raid 1 on pcie adapters

nullroutenullroute Hosting Provider
edited November 2022 in General

Hello,

I want to put 2 of my nvme ssds in raid 1 on my Windows personal computer, but my motherboard only has an one m2 input, is it possible with 2 disks to perform raid 1 software?
1x m2 in motherboard slot
1x m2 via pcie adapter

My motherboard is a ASUS Prime B450M Gaming

pcie adapter pic:

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Comments

  • Yup would work in software no issues. M.2 uses pcie anyways. If you look at the adapter itself and the traces you will see it's fairly barbones just wires to the slot, no logic.

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  • RAID 1 is for weaklings.
    Mentally strong people use YOLORAID.
    YOLORAID works neatly on PCIe adapters.

    You can even find a PCIe adapter with two M.2 slots connecting to a single PCIe x8 or x16 slot.
    It requires setting bifurcation in BIOS.

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  • nullroutenullroute Hosting Provider

    @yoursunny said:
    RAID 1 is for weaklings.
    Mentally strong people use YOLORAID.
    YOLORAID works neatly on PCIe adapters.

    You can even find a PCIe adapter with two M.2 slots connecting to a single PCIe x8 or x16 slot.
    It requires setting bifurcation in BIOS.

    Yoloraid is a joke right?

    @james50a said:
    Yup would work in software no issues. M.2 uses pcie anyways. If you look at the adapter itself and the traces you will see it's fairly barbones just wires to the slot, no logic.

    Okay, I'll take a chance and buy this adapter, thanks.

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  • depends on how you want to build the 'raid' ... meaning that drive on the adapter usually won't appear in bios or the onboard raid tool.
    but windows can do mirroring OOB from the drive/partition management. you can even only mirror partitions instead of the whole drive and use other partitions unraided... just be careful with the efi and rescue partitions etc.

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  • @yoursunny said:
    RAID 1 is for weaklings.
    Mentally strong people use YOLORAID.
    YOLORAID works neatly on PCIe adapters.

    You can even find a PCIe adapter with two M.2 slots connecting to a single PCIe x8 or x16 slot.
    It requires setting bifurcation in BIOS.

    Yikes, RAID 1 is for weaklings.

    I double dare you to use RAID 0

    Thanked by (1)yoursunny

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  • skorupionskorupion Services Provider

    @Flying_Chinaman said:

    @yoursunny said:
    RAID 1 is for weaklings.
    Mentally strong people use YOLORAID.
    YOLORAID works neatly on PCIe adapters.

    You can even find a PCIe adapter with two M.2 slots connecting to a single PCIe x8 or x16 slot.
    It requires setting bifurcation in BIOS.

    Yikes, RAID 1 is for weaklings.

    I double dare you to use RAID 0

    If every provider wrote what RAID all shit would break loose.

    Crunchbits Technical Support, Technical Writer, and Sales
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  • @Flying_Chinaman said:

    @yoursunny said:
    RAID 1 is for weaklings.
    Mentally strong people use YOLORAID.
    YOLORAID works neatly on PCIe adapters.

    You can even find a PCIe adapter with two M.2 slots connecting to a single PCIe x8 or x16 slot.
    It requires setting bifurcation in BIOS.

    Yikes, RAID 1 is for weaklings.

    I double dare you to use RAID 0

    I use single 256GB NVMe diks.

  • NeoonNeoon OGSenpai

    @yoursunny said:
    RAID 1 is for weaklings.
    Mentally strong people use YOLORAID.
    YOLORAID works neatly on PCIe adapters.

    You can even find a PCIe adapter with two M.2 slots connecting to a single PCIe x8 or x16 slot.
    It requires setting bifurcation in BIOS.

    My KS3C uses 2TB spinning rust as YOLORAID.
    Best Raid ever.

    Thanked by (1)yoursunny
  • edited November 2022

    @nullroute said:
    Hello,

    I want to put 2 of my nvme ssds in raid 1 on my Windows personal computer, but my motherboard only has an one m2 input, is it possible with 2 disks to perform raid 1 software?
    1x m2 in motherboard slot
    1x m2 via pcie adapter

    My motherboard is a ASUS Prime B450M Gaming

    This won't apply to you but one word of caution: Your UEFI/BIOS needs to support booting from a PCIe NVMe device to be used as an OS drive. I used one of these M.2 PCIe adapters on a older system that did not have native M.2 support and the drive was not available until the OS booted from a SATA device, limiting how useful the drive could be pre-OS startup. Older platforms that have a UEFI but do not have it natively from the manufacturer do have 3rd party mods but obviously flash those at your own risk.

    Given that you are running on a chipset that has native NVMe support you will be fine, but it's something I wanted to mention since I've had this happen in the past.

    Also a note on SATA M.2 drives: https://superuser.com/questions/1303299/can-you-connect-an-m-2-sata-to-an-m-2-nvme-port

    Cheap dedis are my drug, and I'm too far gone to turn back.

  • nullroutenullroute Hosting Provider

    Just an update.

    The array cannot be built after the raid software is set in the BIOS, the disk which is in pcie is recognized perfectly and even managed to boot with only this drive in pcie (tested separately).

    Apparently it will be possible to carry out raid 1 with 1 disk to boot the operating system and the other 2 nvme in a single raid 1 in software raid. However, it will not serve as bootable primary disks.

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  • @Flying_Chinaman said:

    @yoursunny said:
    RAID 1 is for weaklings.
    Mentally strong people use YOLORAID.
    YOLORAID works neatly on PCIe adapters.

    You can even find a PCIe adapter with two M.2 slots connecting to a single PCIe x8 or x16 slot.
    It requires setting bifurcation in BIOS.

    Yikes, RAID 1 is for weaklings.

    I double dare you to use RAID 0

    I use RAID0 on my non-work stuff and just back them up to a NAS periodically. Worst case if I had to reinstall them from scratch instead of from a backup - no big deal ;).

    I've never personally tried to software raid between a native M.2 slot and an M.2 connected to PCIe via an adapter. I would think in theory it should be possible. I haven't used software raid in quite a while.

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  • I mean, alternatively could just boot the os off a thumb drive and software raid just fine from within windows.

    Thanked by (1)yoursunny

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