable             | no         | "Outlet switch     |
   |                               |            | ability"           |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | output.frequency.nominal      | 50         | "Nominal output    |
   |                               |            | frequency (Hz)"    |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | output.voltage                | 230.0      | "Output voltage    |
   |                               |            | (V)"               |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | output.voltage.nominal        | 230        | "Nominal output    |
   |                               |            | voltage (V)"       |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.beeper.status             | enabled    | "UPS beeper        |
   |                               |            | status"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.delay.shutdown            | 20         | "Interval to wait  |
   |                               |            | after shutdown     |
   |                               |            | with delay command |
   |                               |            | (seconds)"         |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.delay.start               | 30         | "Interval to wait  |
   |                               |            | before             |
   |                               |            | (re)starting the   |
   |                               |            | load (seconds)"    |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.firmware                  | 02         | "UPS firmware"     |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.load                      | 20         | "Load on UPS       |
   |                               |            | (percent of full)" |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.mfr                       | Example    | "UPS manufacturer" |
   |                               | Mfg        |                    |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.model                     | Economy    | "UPS model"        |
   |                               | 1600       |                    |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.power.nominal             | 1600       | "UPS power rating  |
   |                               |            | (VA)"              |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.productid                 | ffff       | "Product ID for    |
   |                               |            | USB devices"       |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.serial                    | 000000000  | "UPS serial        |
   |                               |            | number"            |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.status                    | OL         | "UPS status"       |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.temperature               | 27         | "UPS temperature   |
   |                               |            | (C)"               |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.timer.shutdown            | 0          | "Time before the   |
   |                               |            | load will be       |
   |                               |            | shutdown           |
   |                               |            | (seconds)"         |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.timer.start               | 0          | "Time before the   |
   |                               |            | load will be       |
   |                               |            | started (seconds)" |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+
   | ups.vendorid                  | 0999       | "Vendor ID for USB |
   |                               |            | devices"           |
   +-------------------------------+------------+--------------------+

                      Table 6: Typical UPS Variables

A.2.  Typical UPS Readable and Writable Variables

  Some of the features of a UPS are represented by variables that may
  be tuned by the user.  The following variables are typical of such
  tunable features.  The precise list depends on the model of UPS.  An
  implementation of a Management Daemon acting as a utility program may
  provide a listing of the variables available, as well as acting on
  them, for example, utility program upsrw, as included in the NUT
  package; see Section 2.6, Paragraph 3.

    +========================+============+=========================+
    |        Variable        |  Typical   |   Default Description   |
    |                        |   Value    | Provided as Response to |
    |                        |            |   the Command GET DESC  |
    +========================+============+=========================+
    | battery.charge.low     | 20         | "Remaining battery      |
    |                        |            | level when UPS switches |
    |                        |            | to LB (percent)"        |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | input.transfer.high    | 264        | "High voltage transfer  |
    |                        |            | point (V)"              |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | input.transfer.low     | 184        | "Low voltage transfer   |
    |                        |            | point (V)"              |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | outlet.1.desc          | PowerShare | "Outlet description"    |
    |                        | Outlet 1   |                         |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | outlet.2.desc          | PowerShare | "Outlet description"    |
    |                        | Outlet 2   |                         |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | outlet.2.switchable    | no         | "Outlet switch ability" |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | outlet.desc            | Main       | "Outlet description"    |
    |                        | Outlet     |                         |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | outlet.power           | 25         | "Description            |
    |                        |            | unavailable"            |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | output.voltage.nominal | 230        | "Nominal output voltage |
    |                        |            | (V)"                    |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | ups.delay.shutdown     | 20         | "Interval to wait after |
    |                        |            | shutdown with delay     |
    |                        |            | command (seconds)"      |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+
    | ups.delay.start        | 30         | "Interval to wait       |
    |                        |            | before (re)starting the |
    |                        |            | load (seconds)"         |
    +------------------------+------------+-------------------------+

           Table 7: Typical Readable and Writable UPS Variables

A.3.  Typical UPS Instant Commands

  Some of the features of a UPS are actions known as Instant Commands
  (see Section 2.5), which may be ordered by the user.  The following
  variables represent such Instant Commands.  The precise list depends
  on the model of UPS.  An implementation of a Management Daemon acting
  as a utility program may provide a listing of the variables
  available, as well as acting on them, for example, utility program
  upscmd, as included in the NUT package; see Section 2.6, Paragraph 3.

