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@xxxxxxxxx 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. > >> >