In case of power failure on the network, does the Pi desktop turn off the raspberry Pi safely?
In case of power failure on the network, does the Pi desktop turn off the raspberry Pi safely?
Once the power goes, the raspberry pi has no way of "shutting down nicely": the power is gone.
An UPS can help in such a case. IIRC, you can buy them commercially.
I am currently working on a project where I powered a raspberry pi (compute module) from a lab power-supply. I Had set the current limit to 1.05A (5.4W), and my power supply at one point in the boot process decided: That's more than 1.05A, you can go... well, the power dip is less than 100ms, but the pi crashed and then starts to boot again and in the end it keeps crashing at exactly the same point every time.... (all this while the average current is now under 600mA).
Once the power goes, the raspberry pi has no way of "shutting down nicely": the power is gone.
An UPS can help in such a case. IIRC, you can buy them commercially.
I am currently working on a project where I powered a raspberry pi (compute module) from a lab power-supply. I Had set the current limit to 1.05A (5.4W), and my power supply at one point in the boot process decided: That's more than 1.05A, you can go... well, the power dip is less than 100ms, but the pi crashed and then starts to boot again and in the end it keeps crashing at exactly the same point every time.... (all this while the average current is now under 600mA).
I Had set the current limit to 1.05A (5.4W), and my power supply at one point in the boot process decided: That's more than 1.05A, you can go... (all this while the average current is now under 600mA).
About a year ago I measured the current draw of a Pi 3 using a current probe on my scope. In this attached shot, you can see there are >1 Amp transients. This measurement was like a PS1 emulator was running Final Fantasy 8. I thought I had one from the boot process, but I cannot find it at the moment.