![]() ![]() The second most important factor for your success is to use a power supply that is capable of driving your Pi 4 and (!) your SSD. Maybe you guys can give it a shot with a good power supply and report back. This seems to support this hypothesis: #2513Įxternal usb3 NVMe also uses a lot of power. Since we're all speculating, maybe 10.1 just uses more power. I hope you are aware that many Pi4b users have a very unstable system at the moment. Home Assistant Community Store GitHub API Rpi4-64 (Raspberry Pi 4/400 64-bit OS) What version of Home Assistant Operating System is installed?ġ0.1 Did you upgrade the Operating System.Ģ.Upgrade from 10.0 to 10.1 Anything in the Supervisor logs that might be useful for us?Ĭan't read relevant logs since I downgraded System information System Information version This should allow to use Home Assistant OS on systems with lower amounts of RAM with the trade-off of slightly higher storage wear. zswap instead of swap in zram is used.I suspect it has something to do with the following 'features', from release notes: It yet remains to be seen whether I get my old regular 1 month or more uptime without crashes. But still it crashed, then about every other day.ĭatabase is about to upgrade from schema version: 41 to: 30 I since changed the power supply from a 20W 4 Ampere to a macbook usb-c charger and updated to HA OS 10.1 which, brought some stability improvement. I connected the HDMI and saw that it was the SQUASHFS becoming read only and journald errors. Luckily mine did, it just kept crashing every 5 hours or so. I read that some people were not even able to boot when they updated with a similar NVME SSD Pi4 hardware configuration. I updated from HA OS 9.5 to 10.0, the day it was released and it has been a nightmare since. USB Boot to ORICO SSD Portable External 128GB Mini M.2 NVME ![]()
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