VMware with HPE SimpliVity Support: UPS without Outlet Groups
Example 1a: Turn off the UPS enabled, no shutdown command file or SSH
action configured, external vCenter Server Appliance, PowerChute on physical
Windows machine.
PowerChute is installed on a physical machine outside the Cluster, configured
for a Single/Redundant UPS configuration with 2 nodes in a Cluster. The
option to Turn off the UPS is enabled on the Shutdown Settings page, Delay
Host Maintenance Mode is enabled on the Virtualization Settings page.
No shutdown command file or SSH action configured. The durations in this
example are as follows:
- VM and vApp Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- OmniStack Virtual Controller Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- Delay Host Maintenance Mode = 30 seconds
When a critical UPS event, such as On Battery occurs, the following
sequence is triggered.

- PowerChute reports
that the UPS is on battery.
- After the shutdown
delay configured for the On Battery event has elapsed, PowerChute
issues a command to turn off the UPS. UPS turnoff starts.
- PowerChute to
shut down User VMs and vApps.
- After 2 minutes
(VM/vApp Shutdown Delay), PowerChute shuts down the HPE SimpliVity
OmniStack Virtual Controller.
- After 120 seconds
(OVC Shutdown Delay), the VMware Hosts enter maintenance mode and
are shut down sequentially if all VMs are powered off, otherwise
the maintenance mode task is cancelled. The delay between placing
each host into maintenance mode is the value set for Delay Maintenance
Mode (30 seconds).
- After a 70 second
delay, the operating system on the physical machine running PowerChute
starts to shut down.
- The UPS will wait
the amount of time indicated by one of the following, whichever is
greater:
Low Battery Duration or Maximum
Required Delay.
These are shown on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC interface.
- After this delay, a further non-configurable
two minute delay is counted down.
- The UPS will then turn off after the
user-configurable Shutdown Delay time
has elapsed.
This is configurable on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC
user interface.
It is recommended that the Low Battery Duration
is configured to allow enough time for the Operating System shutdown to
complete. Ideally the operating system should have shut down before the
non-configurable two minute delay (step 8) starts to count down.
Example 1b: Turn off the UPS enabled, no shutdown command file or SSH
action configured, internal vCenter Server Appliance, PowerChute deployed
as a VM.
PowerChute is deployed as VM inside the Cluster, configured for a Single/Redundant
UPS configuration with 2 nodes in a Cluster. HA is enabled on the Cluster
and there is an internal vCenter Server Appliance. The option to Turn
off the UPS is enabled on the Shutdown Settings page, Delay Host Maintenance
Mode is enabled on the Virtualization Settings page. No shutdown command
file or SSH action configured. The durations in this example are as follows:
- VM and vApp Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- OmniStack Virtual Controller Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- Delay Host Maintenance Mode = 30 seconds
- vCenter Server Appliance Shutdown Duration = 240 seconds
When a critical UPS event, such as On Battery occurs, the following
sequence is triggered.

- PowerChute reports
that the UPS is on battery.
- After the shutdown
delay configured for the On Battery event has elapsed, PowerChute
issues a command to turn off the UPS. UPS turnoff starts.
- PowerChute starts
to shut down User VMs and vApps.
- After 2 minutes
(VM/vApp Shutdown Delay), PowerChute shuts down the vCenter Server
Appliance.
- After 240 seconds
(vCSA Shutdown Delay), PowerChute issues a command to shut down the
OmniStack Virtual Controller VMs.
- After 120 seconds
(OVC Shutdown Delay), the VMware Hosts enter maintenance mode and
are shut down sequentially if all VMs are powered off, otherwise
the maintenance mode task is cancelled. The delay between placing
each host into maintenance mode is the value set for Delay Maintenance
Mode (30 seconds). The PowerChute host is powered off last.
- The UPS will wait
the amount of time indicated by one of the following, whichever is
greater:
Low Battery Duration or Maximum
Required Delay
These are shown on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC interface.
- After this delay, a further non-configurable
two minute delay is counted down.
- The UPS will then turn off after the
user-configurable Shutdown Delay time
has elapsed.
This is configurable on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC
user interface.
It is recommended that the Low Battery Duration
is configured to allow enough time for the Operating System shutdown to
complete.
Example 2a: Turn off the UPS enabled, shutdown command file configured, external
vCenter Server Appliance, PowerChute on physical Windows machine.
PowerChute is installed on a physical machine outside the Cluster, configured
for a Single/Redundant UPS configuration with 2 nodes in a Cluster. The
option to Turn off the UPS is enabled on the Shutdown Settings page, Delay
Host Maintenance Mode is enabled on the Virtualization Settings page.
A shutdown command file is configured. The durations in this example are
as follows:
- VM and vApp Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- OmniStack Virtual Controller Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- Delay Host Maintenance Mode = 30 seconds
When a critical UPS event, such as On Battery occurs, the following
sequence is triggered.