     +==================+==========================================+
     |     Command      |                 Meaning                  |
     +==================+==========================================+
     | beeper.disable   | Disable the UPS beeper                   |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | beeper.enable    | Enable the UPS beeper                    |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | beeper.mute      | Temporarily mute the UPS beeper          |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | load.off         | Turn off the load immediately            |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | load.off.delay   | Turn off the load with a delay (seconds) |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | load.on          | Turn on the load immediately             |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | load.on.delay    | Turn on the load with a delay (seconds)  |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | shutdown.return  | Turn off the load and return when power  |
     |                  | is back                                  |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | shutdown.stayoff | Turn off the load and remain off         |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+
     | shutdown.stop    | Stop a shutdown in progress              |
     +------------------+------------------------------------------+

                    Table 8: Typical Instant Commands

Appendix B.  The Shutdown Story for System and UPS

  This appendix provides background material helpful for a general
  understanding of the relation between system and UPS.  It does not
  define any feature of the command-response protocol.

  We consider the steps involved in the shutdown and restart of a long-
  running unattended server protected by a single UPS.  The Management
  Daemon runs in the server as shown in Figure 8.

                    ,------------------SERVER------------------,
                    |                    |                     |
          ,-----,   |     UPS       <-Commands        UPS      |
          | UPS |---|  Attachment        |         Management  |
          |     |===|    Daemon       Responses->    Daemon    |
          /-----\   '--------------------'---------------------'
                                      Internal
                                      loopback

                 Figure 8: Long-Running Unattended Server

  1.   _The public power supply is on._ The system runs normally.
       Every 5 seconds, variable ups.status reports OL. _Days, weeks,
       months go by..._

  2.   _Winter storm.  Tree falls on power lines.  The public power
       supply fails._ The server remains operational, running on the
       UPS battery.  The Management Daemon polls the Attachment Daemon
       and detects status change OL->OB.

  3.   The Management Daemon logs warning messages.  The server is
       still operational, running on the UPS battery. _Minutes go
       by..._

  4.   The battery discharges below the level specified by variable
       battery.charge.low.  The server remains operational, but the UPS
       battery will not last much longer.  The Management Daemon polls
       the Attachment Daemon and detects status change OB->OB+LB.

  5.   The Management Daemon logs the low battery event.

  6.   The Management Daemon decides to call for a system shutdown.  It
       sets status FSD in the Attachment Daemon to call on any
       Secondaries to shut down and waits for command GET NUMATTACH to
       report one single attachment, i.e., the Primary itself.  The
       Management Daemon then issues the system shutdown command for
       itself.

  7.   The operating system's shutdown process takes over.  During the
       system shutdown, a specific script to the NUT Project or an
       equivalent system service unit runs the command upsdrvctl
       shutdown.  This tells the UPS that it is to shut down N seconds
       later where the default is N=20.  Note that the "shutdown" of a
       UPS removes power from the outlet sockets but may not turn the
       UPS off completely.  A delayed shutdown is sometimes audible,
       and the characteristic beeping of the UPS stops.

  8.   The system shuts down and powers down, hopefully before the N=20
       seconds have passed.

  9.   _N seconds after item 7_ The UPS shuts down, i.e., it turns off
       its outlet sockets when N=20 seconds have passed.  With some UPS
       units, there is an audible "clunk".

       What if the public power supply returns before the UPS shuts
       down?  The UPS unit should be able to wait a configurable time
       with default 30 seconds.  These two timers start from the moment
       the UPS receives the upsdrvctl shutdown command. _Minutes,
       hours, days go by..._

  10.  _Some time later, maybe much later, the public power supply
       returns._ The UPS reconnects its outlets to send power to the
       protected system.

  11.  The system BIOS option "Restore power on AC return" or "Restore
       to previous state" has hopefully been selected and the system
       powers up.  The bootstrap process of the operating system
       begins.

  12.  The operating system starts the Attachment Daemon and the
       Management Daemon.  The Attachment Daemon starts the Driver and
       scans the UPS.  The UPS status becomes OL+LB.

  13.  After some time, the battery charges above the
       battery.charge.low threshold, and the Attachment Daemon declares
       the status change OL+LB->OL.  We are now back in the same
       situation as item 1 above.

Appendix C.  Technical Terms: Historical Differences

  This appendix lists the major differences between the technical terms
  used in NUT software release 2.8.0 and documented in this text, as
  well as those used in previous version 2.7.4 of the NUT Project.

