How to install ubuntu on on Asus ROG G701VIK

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I have an ASUS ROG G701-VIK gaming laptop with 2* M2 SSD NVMe in a RAID-0 array in SATA mode and my BIOS has no option to change from SATA mode to AHCI mode.



When I'm trying to install Ubuntu, the installer does not detect my SSD.



Update:
- Now i'm installing ubuntu 18.04 on an external usb.
- Cloned full ubuntu installation from usb to the second SSD.
- It's booting normally but to GNU GRUB screen .



grub> ls

hd0 (hd0,gpt1) (hd0,gpt2) (hd0,gpt3) (hd0,gpt4) hd1 (hd1,gpt1) (hd1,gpt2) (hd1,gpt3) (hd1,gpt4)

grub> boot
You need to load kernel first.


How to fix this error?










share|improve this question























  • i do not think you can change RAID 0, without totally erasing drives and reinstalling separately. Make sure you have good backups. If either drive fails you lose all data on both drives as half is on one & half on other alternating. See this: askubuntu.com/questions/861854/… Many with NVMe drives have now installed Ubuntu, so that is not an issue.
    – oldfred
    Apr 19 at 21:25











  • i found some have have same my issues in same link u send it and he resolve this issues with raid 0 but he not share how ? Cereal Killer who did it
    – merocom
    Apr 20 at 2:35











  • i don't know how to contact him ???? user:391046
    – merocom
    Apr 20 at 2:36







  • 3




    Possible duplicate of NVMe disk configured in RAID0 unable to install Ubuntu 16.04
    – David Foerster
    Apr 20 at 9:16






  • 2




    Close voter warning: Answer added: I have similar hardware. @EricCarvalho
    – Fabby
    Apr 20 at 20:20














up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1












I have an ASUS ROG G701-VIK gaming laptop with 2* M2 SSD NVMe in a RAID-0 array in SATA mode and my BIOS has no option to change from SATA mode to AHCI mode.



When I'm trying to install Ubuntu, the installer does not detect my SSD.



Update:
- Now i'm installing ubuntu 18.04 on an external usb.
- Cloned full ubuntu installation from usb to the second SSD.
- It's booting normally but to GNU GRUB screen .



grub> ls

hd0 (hd0,gpt1) (hd0,gpt2) (hd0,gpt3) (hd0,gpt4) hd1 (hd1,gpt1) (hd1,gpt2) (hd1,gpt3) (hd1,gpt4)

grub> boot
You need to load kernel first.


How to fix this error?










share|improve this question























  • i do not think you can change RAID 0, without totally erasing drives and reinstalling separately. Make sure you have good backups. If either drive fails you lose all data on both drives as half is on one & half on other alternating. See this: askubuntu.com/questions/861854/… Many with NVMe drives have now installed Ubuntu, so that is not an issue.
    – oldfred
    Apr 19 at 21:25











  • i found some have have same my issues in same link u send it and he resolve this issues with raid 0 but he not share how ? Cereal Killer who did it
    – merocom
    Apr 20 at 2:35











  • i don't know how to contact him ???? user:391046
    – merocom
    Apr 20 at 2:36







  • 3




    Possible duplicate of NVMe disk configured in RAID0 unable to install Ubuntu 16.04
    – David Foerster
    Apr 20 at 9:16






  • 2




    Close voter warning: Answer added: I have similar hardware. @EricCarvalho
    – Fabby
    Apr 20 at 20:20












up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1






1





I have an ASUS ROG G701-VIK gaming laptop with 2* M2 SSD NVMe in a RAID-0 array in SATA mode and my BIOS has no option to change from SATA mode to AHCI mode.



When I'm trying to install Ubuntu, the installer does not detect my SSD.



Update:
- Now i'm installing ubuntu 18.04 on an external usb.
- Cloned full ubuntu installation from usb to the second SSD.
- It's booting normally but to GNU GRUB screen .



grub> ls

hd0 (hd0,gpt1) (hd0,gpt2) (hd0,gpt3) (hd0,gpt4) hd1 (hd1,gpt1) (hd1,gpt2) (hd1,gpt3) (hd1,gpt4)

grub> boot
You need to load kernel first.


