SM951 as OS boot device information |
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odiebugs
Newbie Joined: 07 Jul 2015 Status: Offline Points: 193 |
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The AHCI version carries the code H in the model number and the NVMe has a V in it. The AHCI is MZ-HPV xxx0, and the NVMe is a MZ- VPVxxx0. Sent out I guess to be tested in a few OEM machines but probably close to no one can get their hands on one until they decide to push them out. Kind of guessing, when they first denied they were any NVMe. I guess it's good they see what can happen before producing for retail and finding problems over time. They didn't have many happy people with the last EVO problem. Lots of the same story about the NVMe, but I see that even Anandtech has run some benches and got their hands on one. I have followed them for a long time and they are tops among the hardware crowd. Even Toms hardware, say they have a NVMe tested. They also have a different story in a way, saying they are close to going to the shelf. Looking at the bench tests, looks like they are NVMe.
Edited by odiebugs - 22 Jul 2015 at 8:40am |
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asrocking
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odiebugs
Newbie Joined: 07 Jul 2015 Status: Offline Points: 193 |
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Xaltar, also on the main post I say you add driver info.
We have all seen what windows AHCI, RST, drivers and the Intel AHCI, RST drivers can do in a per board case. People seen where the win AHCI beat the Intel AHCI. Sometimes some found the Intel was better, especially in RAID. Maybe adding how people should bench both to see what their system will run like with drivers. As time goes on we should see many update to the NVMe drivers from Intel and from Windows. As of now, windows has it's driver using Force Unit Access, IO writes, which go by the DRAM and write to flash, lowering bandwidth where the Intel doesn't.
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asrocking
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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I tried to load the Intel IRST "F6" AHCI driver into my SM951 once, but it did not work, and I was afraid to keep trying.
One odd thing I've found while using the SM951 (AHCI) is the Intel IRST Windows UI will not install when you install the Windows IRST driver and UI package. The IRST installer just hangs at the end, which is the UI installation stage. I must kill the process with Task Manager. The IRST driver was installed, but the IRST Windows UI won't. Even the latest IRST 14.5 version failed to do so. Fortunately when UEFI booting Win 8/8.1/10, the Ctrl i Intel RAID OROM interface becomes an option in the Advanced section of the UEFI. So I have the basic IRST RAID creation and deletion features, but not the entire IRST Windows UI feature set. Yet another interesting thing I learned while installing Windows on the SM951, if you don't have at least one drive connected to the Intel SATA ports, you cannot install the Intel IRST driver. Both the F6 and Windows IRST package fails to install until a drive is connected to the Intel SATA ports. Interesting how the SM951 will choose, or be assigned, the Windows AHCI driver during a Windows installation, while the IRST driver included with Windows could be used. Well, that driver might only be the RAID driver and not the AHCI driver. |
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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NVMe SSDs do not support AHCI AFAIK. The AHCI and NVMe versions of the SM951 have slightly different model numbers. Both are enthusiast level products that are not plug and play devices (when used as OS drives), and not meant for those that don't understand what they are all about. The same can be said for M.2, which really only has two versions, SATA and PCIe. IMO that is not a "minefield", but requires more attention than just grabbing an M.2 SSD off a shelf. Several reasons for that, the main one being the SSD's internal controller must be capable of using the NVMe protocol, which is more than simply driver/software support. The architecture of the SSD controller and the support chips for the controller (memory buffer) must be designed to work with NVMe. NVMe is a major change in non-volatile storage IO. AHCI was designed to work with the SATA storage hardware that existed at that time (ironically, HDDs), but NVMe was designed independently and cannot be applied to existing storage hardware. NVMe would be worthless for use with HDDs, since they cannot even keep up with what AHCI provides. While SSD users are still stuck with file systems designed for HDDs, NVMe is a major step beyond AHCI. |
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kechlion
Newbie Joined: 04 Aug 2015 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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This appears to be as good a place as any to ask about the SM951. I'm planning on doing a nice clean sweep install for Windows 10 (Win 7 then upgrade). The SSD I'm looking at is (http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-SM951-256GB-AHCI-MZHPV256HDGL-00000/dp/B00VELD92U). I have an ASRock X99 Extreme 4. I would have purchased it last year sometime around Christmas. My understanding is that since that particular SM951 is an AHCI board I won't need to do anything special, right?
I saw someone mention that the new M.2s aren't precisely plug and play, but it seems like it should be fine as an OS drive with no extra effort. Would that be correct? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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Xaltar
Moderator Group Joined: 16 May 2015 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 24638 |
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At most you will need to update to the latest bios to support booting from the SM951.
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kechlion
Newbie Joined: 04 Aug 2015 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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Thanks for the quick answer - that's simple and easy enough, I definitely appreciate it.
Since this thread is kind of about the SM951, I thought I'd share the fairly in depth review I saw of that particular SSD. So far it looks pretty nice - http://techreport.com/review/28446/samsung-sm951-pcie-ssd-reviewed Cheer!
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robman1
Newbie Joined: 07 Aug 2015 Location: El Paso, TX Status: Offline Points: 21 |
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Having a hard time finding the SM951 NVMe model but definitely holding out till its pointless. Does the Z97M OC Formula have enough PCIe 3.0 for above stated and a PowerColor Radeon R9 285 2GB TurboDuo Video Card to operate at max potentials?
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Xaltar
Moderator Group Joined: 16 May 2015 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 24638 |
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An R9 285 will not max out the bandwidth of a PCIE 3.0 x8 slot so even if you end up with only 8 lanes you will not see any performance hit. In fact, the R9 285 shouldn't noticeably bottleneck at x4.
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robman1
Newbie Joined: 07 Aug 2015 Location: El Paso, TX Status: Offline Points: 21 |
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Including the SM951 NVME model installed to PCIE slot? What configurations can I use for the Radeon 285 and SM951 to both be in PCIE 3.0 slots?
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