       +===================+========================+===========+
       | Term in Previous  | Term in this Document, | Reference |
       | Release NUT 2.7.4 | Release NUT 2.8.0      |           |
       +===================+========================+===========+
       | ALREADY-LOGGED-IN | ALREADY-ATTACHED       | Table 3   |
       +-------------------+------------------------+-----------+
       | ALREADY-SSL-MODE  | TLS-ALREADY-ENABLED    | Table 3   |
       +-------------------+------------------------+-----------+
       | LOGIN             | ATTACH                 | Section   |
       |                   |                        | 4.2.1     |
       +-------------------+------------------------+-----------+
       | LOGOUT            | DETACH                 | Section   |
       |                   |                        | 4.2.2     |
       +-------------------+------------------------+-----------+
       | Master            | Primary                | Section   |
       |                   |                        | 2.7       |
       +-------------------+------------------------+-----------+
       | NETVER            | PROTVER                | Section   |
       |                   |                        | 4.2.10    |
       +-------------------+------------------------+-----------+
       | NUMLOGINS         | NUMATTACH              | Section   |
       |                   |                        | 4.2.4.3   |
       +-------------------+------------------------+-----------+
       | Slave             | Secondary              | Section   |
       |                   |                        | 2.8       |
       +-------------------+------------------------+-----------+

            Table 9: Technical Terms: Historical Differences

Appendix D.  Security Defenses in Release 2.7.4

  Previous NUT version 2.7.4 did not provide support for TLS 1.3
  [RFC8446].  The following subsections describe mitigating techniques.

D.1.  Shims

  Previous version 2.7.4 of NUT did not support TLS 1.3 [RFC8446].
  Where such protection is needed for version 2.7.4, a possible
  technique introduces shims between the Attachment Daemon and the
  network and between the network and the Management Daemon, as shown
  in Figure 9.  These shims provide TLS 1.3 support, thus allowing the
  Attachment Daemon and Management Daemon to continue temporarily
  without having TLS implementations themselves.  The technique has
  been successfully tested.

                     TLS shim listens     TLS shim listens
                     on port TBD1/TCP     on port 3493/TCP
      ,-----,------------,----,               ,----,--------------,
      | UPS - Attachment |TLS | <-STARTTLS    | TLS|  Management  |
      |     |   Daemon   |shim|         OK--> |shim|    Daemon    |
      /-----'------------'----\               '----'--------------'
              Listens on
            port 3493/TCP

           Figure 9: Shims Provide TLS Support During Migration

D.1.1.  Attachment Daemon Shim

  The shim in front of the Attachment Daemon listens to incoming
  traffic on port TBD1/TCP.  When it receives the command STARTTLS, it:

  1.  returns OK to the client and sets up TLS encapsulation.
  2.  does not send STARTTLS to the Attachment Daemon port 3493/TCP.

  All other commands and responses are passed through.

  Note: Port TBD1/TCP is not specified by this text.

D.1.2.  Management Daemon Shim

  The shim in front of the Management Daemon listens for incoming
  traffic on port 3493/TCP.  When it receives the command STARTTLS, it:

  1.  returns FEATURE-NOT-CONFIGURED to the client.
  2.  sends STARTTLS to the Attachment Daemon on port TBD1/TCP.

  All other commands and responses are passed through.

D.2.  TLS Tunnels

  Another technique is the use of TLS tunnels [RFC8446], using a
  software, such as stunnel [stunnel], which adds OpenSSL-based TLS
  support without modifying the Attachment Daemon or Management Daemon.
  The NUT Project has no procedure to enforce this on sites.

D.3.  VPN

  A further option to secure communications is very similar to TLS
  tunneling [RFC8446] and consists of routing the NUT traffic through a
  Virtual Private Network (VPN).

D.4.  VLAN

  A fourth option is to isolate the UPS management traffic at the
  network switching level using a Virtual LAN (VLAN) technique.

                   ,-------------,               ,-------------,
         ,-----,   | Attachment  |               | Management  |
         | UPS |---|   Daemon    |               |   Daemon    |
         |     |   |-------------|      UPS      |-------------|
         |     |===|             |   Management  |    UPS      |
         /-----\   | Protected   |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| Management  |
                   |  Server     |     VLAN      |   Client    |
                   |             |               '-------------'
                   '-------------'
               Production | VLAN
                      ,---|-------,
                     ,-----------,|
                    ,-----------,|'
                    |  Clients  |'
                    '-----------'

        Figure 10: UPS Management Protocol Runs over Its Own VLAN

  In Figure 10, there are two VLANS: the main traffic between the
  protected server and its clients using the production VLAN.  The UPS
  management traffic between the Attachment and Management Daemons uses
  the UPS management VLAN marked as ~~~~~~~~~~~~~.

Appendix E.  Administrative Security

  Administrative commands, such as FSD, INSTCMD, and SET, are powerful
  and can have a deep effect on system integrity.  For example, the
  command FSD is involved in mission-critical system shutdown
  decisions.  Access to them needs to be managed and restricted.  This
  section presents the current practice.

E.1.  Management of Administrative Users

  The Attachment Daemon maintains a file (currently upsd.users) that
  defines each administrative user.  Note that these users are
  independent of those recorded in file /etc/passwd.  Each
  administrative user gets its own section in file upsd.users.  The
  declarations in that section set the parameters that define that
  user's privileges.  The section begins with the name of the user
  enclosed in square brackets, opening bracket ([) and closing bracket
  (]), and continues until the next username in brackets or EOF.