How to fix this error?










share|improve this question















I have an ASUS ROG G701-VIK gaming laptop with 2* M2 SSD NVMe in a RAID-0 array in SATA mode and my BIOS has no option to change from SATA mode to AHCI mode.



When I'm trying to install Ubuntu, the installer does not detect my SSD.



Update:
- Now i'm installing ubuntu 18.04 on an external usb.
- Cloned full ubuntu installation from usb to the second SSD.
- It's booting normally but to GNU GRUB screen .



grub> ls

hd0 (hd0,gpt1) (hd0,gpt2) (hd0,gpt3) (hd0,gpt4) hd1 (hd1,gpt1) (hd1,gpt2) (hd1,gpt3) (hd1,gpt4)

grub> boot
You need to load kernel first.


How to fix this error?







system-installation asus nvme






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 16 at 5:41

























asked Apr 18 at 14:39









merocom

13




13











  • i do not think you can change RAID 0, without totally erasing drives and reinstalling separately. Make sure you have good backups. If either drive fails you lose all data on both drives as half is on one & half on other alternating. See this: askubuntu.com/questions/861854/… Many with NVMe drives have now installed Ubuntu, so that is not an issue.
    – oldfred
    Apr 19 at 21:25











  • i found some have have same my issues in same link u send it and he resolve this issues with raid 0 but he not share how ? Cereal Killer who did it
    – merocom
    Apr 20 at 2:35











  • i don't know how to contact him ???? user:391046
    – merocom
    Apr 20 at 2:36







  • 3




    Possible duplicate of NVMe disk configured in RAID0 unable to install Ubuntu 16.04
    – David Foerster
    Apr 20 at 9:16






  • 2




    Close voter warning: Answer added: I have similar hardware. @EricCarvalho
    – Fabby
    Apr 20 at 20:20
















  • i do not think you can change RAID 0, without totally erasing drives and reinstalling separately. Make sure you have good backups. If either drive fails you lose all data on both drives as half is on one & half on other alternating. See this: askubuntu.com/questions/861854/… Many with NVMe drives have now installed Ubuntu, so that is not an issue.
    – oldfred
    Apr 19 at 21:25











  • i found some have have same my issues in same link u send it and he resolve this issues with raid 0 but he not share how ? Cereal Killer who did it
    – merocom
    Apr 20 at 2:35











  • i don't know how to contact him ???? user:391046
    – merocom
    Apr 20 at 2:36







  • 3




    Possible duplicate of NVMe disk configured in RAID0 unable to install Ubuntu 16.04
    – David Foerster
    Apr 20 at 9:16






  • 2




    Close voter warning: Answer added: I have similar hardware. @EricCarvalho
    – Fabby
    Apr 20 at 20:20















i do not think you can change RAID 0, without totally erasing drives and reinstalling separately. Make sure you have good backups. If either drive fails you lose all data on both drives as half is on one & half on other alternating. See this: askubuntu.com/questions/861854/… Many with NVMe drives have now installed Ubuntu, so that is not an issue.
– oldfred
Apr 19 at 21:25





i do not think you can change RAID 0, without totally erasing drives and reinstalling separately. Make sure you have good backups. If either drive fails you lose all data on both drives as half is on one & half on other alternating. See this: askubuntu.com/questions/861854/… Many with NVMe drives have now installed Ubuntu, so that is not an issue.
– oldfred
Apr 19 at 21:25













i found some have have same my issues in same link u send it and he resolve this issues with raid 0 but he not share how ? Cereal Killer who did it
– merocom
Apr 20 at 2:35





i found some have have same my issues in same link u send it and he resolve this issues with raid 0 but he not share how ? Cereal Killer who did it
– merocom
Apr 20 at 2:35













i don't know how to contact him ???? user:391046
– merocom
Apr 20 at 2:36





i don't know how to contact him ???? user:391046
– merocom
Apr 20 at 2:36





3




3




Possible duplicate of NVMe disk configured in RAID0 unable to install Ubuntu 16.04
– David Foerster
Apr 20 at 9:16