- PowerChute reports
that the UPS is on battery.
- After the shutdown
delay configured for the On Battery event has elapsed, PowerChute
issues a command to turn off the UPS. UPS turnoff starts.
- PowerChute starts
to shut down User VMs and vApps.
- After 2 minutes
(VM/vApp Shutdown Duration), PowerChute shuts down the HPE SimpliVity
OmniStack Virtual Controller.
- After 120 seconds
(OVC Shutdown Delay), PowerChute starts to execute the shutdown command
file.
- After the delay
configured for the command file has elapsed, the VMware Hosts enter
maintenance mode and are shut down sequentially if all VMs are
powered off, otherwise the maintenance mode task is cancelled. The
delay between placing each host into maintenance mode is the value
set for Delay Maintenance Mode (30 seconds).
- After a 70 second
delay, the operating system on the physical machine running PowerChute
starts to shut down.
- The UPS will wait
the amount of time indicated by one of the following, whichever is
greater:
Low Battery Duration or Maximum
Required Delay.
These are shown on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC interface.
- After this delay, a further non-configurable
two minute delay is counted down.
- The UPS will then turn off after the
user-configurable Shutdown Delay time
has elapsed.
This is configurable on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC
user interface.
It is recommended that the Low Battery Duration
is configured to allow enough time for the Operating System shutdown to
complete. Ideally the operating system should have shut down before the
non-configurable two minute delay (step 9) starts to count down.
Example 2b: Turn off the UPS enabled, shutdown command file configured, internal
vCenter Server Appliance, PowerChute deployed as a VM.
PowerChute is installed as a VM inside the Cluster, configured for a
Single/Redundant UPS configuration with 2 nodes in a Cluster. HA is enabled
on the Cluster and there is an internal vCenter Server Appliance. The
option to Turn off the UPS is enabled on the Shutdown Settings page, Delay
Host Maintenance Mode is enabled on the Virtualization Settings page.
A shutdown command file is configured. The durations in this example are
as follows:
- VM and vApp Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- OmniStack Virtual Controller Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- Delay Host Maintenance Mode = 30 seconds
- vCenter Server Appliance Shutdown Duration = 240 seconds
When a critical UPS event, such as On Battery occurs, the following
sequence is triggered.

- PowerChute reports
that the UPS is on battery.
- After the shutdown
delay configured for the On Battery event has elapsed, PowerChute
issues a command to turn off the UPS. UPS turnoff starts.
- PowerChute starts
to shut down User VMs and vApps.
- After 2 minutes
(VM/vApp Shutdown Duration), PowerChute shuts down the vCenter Server
Appliance.
- After 240 seconds
(vCSA Shutdown Duration), PowerChute shuts down the HPE SimpliVity
OmniStack Virtual Controller.
- After 120 seconds
(OVC Shutdown Delay), PowerChute starts to execute the shutdown command
file.
- After the delay
configured for the command file has elapsed, the VMware Hosts enter
maintenance mode and are shut down sequentially if all VMs are
powered off, otherwise the maintenance mode task is cancelled. The
delay between placing each host into maintenance mode is the value
set for Delay Maintenance Mode (30 seconds). The PowerChute host is
powered off last.
- The UPS will wait
the amount of time indicated by one of the following, whichever is
greater:
Low Battery Duration or Maximum
Required Delay.
These are shown on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC interface.
- After this delay, a further non-configurable
two minute delay is counted down.
- The UPS will then turn off after the
user-configurable Shutdown Delay time
has elapsed.
This is configurable on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC
user interface.
It is recommended that the Low Battery Duration
is configured to allow enough time for the Operating System shutdown to
complete.
Example 3a: Turn off the UPS enabled, shutdown command file configured,
Execute Command File after Host Shutdown enabled, external vCenter Server
Appliance, PowerChute on physical Windows machine.
PowerChute is installed on a physical machine outside the Cluster, configured
for a Single/Redundant UPS configuration with 2 nodes in a Cluster. The
option to Turn off the UPS is enabled on the Shutdown Settings page, Delay
Host Maintenance Mode is enabled on the Virtualization Settings page.
A shutdown command file is configured. Execute Command File after Host
Shutdown is enabled, with a delay of 30 seconds applied. The durations
in this example are as follows:
- VM and vApp Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- OmniStack Virtual Controller Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- Delay Host Maintenance Mode = 30 seconds
When a critical UPS event, such as On Battery occurs, the following
sequence is triggered.

