Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Modules stop work over time
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Is it possible that pi-hole is seeing those network queries (from those modules) and actively blocking them till you reset the whole thing again?
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Those are questions for the authors. If it were me though, I would disable everything from running on the rpi, or start with a completely clean setup (including a reformat and reload of the Raspbian image), and see where that takes you. But that’s me. I like to eliminate any and all possible causes. It’s also why I have multiple rpis sitting on my desk … I can easily and quickly spin one up from scratch.
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@KirAsh4 I only have one at home. And one at work… But I will soon lay my hands on some more.
Well, thanks for your input. I’ll dig deeper…
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Fresh error log
{ Error: socket hang up
at TLSSocket.onHangUp (_tls_wrap.js:1087:19)
at TLSSocket.g (events.js:286:16)
at emitNone (events.js:91:20)
at TLSSocket.emit (events.js:185:7)
at endReadableNT (_stream_readable.js:926:12)
at _combinedTickCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:74:11)
at process._tickDomainCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:122:9) code: ‘ECONNRESET’ } -
I think i resolved the issue… It was related to my use of Pi-hole.
I was using OpenDNS and according to logs in my router some connections were timed out or was unreachable. I changed it first to Google DNS and later to my ISPs DNS-severs. And, behold, no error in my pm2-logs (at least not at the moment) and the modules are up and runningSo, you were all on to something; @KirAsh4, @McSorley and @kckndrgn!