How to create Samsung 950 Pro RAID 0, Z170 OC F? |
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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The Windows version, Windows 7 in particular, is a problem IF you want to use your PCIe SSDs in RAID 0 as the OS/boot volume. The RAID array creation is independent of that, as long as you have installed the IRST version 14 software, the latest version preferably, and your board supports it. You can use Windows 7 with PCIe SSDs in RAID 0 as data drives fine, given the CSM configuration you have. Regarding Intel's statement in their forum, my response to it is talk is cheap. Show me an example of IRST version 14 software on a Skylake board that allows PCIe SSDs in the M.2 slots (connected to the chipset's DMI3 lanes), to be used independently or combined with PCIe SSDs in the board's PCIe slots and PCIe 3.0 lanes (from the CPU) in the creation of RAID arrays. That is, while allowing the remaining CPU's PCIe 3.0 lanes to function normally with video cards. The ability of the IRST version 14 software to communicate with both of those separate resources (PCIE 3.0 in the CPU, and DMI3 in the chipset) is the key and what needs to be proven. I am skeptical about that capability. I would love to be wrong about this, or that it is a matter of some physical design configuration of the mother board, or an internal UEFI firmware configuration. ASRock has always supported the most advanced storage configurations and technologies on their mother boards, before other manufactures did. I learned that long before I became a moderator in their forum. I'm not supporting or defending ASRock here, just relating facts. (For example, I am using an Intel 750 PCIe SSD as the OS drive with Win 10 in my Z77 Extreme4 mother board. Of course I'm using a Beta UEFI that has NVMe support, and an updated CSM option, but otherwise I was UEFI booting my SATA SSDs not long after this board was released.) Intel, show me where it states these things in your IRST documentation. Or if it can be done with a Windows IRQ configuration. Back to your situation, some more or repeated suggestions from my PM: Forget seeing NVMe SSDs in the Storage Configuration screen, use System Browser in the UEFI, and the NVMe Configuration screen in the Advanced section, to verify detection of the NVMe SSDs. IF you can see NVMe SSDs in System Browser that are in the PCIe slots (with adapters in your case) and in the M.2 slots, at the same time, that is a good start. Do not dismiss the use of the CSM option as not needed for your needs. If your video source is GOP compatible, setting CSM to Disabled will only help you, it won't cause problems. Removing all SATA drives (or removing their power) from the Intel SATA ports while you try to get the NVMe SSDs recognized by the IRST utility in the UEFI may make a big difference. The IRST PCIe Remapping option in Storage Configuration (HA! So much for ignoring the Storage Configuration screen, right? ) must be Enabled when using NVMe SSDs in the M.2 slots, with the goal of using them in RAID arrays. Do we need an IRST PCIe Remapping option for NVMe SSDs used in the PCIe slots on Skylake boards? I don't know. That seven NVMe SSD RAID 0 array shown with your board must have been created using the Windows software RAID feature. I should have known. I have seen benchmark results of those arrays with NVMe SSDs being quite good, except for 4K read speeds. That is typical. |
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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Yes you are correct. I think someone else told you about this... |
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maurizio
Newbie Joined: 09 Oct 2015 Status: Offline Points: 17 |
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Here is something confusing: Various review articles seem to say that PCIE1, PCIE4, and PCIE6 carry CPU lanes traffic (the quote from TweakTown above would seem to be saying as much, for example: "The first, third, and last PCI-E 16x slots are wired to the CPU."). But the tech support statement is that "PCIe6 slot would be from south bridge on this board." Isn't that a contradiction? |
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clubfoot
Newbie Joined: 28 Mar 2016 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 246 |
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If I'm not mistaken that applies to the x99 chipset. The z170 on our boards sacrifice SATA and express ports instead of PCI graphics lanes.
It has to do with the cpu having more available lanes on x99. Again I could be wrong.
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