Possible duplicate of NVMe disk configured in RAID0 unable to install Ubuntu 16.04
– David Foerster
Apr 20 at 9:16




2




2




Close voter warning: Answer added: I have similar hardware. @EricCarvalho
– Fabby
Apr 20 at 20:20




Close voter warning: Answer added: I have similar hardware. @EricCarvalho
– Fabby
Apr 20 at 20:20










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
0
down vote













The best thing you can do is to remove the RAID-0 as RAID-0 is worse than no RAID at all.



It's a bit complex though and not for the faint at heart as no matter what, Ctrl+I, Ctrl+R, Ctrl+E, Ctrl+D or even Ctrl+Shift+I, R, E or D will bring you into the Intel RAID Setup ROM so you have to:



  • Take a CloneZilla Live backup of the pre-installed Windows 10 environment on the RAID-0 to another (bigger) disk

  • Download RTSCLI64 V 13.2.0_1016 and then patch it to ignore driver version checking.


  • Boot Windows 10 into command prompt and delete the RAID array with the patched RSTCLI64:



    rstcli64 --manage --delete OEMRAID0 


  • Patch the CloneZilla image for it to be able to be restored onto a smaller disk


  • Restore the CloneZilla Image to one of the NVMes

  • Install Ubuntu to the second NVMe

Done! :-)



Note: I keep Windows around just to be able to change the keyboard background lights and to be able to do BIOS updates (haven't found a way around that yet)






share|improve this answer






















  • CloneZilla didn’t detected my SSD or RAID
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 6:39










  • I delete RAID 0 from bios and now it’s separate 2 NVME ssd also not detected by ubuntu installation
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 8:07











  • Any suggestions ??
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:44










  • Nothing happened, i'm feeling bored with my laptop
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:55










  • this link for laptop System76 : system76.com/laptops/bonobo. same my laptop specification specially M.2 PCI/SSD and hold Linux ????
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 11:16











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

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up vote
0
down vote













The best thing you can do is to remove the RAID-0 as RAID-0 is worse than no RAID at all.



It's a bit complex though and not for the faint at heart as no matter what, Ctrl+I, Ctrl+R, Ctrl+E, Ctrl+D or even Ctrl+Shift+I, R, E or D will bring you into the Intel RAID Setup ROM so you have to:



  • Take a CloneZilla Live backup of the pre-installed Windows 10 environment on the RAID-0 to another (bigger) disk

  • Download RTSCLI64 V 13.2.0_1016 and then patch it to ignore driver version checking.


  • Boot Windows 10 into command prompt and delete the RAID array with the patched RSTCLI64:



    rstcli64 --manage --delete OEMRAID0 


  • Patch the CloneZilla image for it to be able to be restored onto a smaller disk


  • Restore the CloneZilla Image to one of the NVMes

  • Install Ubuntu to the second NVMe

Done! :-)



Note: I keep Windows around just to be able to change the keyboard background lights and to be able to do BIOS updates (haven't found a way around that yet)






share|improve this answer






















  • CloneZilla didn’t detected my SSD or RAID
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 6:39










  • I delete RAID 0 from bios and now it’s separate 2 NVME ssd also not detected by ubuntu installation
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 8:07











  • Any suggestions ??
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:44










  • Nothing happened, i'm feeling bored with my laptop
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:55










  • this link for laptop System76 : system76.com/laptops/bonobo. same my laptop specification specially M.2 PCI/SSD and hold Linux ????
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 11:16















up vote
0
down vote













The best thing you can do is to remove the RAID-0 as RAID-0 is worse than no RAID at all.



