This can easily be achieved by using the dummy-ups
driver.
The port
field acts as the reference to the "other" UPS served
by another NUT server.
Example with dummy-ups
driver:
[proxy] driver = dummy-ups port = upsname@ip-or-hostname[:port] desc = "UPS proxy for UPS upsname on server ip-or-hostname"
Also note that there is a clone
driver with similar purpose,
which allows users to group clients to a particular outlet of
a device with a "real" driver running locally, and deal with
this output as if it was a normal UPS.
Here the port
field references the driver socket name that
the "real" UPS driver is using. See its manual page for more
details and caveats.
Example with clone
driver:
[realups] driver = usbhid-ups port = auto
[clone-outlet-1] driver = clone port = usbhid-ups-realups load.on = outlet.1.load.on load.off = outlet.1.load.off load.status = outlet.1.status [...]
This allows to group load attached to a separately manageable outlet (or group of outlets) on larger UPS and ePDUs, in order to power those devices on/off together. This may be also useful to delegate management of feeds to devices for purposes like hosting or supporting hardware for smaller teams sharing a rack in a larger company.