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    A New Chapter for MagicMirror: The Community Takes the Lead
    Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.

    dead SD-card every aprox. 6 months

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    • A Offline
      almliden
      last edited by

      I know this is an old thread, but hope someone finds this helpful.

      1. Use a proper power source, one reason for SD-cards to wear out fast is that the RPi doesn’t receive enough power to actually perform the writes and therefore writes bad data which corrupts the card. Depending on which model it is it might need more power. Since I switched to better power supplies I haven’t had a dead SD-card for quite a while, so it seem to have an impact.

      2. Use RPi-images that writes to /tmpfs, or configure them to write temporary data to RAM to reduce wear on the SD-card.

      3. Since it hasn’t been mentioned before in this thread, avoid powering off the device by removing power since this could cancel an ongoing write which potentially could corrupt the card. If you need to power it off, do it properly.

      SergeS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • SergeS Offline
        Serge @almliden
        last edited by

        @almliden said in dead SD-card every aprox. 6 months:

        Use RPi-images that writes to /tmpfs, or configure them to write temporary data to RAM to reduce wear on the SD-card.

        How to do that?

        MoreLinuxM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • MoreLinuxM Offline
          MoreLinux @Serge
          last edited by MoreLinux

          @Serge said in dead SD-card every aprox. 6 months:

          @almliden said in dead SD-card every aprox. 6 months:

          Use RPi-images that writes to /tmpfs, or configure them to write temporary data to RAM to reduce wear on the SD-card.

          How to do that?

          As root user, edit the file /etc/fstab and add the following lines:

          tmpfs    /tmp    tmpfs    defaults,noatime,nosuid,size=100m    0 0
          tmpfs    /var/tmp    tmpfs    defaults,noatime,nosuid,size=30m    0 0
          tmpfs    /var/log    tmpfs    defaults,noatime,nosuid,mode=0755,size=100m    0 0
          tmpfs    /var/run    tmpfs    defaults,noatime,nosuid,mode=0755,size=2m    0 0
          tmpfs    /var/spool/mqueue    tmpfs    defaults,noatime,nosuid,mode=0700,gid=12,size=30m    0 0
          
          

          Now most of the write intensive files write to the Raspberry PI’s ram.

          Disable the swap file, as it can be write intensive too. First check if you have swap activated with the command:

          free -h
          

          If your total swap is 0B, you are good, if not, execute the following commands:

          dphys-swapfile swapoff
          dphys-swapfile uninstall
          systemctl disable dphys-swapfile
          

          Now the command activated with the command:

          free -h
          

          should tell you that you are not using the swap file anymore.

          P 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • S Offline
            sdetweil
            last edited by

            i switched to using a small ssd USB stick, boot from the sd card, run from the usb stick… all the i/o goes to the ssd

            Sam

            How to add modules

            learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • BKeyportB Offline
              BKeyport Module Developer
              last edited by

              can you explain how to do this, or provide a link to an explaination?

              The "E" in "Javascript" stands for "Easy"

              S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • S Offline
                sdetweil @BKeyport
                last edited by sdetweil

                https://www.tomshardware.com/news/boot-raspberry-pi-from-usb,39782.html

                really easy, copy all the data from sd to ssd, then change one line in sd config, reboot… voila

                on one machine I had trouble with regularly, I had a 500gb ssd drive I wasn’t using…
                for my main dev machine, I just bought a 128gig usb stick ssd. came with a cable, took 20 minutes to copy the data…spent $35 from amazon

                Sam

                How to add modules

                learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • S Offline
                  sdetweil @sdetweil
                  last edited by

                  @BKeyport I am NOT trying to BOOT from the usb stick, most pi’s don’t support that

                  Sam

                  How to add modules

                  learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • BKeyportB Offline
                    BKeyport Module Developer
                    last edited by

                    Speak of the evil, the evil happens. Blew up my SD card.

                    The "E" in "Javascript" stands for "Easy"

                    S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • S Offline
                      sdetweil @BKeyport
                      last edited by

                      @BKeyport boooooo

                      Sam

                      How to add modules

                      learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • P Offline
                        PHAGE.GOV @MoreLinux
                        last edited by

                        @MoreLinux so how do you edit this text file using root?

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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