Hello all, and hope all is well Has anyone installed / on an nvme ssd for Cent 7? Would anyone know if that is supported? I have installed using Arch Linux, but at the time, mid last year, had to patch grub to recognize nvme. Arch is obviously running a much more recent kernel. Not afraid todo some empirical leg work. Just asking if anyone had tried already
thanks all for any/all help regards
On Apr 19, 2017, at 4:25 PM, jsl6uy js16uy js16uy@gmail.com wrote:
Hello all, and hope all is well Has anyone installed / on an nvme ssd for Cent 7? Would anyone know if that is supported? I have installed using Arch Linux, but at the time, mid last year, had to patch grub to recognize nvme. Arch is obviously running a much more recent kernel. Not afraid todo some empirical leg work. Just asking if anyone had tried already
I installed RHEL 7.3 (same kernel as CentOS7) and it worked fine except for the fact that ‘efibootmgr’ defaults to using /dev/sda, and the disk is called /dev/nvme0n1, so doing stuff like changing the default boot back to Windows (dual boot) didn’t work without some tweaking.
-- Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org
Sweet! Thanks much for the update sir! We are locked on a ver, ver == repo/pkg time slice, within the Cent7u2 release run, but this could be a reason to push the pointer forward in our infra I can live with those headaches Thanks again Will report back if we do anything above normal tweaking
On Wed, Apr 19, 2017 at 4:23 PM, Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org wrote:
On Apr 19, 2017, at 4:25 PM, jsl6uy js16uy js16uy@gmail.com wrote:
Hello all, and hope all is well Has anyone installed / on an nvme ssd for Cent 7? Would anyone know if
that
is supported? I have installed using Arch Linux, but at the time, mid last year, had to patch grub to recognize nvme. Arch is obviously running a much more
recent
kernel. Not afraid todo some empirical leg work. Just asking if anyone had tried already
I installed RHEL 7.3 (same kernel as CentOS7) and it worked fine except for the fact that ‘efibootmgr’ defaults to using /dev/sda, and the disk is called /dev/nvme0n1, so doing stuff like changing the default boot back to Windows (dual boot) didn’t work without some tweaking.
-- Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org
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