01-18-2021, 08:11 PM
(01-17-2021, 10:01 PM)dsimic Wrote: Thank you for checking. Did you actually turn the laptop off and on while testing the behavior of those two SMART parameters? A reboot alone, without powering off and on, might not be enough for those two parameters to be reset by the NVMe drive.
Yep, even fully powering off, this drive retains those values.
(01-17-2021, 10:01 PM)dsimic Wrote: Speaking about the two available power inputs, the barrel port and the Type-C PD port, PineBook Pro can actually draw a slightly higher current from the barrel port, compared with the Type-C PD port. That's the way the PineBook Pro's internal charging circuitry is actually configured. With that in mind, using the barrel port is actually less likely to cause any power-related issues.
Good to know! The main reason I'm using USB-C over barrel power is that I don't have a USB-A 15W adapter; the 15W adapter I have is a USB-C to USB-C, and the outlet provides only 2.4A max on the USB-A port, so right now USB-C is going to give me more power. Good to know I should invest in a new adapter, though. Do you know what the specification for the barrel port is? I was under the assumption that both were rated for 5V 3A max.
I did have some issues today while plugged into USB-C, similar to what is described in this thread, where my screen appeared unresponsive, and subsequent attempts to boot resulted in the same power LED symptoms as the video. After leaving it to cool for an hour, same symptoms. I then charged it for an hour or two, and all was well. I'm guessing I either overheated it and the battery drained too quickly; was fine an hour beforehand, but had it in a less cooling-friendly spot.
(01-17-2021, 10:01 PM)dsimic Wrote: It would be great if you could manage to perform the additional testing, as you've described it. Previous reports on the issues caused by the instability of PCIe Gen2 speed had different error messages than yours, but everything can be checked only through the additional testing.
Until the above happened, I again ran a restic restore overnight, this time with 5500 max exlat set. The result was still no disappearing NVMe, so I think for this drive, it's just APST with the PS 4 that's the issue; PS 3 seems to work.
Going to try leaving my PBP on overnight with Gen 1 and no I/O this time, to see if the drive disappears if it goes down to idle PS 3 without heavy load. If that works fine, I'll give Gen 2 speeds a shot.