I got 0 back when doing that command. Jude <jdashiel at panix dot com> "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940) . On Mon, 3 Oct 2022, progandy wrote:
Hello,
The kernel should be able to detect those remapped nvme drives and report them in the ahci sysfs tree.
cat /sys/bus/pci/drivers/ahci/*:*/remapped_nvme
This command should report a number greater than 0 if there is such a remapped nvme. Since the nvme is listed in the lsblk output, there should be no remapping occuring, though.
What drives do you expect the machine to have?
Your output lists one unpartitioned scsi/sata drive as /dev/sda, one nvme drive as /dev/nvme0n1 including three partitions, one optical drive as /dev/sro, and some zram (compressed ram).
parted should be able to work with both sda and nvme0n1.
I think the -l option for parted should list all drives and partitions it can access.
parted -l
-- ProgAndy
Am 03.10.22 um 18:52 schrieb Jude DaShiell:
That needs sighted people to even look at those settings let alone adjust them. . On Mon, 3 Oct 2022, nhasian@gmail.com wrote:
By any chance is the disk controller in the EUFI/BIOS set to RAID or Intel rapid storage technology? Try changing it to ACHI and see if that resolves your issue.