@Suiseiseki@freesoftwareextremist.com >Those devices are not compliant with the PCIe specification - compliant cards will operate even in a PCIe 1.0 port, albeit at a reduced speed.
Running NVMe drives at PCIe 2.0 speeds kinda removes the purpose of getting NVMe in the first place you know.
A GNUboot developer is fixing up the RAMinit, so eventually RAM support will be much improved.That's nice to hear that the code for these is actually being fixed by someone, considering that Coreboot has abandoned the old AMD boards already.
256GB can be reached with a specific DIMM models.I did not know that, might be worth considering as an upgrade then.
Also instead of buying a Raptor Computing board I could also decide to buy a second AMD Board and just run my database clusters on two machines to split the workload which might be a way to speed things up on a lower budget.
However I do like experimenting with something new tho.
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SuperDicq (superdicq@minidisc.tokyo)'s status on Thursday, 30-May-2024 17:47:01 JSTSuperDicq