- PowerChute reports
that the UPS is on battery.
- After the shutdown
delay configured for the On Battery event has elapsed, PowerChute
issues a command to turn off the UPS. UPS turnoff starts.
- PowerChute starts
to shut down User VMs and vApps.
- After 2 minutes
(VM/vApp Shutdown Duration), PowerChute shuts down the HPE SimpliVity
OmniStack Virtual Controller.
- After 120 seconds
(OVC Shutdown Delay), the VMware Hosts enter maintenance mode and
are shut down sequentially if all VMs are powered off, otherwise
the maintenance mode task is cancelled. The delay between placing
each host into maintenance mode is the value set for Delay Maintenance
Mode (30 seconds).
- Following the
30 second delay configured for the Execute
Command File after Host Shutdown option, PowerChute starts
to execute the shutdown command file.
- After the duration
configured for the shutdown command file has elapsed, the OS Shutdown
Command is issued and an additional 70 second delay is counted down
before the operating system on the physical machine running PowerChute
starts to shut down.
- The UPS will wait
the amount of time indicated by one of the following, whichever is
greater:
Low Battery Duration or Maximum
Required Delay.
These are shown on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC interface.
- After this delay, a further non-configurable
two minute delay is counted down.
- The UPS will then turn off after the
user-configurable Shutdown Delay time
has elapsed.
This is configurable on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC
user interface.
It is recommended that the Low Battery Duration
is configured to allow enough time for the Operating System shutdown to
complete. Ideally the operating system should have shut down before the
non-configurable two minute delay (step 9) starts to count down.
Example 3b: Turn off the UPS enabled, SSH action configured, internal
vCenter Server Appliance, PowerChute deployed as a VM.
PowerChute is installed as a VM inside the Cluster, configured for a
Single/Redundant UPS configuration with 2 nodes in a Cluster. HA is enabled
on the Cluster and there is an internal vCenter Server Appliance. The
option to Turn off the UPS is enabled on the Shutdown Settings page, Delay
Host Maintenance Mode is enabled on the Virtualization Settings page.
A SSH action is configured to execute before host shutdown, with a delay
of 30 seconds applied. The durations in this example are as follows:
- VM and vApp Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- OmniStack Virtual Controller Shutdown Duration = 120 seconds
- Delay Host Maintenance Mode = 30 seconds
- vCenter Server Appliance Shutdown Duration = 240 seconds
When a critical UPS event, such as On Battery occurs, the following
sequence is triggered.

- PowerChute reports
that the UPS is on battery.
- After the shutdown
delay configured for the On Battery event has elapsed, PowerChute
issues a command to turn off the UPS. UPS turnoff starts.
- PowerChute starts
to shut down User VMs and vApps.
- After 2 minutes
(VM/vApp Shutdown Duration), PowerChute shuts down the vCenter
Server Appliance.
- After 240 seconds
(vCSA Shutdown Delay), PowerChute shuts down the HPE SimpliVity OmniStack
Virtual Controller.
- After 120 seconds
(OVC Shutdown Delay), PowerChute waits the 30 second delay configured
for Execute SSH Action before Host
Shutdown, and starts to execute the SSH action.
- VMware Hosts enter
maintenance mode and are shut down sequentially if all VMs are
powered off, otherwise the maintenance mode task is cancelled. The
delay between placing each host into maintenance mode is the value
set for Delay Maintenance Mode (30 seconds). The PowerChute host is
powered off last.
- The UPS will wait
the amount of time indicated by one of the following, whichever is
greater:
Low Battery Duration or Maximum
Required Delay.
These are shown on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC interface.
- After this delay, a further non-configurable
two minute delay is counted down.
- The UPS will then turn off after the
user-configurable Shutdown Delay time
has elapsed.
This is configurable on the Configuration - Shutdown page in the NMC
user interface.
It is recommended that the Low Battery Duration
is configured to allow enough time for the Operating System shutdown to
complete.