  For example, the following file declares two administrative users,
  admin and pfy:

     [admin]
         password = sekret
         upsmon master
         actions = SET
         instcmds = ALL
     [pfy]
         password = sekret
         instcmds = test.panel.start
         instcmds = test.panel.stop

  Within each section, the administrative user declarations are:

       +=============+==========================================+
       | Declaration |                 Meaning                  |
       +=============+==========================================+
       | actions     | Allow the user to do certain things in   |
       |             | the Attachment Daemon.  To specify       |
       |             | multiple actions, use multiple instances |
       |             | of the declaration.  Valid actions are:  |
       |             |                                          |
       |             | *  FSD Set the "Forced Shutdown" flag    |
       |             |    for this UPS.  See Section 4.2.3.     |
       |             |                                          |
       |             | *  SET Change the value of a UPS         |
       |             |    variable.  See Section 4.2.11.        |
       +-------------+------------------------------------------+
       | instcmds    | Let a user initiate specific Instant     |
       |             | Commands.  See Section 4.2.6.  Use value |
       |             | ALL to grant all commands automatically. |
       |             | To specify multiple commands, use        |
       |             | multiple instances of the instcmds       |
       |             | field.  For the full list of what a      |
       |             | given UPS supports, use client upscmd -l |
       |             | supplied by the NUT Project.  The LIST   |
       |             | CMD command is issued within the client  |
       |             | upscmd.                                  |
       +-------------+------------------------------------------+
       | password    | Set the password for this user.  _Your   |
       |             | password should be more secure than the  |
       |             | examples shown._                         |
       +-------------+------------------------------------------+
       | upsmon      | Add the necessary actions for a          |
       |             | Management Daemon to process a system    |
       |             | shutdown.  In current practice, the      |
       |             | value is still master or slave.  Note    |
       |             | that there is no EQUALS =.               |
       +-------------+------------------------------------------+

               Table 10: Administrative User Declarations

E.2.  An Administrative User of a Client Management Daemon

  The following examples show the current security practices for
  administrative users of a client Management Daemon.  They also
  illustrate the command pair USERNAME and PASSWORD.  See Sections
  4.2.13 and 4.2.8.

E.2.1.  An Administrative User Logs into a Short Session

  In this simple example of current practice, the system administrator
  sets the battery level at which an Attachment Daemon will raise the
  status LB, represented by variable battery.charge.low, to 35% of full
  charge.  A system administrator types the following command to call
  the client upsrw supplied by the NUT Project.

  upsrw -s battery.charge.low=35 -u admin -p sekret [email protected]

  Option -s specifies the variable and the value, option -u specifies
  the USERNAME, option -p specifies the PASSWORD, and [email protected]
  is the UPS.  The USERNAME and PASSWORD commands are issued within the
  client upsrw, and the session is of short duration.

  Note: Your password should be stronger than the example shown.

E.2.2.  An Administrative User Logs into a Long Session

  In this second example of current practice, the long-running
  Management Daemon upsmon, which is responsible for initiating system
  shutdowns and which is provided by the NUT Project, issues commands
  USERNAME and PASSWORD when it starts up.  The data values needed for
  the USERNAME and PASSWORD commands are provided by a configuration
  file upsmon.conf, which contains the line:

  MONITOR [email protected] 1 admin sekret master

  This says that the UPS to be monitored is [email protected].  It
  provides 1 single power supply.  The administrative user is admin
  with password sekret.  The Management Daemon acts as a Primary,
  although current practice still uses the former term master.

  The USERNAME and PASSWORD commands are contained within the client
  upsmon, and the session is of long duration.

Acknowledgments

  This document is based on the NUT Project documentation [devguide].
  The editor acknowledges the work of Charles Lepple, Arjen de Korte,
  Arnaud Quette, Jim Klimov, Russell Kroll, Manuel Wolfshant, Greg
  Troxel, Mark Hansen, and many others who contribute to the
  nut-upsuser [nut-upsuser] and nut-upsdev [nut-upsdev] mailing lists.

  Earlier draft versions of this document were prepared using an SGML
  DTD [SGML] and an XML meta-DTD defined by HyTime Annex A [HyTimeA].
  Unlike XML, SGML offers markup minimization, and the earlier drafts
  took advantage of this.  The osgmlnorm [sgmlnorm] program generated
  the XML that was used as input to xml2rfc [RFC7991], which then
  created the document's current source.  The editor acknowledges the
  help received from Carsten Bormann and Julian Reschke in the xml2rfc
  mailing list.

  Many helpful comments were received from Eliot Lear, Bart Smit, David
  Zomaya, Joyce Norris, and Ted Mittelstaedt.

Author's Address

  Roger Price (editor)
  Network UPS Tools Project
  France
  Email: [email protected]