APU SSD pfSense 2.2 installation problems
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Hehe. By all means bennyc, please influence my decision:)
I have done some quick research, and came up with Kingston SSDNow mS200. I can get it locally here in Norway and there seems to be a german store providing APU that sells it, and it supports TRIM. I'd find it hard to believe that a store selling APU's would sell an incompatible SSD :)
http://www.apu-board.de/produkte/kingstonms200.htmlGood choice?
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The APU isn't picky about SSDs that I'm aware of, anything will probably work. With SSDs in general, it's more about getting good quality hardware. We've seen some quality issues with Kingston SSDs in the past (though the 2.5" SATA ones), but no idea about that one in particular.
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I have done some quick research, and came up with Kingston SSDNow mS200. I can get it locally here in Norway and there seems to be a german store providing APU that sells it, and it supports TRIM. I'd find it hard to believe that a store selling APU's would sell an incompatible SSD :)
http://www.apu-board.de/produkte/kingstonms200.htmlGood choice?
I've been using one in an APU for about half a year without problems but I'm also using memory file system for /tmp and /var so I've been very nice to it.
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Well, mine is also that Kingston type… and I haven't been so nice to it, but it stands up-to now 8)
I enabled trim, but as it is a home environment I really doubt it gets much 'wear'. I have no write intensive packages, so I expect it to survive a couple of years easily. (enough until something new replaces it)
However, because of the warnings received for the brand (negative reviews), I prepped an old SD card as well which is in standby in the APU ((boot order selects mSATA first. Same trick should go with usb, but haven't tested it)).
Should I run into trouble with the Kingston, at least I will be able to boot and order a new SSD using an internet connection ;).That is of course, only when the SSD is to blame and the APU isn't dead (..;D..)
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Thanks all for your inputs. :) I have ordered the Kingston.
Do I need to do anything in particular during installation or is it just a matter of unplugging the old one, plug in the Kingston and install pfSense? No setting changes? -
I can't remember I had to change anything… Should be true plug and
playinstall. After install, enable trim. -
Like this?
http://dormannetworks.com/node/14 -
Boot into single user mode and run "tunefs -t enable /".
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Thank you for everybody’s help. I really do appreciate it!
:D
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I took note from another how-to somewhere here on the forum, so all credits to the guy who originally posted it.
But here were the instructions I followed:1. start serial console
2. Run "/usr/local/sbin/ufslabels.sh" (this will change the UUID in fstab or else it will not boot anymore when doing the next step. (confirm-> yes))
3. Add ahci_load="YES" to /boot/loader.conf.local
4. Reboot
5. Start pfSense in single user mode (option 5) and press return when asked for it (go to sbin #)
6. Run "/sbin/tunefs -t enable /"
7. Run "/sbin/reboot"
8. Check if TRIM is enabled with "tunefs -p /" -
Steps 4-8 should be enough with pfSense 2.2.