May 27, 20197 yr Hi, I have a VROC supported Acer PCIe card with 4x NVMe M.2 ssd slots and VROC supported motherboard. Before buying a VROC key, I wonder if anyone has tried/views on if this will work. To passthru the controller itself or passthru each ssd to vm`s.
May 27, 20197 yr You don't vroc in unraid, it's only needed if you need a bootable m.2 array, such as under native windows
May 27, 20197 yr Author 4 minutes ago, tjb_altf4 said: You don't vroc in unraid, it's only needed if you need a bootable m.2 array, such as under native windows The main objective was actually not to get VROC in unRaid, but to have the possibility passthru M2. NVMe drives to VM`s. I purchased ASUS HYPER M.2 X16 CARD V2 only to find out that 1 of 4 drives was visible for unRaid. My thinking was that this was due to the motherboard not making all drives visible due to lack of VROC key. I didn't plan to run VROC functionality, just to the the NVMe drives available for passthru.
May 27, 20197 yr Some brief googling on that card suggests it doesn't work like that. It appears to be a software based RAID, and not able to expose all the M.2 slots directly.
May 27, 20197 yr Author 1 hour ago, jonathanm said: Some brief googling on that card suggests it doesn't work like that. It appears to be a software based RAID, and not able to expose all the M.2 slots directly. Thanks for googling for me.
May 28, 20197 yr 13 hours ago, frodr said: The main objective was actually not to get VROC in unRaid, but to have the possibility passthru M2. NVMe drives to VM`s. I purchased ASUS HYPER M.2 X16 CARD V2 only to find out that 1 of 4 drives was visible for unRaid. My thinking was that this was due to the motherboard not making all drives visible due to lack of VROC key. I didn't plan to run VROC functionality, just to the the NVMe drives available for passthru. For this to work, the motherboard needs to support bifurcation, such as on AMD x399 and Intel x299. This splits a x16 slot into x4 x4 x4 x4, the Hyper m.2 physically splits the lanes to provide separate slots for each m.2 VROC merely allows a NVME RAID array to be bootable and will not enable visibility of those devices on its own. If your motherboard does not support bifurcation, you need a different card that has a PLX chip or some sort of controller. Edited May 28, 20197 yr by tjb_altf4
May 28, 20197 yr Author 9 hours ago, tjb_altf4 said: For this to work, the motherboard needs to support bifurcation, such as on AMD x399 and Intel x299. This splits a x16 slot into x4 x4 x4 x4, the Hyper m.2 physically splits the lanes to provide separate slots for each m.2 VROC merely allows a NVME RAID array to be bootable and will not enable visibility of those devices on its own. If your motherboard does not support bifurcation, you need a different card that has a PLX chip or some sort of controller. The motherboard supports bifurcation. Should I be able to see all 4 drives then? https://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Xeon/C620/X11DAi-N.cfm
May 28, 20197 yr Youll need to enable it on the specific pcie slot in the bios, looking at the manual, 'auto' might do the job, otherwise force 4x4x4x4x
May 28, 20197 yr Author 37 minutes ago, tjb_altf4 said: Youll need to enable it on the specific pcie slot in the bios, looking at the manual, 'auto' might do the job, otherwise force 4x4x4x4x Thanks, you helped me a lot. First 3 beers on me.....
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.