On 2/25/2020 8:28 AM, Mario Olofo wrote:
Good morning all,

@Pete French, you have trim activated on your SSDs right? I heard that if
its not activated, the SSD disc can stop working very quickly.
@Daniel Kalchev, I used UFS2 with SU+J as suggested on the forums for me,
and in this case the filesystem didn't "corrupted", it justs kernel panic
from time to time so I gave up.
I think that the problem was related to the size of the journal, that
become full when I put so many files at once on the system, or was
deadlocks in the version of the OS that I was using.
@Alexander Leidinger I have the original HDD 1TB Hybrid that came with the
notebook will try to reinstall FreeBSD on it to see if it works correctly.

Besides my notebook been a 2019 model Dell G3 with no customizations other
than the m.2 SSD, I never trust that the system is 100%, so I'll try all
possibilities.
1- The BIOS received an update last month but I'll look if there's
something newer.
2- Reinstall the FreeBSD on the Hybrid HDD, but if the problem is the
FreeBSD driver, it'll work correctly on that HD.
3- Will try with other RAM. This I really don't think that is the problem
because is a brand new notebook, but... who knows =).

Thank you,

Mario

I have a Lenovo Carbon X1 that has a Samsung nVME SSD in it and it's fine with both FreeBSD12-STABLE and Windows (I have it set up for dual EFI boot using REFIND.)  It does not have a "custom" driver for Win10; it is using Microsoft's "built-in" stuff.

Zero problems and I beat on it pretty-heavily.

--
-- Karl Denninger
/The Market-Ticker/
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