I'm sorry if you think that I'm wasting your time.
From my point of view, it's the other way around since all it's written in the OP!
And you still saying to run a packet capture means you didn't get the point or you know HA less than me!
No, my problem is not just the thermostat!
All the sensors and switches loses their state, but while they get them back in a while kapart from the battery powered sensors), the thermostat has to be set back manually.
HA doesn't query any state.
The thermostat is within HA, it doesn't have to query anything from anything, that's what I'm investigating.
The setpoint is set in HA and HA retains that number.
Since the updates comes from the devices and ate not requested from HA, some exposes their statuses in less than a minute, some (like temperature sensors that are battery powered) sends their statuses very less frequently (if the temperature doesn't change, they communicate every 30/40 minutes.
All the devices (sensors and switches )sends their status via MQTT; I've manually configured them all via yaml.
The problem is in HA itself since as soon as I reload the config, the thermostat (which is a HA entity by itself), loses the setpoint and the status (heater/cool/off).
Nothing like that, the resources are more than enough, no peaks.
It "goes back to normal" when all the sensors/switches have sent their status and when I manually turn the heater back on and set a new setpoint for the thermostat
I've edited the post with some other information.
About your configuration, how does HA ask for the state? This mean that your HA loses all the values too, but it repopulates them automatically. What about the entities that provides values FROM HA itself? For example the setpoint of the thermostat?
I'm using HA OS on Proxmox.
About the configuration, what do you need to know? Do you wanna see it all?
All the sensors and switches slowly goes back to "normal" as soon as they publish their state.
Some SIM costs 10€ and lasts for 10 years with 500MB (1NCE) that for a tracker are a lot! (Maybe not enough for 10 years, but some year is still a very good deal.)
That's not true at all!
I'm using some 1NCE SIM that cost 10€ for 10 years of connectivity with 500MB of data. For my car I've calculated that it should last about 6/7 years, but even if it would last 1 year, it's still less than 1€/month!
OP "just" needs to find the tracker and selfhost something like Traccar.
I run it on a Fujitsu Futro S720 thin client (bought for 40€ on ebay) with a VLAN aware switch.
I know the Futro is not available in the US, but there is an HP thin client similar to it.
I don't see contraindications about that, I have 2 Wireguard VPNs (to my VPS and to my home) on all the time and I haven't noticed any extra battery draining.
Have you tried a different calendar app?
I'm using Etar and it never missed an appointment. I pair it with Calendar Notification to be able to postpone alarms, it hasn't been updated in a while, but...it works!
Me too!
I have some Aqara temperature sensors that I've bought about 4/5 years ago and I've changed the batteries once in the ones that are nearer the coordinator, twice for the far one.
It doesn't last as much as it did when it was new (about 5/6 hours), and that's expected, but it still last about 3/4 hours and it seems pretty decent to me!
Are you sure this is true with nowadays batteries too?
My laptop is almost always connected to the power supply, is about 5 years old and the battery still seams to be in a good shape.
I'm sorry if you think that I'm wasting your time. From my point of view, it's the other way around since all it's written in the OP! And you still saying to run a packet capture means you didn't get the point or you know HA less than me!