Googled it further and then changed the BIOS back to secure boot enabled and UEFI enabled. Somehow Ubuntu installer was not able to detect Windows 10. I went uple of times.restart at the BIOS level.Operating system never came up.finally BIOS went into the health check and recovery mode.i reverted back the setting to RAID On and at least Windows 10 is able to boot.ĭell's BIOS doesn't seems to be that easy to work with for dual boot Linux or PCIe NVME drive it seems.will try it later during the weekend. Googled on Internet for Dell XPS desktop/laptop specific issues and found these links:īIOS warned at the time of saving this setting that either I may not be able to boot my Operating System(Windows 10) or I need to re-install it.
Rather than trying Ubuntu, I went ahead with the install but end up with some bugs.Ubuntu was not able to detect Windows 10 installation on my computer.Seems that 18.04 LTS is somewhat too early to try it out. Mine is Dell XPS 8930 Desktop - Intel Core i7-8700(6 Cores Processor with 64 GB RAM, Windows is installed on SATA SSD and I am trying to install ubuntu Linux 18.04 LTS on PCIe NVME SSD). first i went into the "try without install mode" and opened gparted.gparted showed SATA SSD, other hard drives, USB drive but not the Samsung PCIe NVME SSD.Īnything else i need to have in my bootable ISO image to detect the PCIe NVME SSD? My BIOS mode is UEFI(that's the one via which Windows has been installed), is that the issue as mentioned here? The same is visible and useable from Windows 10 Professional. Or runs into them randomly after an AMD Chipset update.I am trying to install Ubuntu Desktop 18.04 LTS along side Windows 10, but it's not detecting my Samsung EVO 960 PCIe NVME SSD(500 GB). Hopefully this helps someone out there who's had similar issues.
I posted this so the internet will archive this for future use. Windows not recognizing new m.2 NVME SSD but shows in BIOS - Microsoft Community
NVME M.2 SSD detected in BIOS - not detected in Windows 10 圆4 - Microsoft Community New NVMe SSD not recognized by Windows 10 - Microsoft Community Within 2 seconds, everything seems to be working without any issues. Browse From My Computer -> Let me pick from a list -> Select Standard NVM Express Controller -> Next
Find AMD-RAID Bottom Device -> Right Click -> Properties -> Driver -> Update Driver Device Manager -> Storage Controllers -> Expand The solution is to change/update the driver to the Standard NVME controller that comes with Windows. For whatever reason, this AMD driver and Windows do not get along.
After spending way too many hours on this problem, I finally found the solution to my specific issue and it's all related to the "AMD-RAID Bottom Device" Controller Drivers that the AMD chipset software installs.
Nothing worked and I refused to reinstall Windows as a solution (as I've seen in other posts recommending). I know my MSI x470 Gaming Plus board supports 2 drives, this was not related to a disabled SATA port, or a drive support/compatibility issue. I've done everything from messing around with the BIOS to buying a PCIe NVME Riser to make sure it wasn't a bad NVMe connection. You install a second NVMe drive onto your motherboard, your BIOS sees the drive, but Windows does not in Device Manager or Disk Management. I've seen most posts related to MSI boards but I doubt it's limited to them. The issue seems to be specific to AMD processors and respective motherboards. I've seen similar posts scattered over the internet and no real solutions.