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Jun 9, 2022 at 14:07 comment added wazoox It looks like your PC has 2 NVME SSDs from the photo you sent. And yes, I think Intel FakeRAID for NVME just isn't supported at all under Linux so you should try disabling it.
Jun 9, 2022 at 9:35 history edited Diagon CC BY-SA 4.0
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Jun 9, 2022 at 8:37 history edited Diagon CC BY-SA 4.0
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Jun 9, 2022 at 8:31 history edited Diagon CC BY-SA 4.0
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Jun 9, 2022 at 7:49 comment added Diagon @wazoox - it's a Dell Inspiron 15. There is, as far as I can tell, only one drive, though the UEFI makes it look otherwise (see the pic I added to the question). I'm not sure if that means the NVME is split in half and made RAID? Ubuntu can't see the drive. Yes, I tried lsblk, fdisk -l, and looked all over /dev/disk/...
Jun 9, 2022 at 7:47 history edited Diagon CC BY-SA 4.0
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Jun 8, 2022 at 16:40 comment added djdomi I think the question regarding this is that the question belongs to the Intel fake raid
Jun 8, 2022 at 15:57 comment added wazoox Your description isn't clear. Your NVME drive is listed as "RAID" in the UEFI setup? What's the motherboard model? Then there's only one drive? So it's not a RAID anyway. You say the drive isn't detected. How do you determined that? did you try the "lsblk" command?
Jun 8, 2022 at 15:18 history migrated from serverfault.com (revisions)
Jun 8, 2022 at 12:53 history asked Diagon CC BY-SA 4.0