There's a GPIO you can read for undervoltage. 35 IIRC.
> On Aug 25, 2016, at 7:35 AM, Nigel Titley wrote:
>
>
>
>> On 25/08/16 15:27, Jan Kandziora wrote:
>>> Am 25.08.2016 um 16:07 schrieb Nigel Titley:
>>>
On 25/08/16 13:47, Matthias Urlichs wrote:
> On 25.08.2016 14:38, Nigel Tit
On 25/08/16 15:27, Jan Kandziora wrote:
> Am 25.08.2016 um 16:07 schrieb Nigel Titley:
>>
>> On 25/08/16 13:47, Matthias Urlichs wrote:
>>> On 25.08.2016 14:38, Nigel Titley wrote:
This is a possibility and it had crossed my mind that this might be the
issue but it doesn't explain why a
Am 25.08.2016 um 16:07 schrieb Nigel Titley:
>
>
> On 25/08/16 13:47, Matthias Urlichs wrote:
>> On 25.08.2016 14:38, Nigel Titley wrote:
>>> This is a possibility and it had crossed my mind that this might be the
>>> issue but it doesn't explain why a subsequent attempt to start it from
>>> the
On 25/08/16 13:47, Matthias Urlichs wrote:
> On 25.08.2016 14:38, Nigel Titley wrote:
>> This is a possibility and it had crossed my mind that this might be the
>> issue but it doesn't explain why a subsequent attempt to start it from
>> the command line fails.
> I had that problem on one of my R
On 25.08.2016 14:38, Nigel Titley wrote:
>
> This is a possibility and it had crossed my mind that this might be the
> issue but it doesn't explain why a subsequent attempt to start it from
> the command line fails.
I had that problem on one of my Raspberry Pi systems.
The issue went away after I
On 25/08/16 06:59, Andy Carter wrote:
> On Wednesday 24 Aug 2016 23:46:20 Jan Kandziora wrote:
>> Am 24.08.2016 um 20:47 schrieb Nigel Titley:
>>> I'm carrying on investigations but I'm running out of ideas. Can anyone
>>> make a suggestion?
>> Check whether the network is up and thus, the enet d