M2 PCIe issue |
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gareth_alien
Newbie Joined: 27 Nov 2015 Location: UK Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Posted: 27 Nov 2015 at 5:33am |
I'm on the process of building my new system and have found an issue. The have a X99 Extreme4/3.1 board and have installed a Samsung SM951 M.2 PCIe 3.0 (x4) NVMe SSD. I've not installed the OS yet because the drive is not listed under M2, but under SATA. How can I be sure the drive is running via PCIe and not SATA?
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jwsg
Newbie Joined: 07 Nov 2015 Status: Offline Points: 6 |
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There is no SATA 951 only PCIe - you might have the older AHCI version (the same protocol that runs over SATA on other SSDs) or NVMe (as used on the new 950)
Edited by jwsg - 27 Nov 2015 at 8:40am |
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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I assume you have your NVMe SM951 installed in the Ultra M.2 port, or possibly an M.2 to PCIe adapter card? Either way, it is impossible for an NVMe SM951 to be using the SATA interface. All SM951s have the equivalent of a storage controller on the SSD, whether NVMe or AHCI, and do not use the board's SATA controller. If you are seeing your SM951 listed among the SATA drives, that is probably related to this, from your board's specifications: S_SATA3_2 connector is shared with Ultra M.2 Socket Intel allows some of the PCIe resources on your board to be configured for different purposes. Your board shares resources between the Ultra M.2 port and the S_SATA3_2 port. The Storage Configuration screen in the UEFI may even have an option to select which port will be assigned to those resources. Do you have a SATA drive connected to the S_SATA3_2 port? Do you see your SM951 listed in the S_SATA3_2 line in Storage Configuration? What OS is installed in the PC you have the SM951 in now? Did you install an NVMe driver for your SM951? Don't expect an NVMe SSD to be recognized in a board's UEFI in the same way as SATA drives are. They don't even appear in the M.2 port list in the UEFI on the latest Intel boards. You can be sure your drive is using the PCIe NVMe interface, by running a benchmark like AS SSD. |
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gareth_alien
Newbie Joined: 27 Nov 2015 Location: UK Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Thanks everyone - turns out I was confusing myself. I was looking at the M2 entry under SATA, not noticing the NVMe section in the BIOS. First computer I've built in many years and I still need to get used to the new technology! Sorry for being a bit of a newbie time waster.
Edited by gareth_alien - 28 Nov 2015 at 4:34am |
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