It's a bit complex though and not for the faint at heart as no matter what, Ctrl+I, Ctrl+R, Ctrl+E, Ctrl+D or even Ctrl+Shift+I, R, E or D will bring you into the Intel RAID Setup ROM so you have to:



  • Take a CloneZilla Live backup of the pre-installed Windows 10 environment on the RAID-0 to another (bigger) disk

  • Download RTSCLI64 V 13.2.0_1016 and then patch it to ignore driver version checking.


  • Boot Windows 10 into command prompt and delete the RAID array with the patched RSTCLI64:



    rstcli64 --manage --delete OEMRAID0 


  • Patch the CloneZilla image for it to be able to be restored onto a smaller disk


  • Restore the CloneZilla Image to one of the NVMes

  • Install Ubuntu to the second NVMe

Done! :-)



Note: I keep Windows around just to be able to change the keyboard background lights and to be able to do BIOS updates (haven't found a way around that yet)






share|improve this answer






















  • CloneZilla didn’t detected my SSD or RAID
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 6:39










  • I delete RAID 0 from bios and now it’s separate 2 NVME ssd also not detected by ubuntu installation
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 8:07











  • Any suggestions ??
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:44










  • Nothing happened, i'm feeling bored with my laptop
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:55










  • this link for laptop System76 : system76.com/laptops/bonobo. same my laptop specification specially M.2 PCI/SSD and hold Linux ????
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 11:16













up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









The best thing you can do is to remove the RAID-0 as RAID-0 is worse than no RAID at all.



It's a bit complex though and not for the faint at heart as no matter what, Ctrl+I, Ctrl+R, Ctrl+E, Ctrl+D or even Ctrl+Shift+I, R, E or D will bring you into the Intel RAID Setup ROM so you have to:



  • Take a CloneZilla Live backup of the pre-installed Windows 10 environment on the RAID-0 to another (bigger) disk

  • Download RTSCLI64 V 13.2.0_1016 and then patch it to ignore driver version checking.


  • Boot Windows 10 into command prompt and delete the RAID array with the patched RSTCLI64:



    rstcli64 --manage --delete OEMRAID0 


  • Patch the CloneZilla image for it to be able to be restored onto a smaller disk


  • Restore the CloneZilla Image to one of the NVMes

  • Install Ubuntu to the second NVMe

Done! :-)



Note: I keep Windows around just to be able to change the keyboard background lights and to be able to do BIOS updates (haven't found a way around that yet)






share|improve this answer














The best thing you can do is to remove the RAID-0 as RAID-0 is worse than no RAID at all.



It's a bit complex though and not for the faint at heart as no matter what, Ctrl+I, Ctrl+R, Ctrl+E, Ctrl+D or even Ctrl+Shift+I, R, E or D will bring you into the Intel RAID Setup ROM so you have to:



  • Take a CloneZilla Live backup of the pre-installed Windows 10 environment on the RAID-0 to another (bigger) disk

  • Download RTSCLI64 V 13.2.0_1016 and then patch it to ignore driver version checking.


  • Boot Windows 10 into command prompt and delete the RAID array with the patched RSTCLI64:



    rstcli64 --manage --delete OEMRAID0 


  • Patch the CloneZilla image for it to be able to be restored onto a smaller disk


  • Restore the CloneZilla Image to one of the NVMes

  • Install Ubuntu to the second NVMe

Done! :-)



Note: I keep Windows around just to be able to change the keyboard background lights and to be able to do BIOS updates (haven't found a way around that yet)







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 20 at 20:23

























answered Apr 20 at 20:13









Fabby

24.4k1352153




24.4k1352153











  • CloneZilla didn’t detected my SSD or RAID
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 6:39










  • I delete RAID 0 from bios and now it’s separate 2 NVME ssd also not detected by ubuntu installation
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 8:07











  • Any suggestions ??
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:44










  • Nothing happened, i'm feeling bored with my laptop
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:55










  • this link for laptop System76 : system76.com/laptops/bonobo. same my laptop specification specially M.2 PCI/SSD and hold Linux ????
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 11:16

















  • CloneZilla didn’t detected my SSD or RAID
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 6:39










  • I delete RAID 0 from bios and now it’s separate 2 NVME ssd also not detected by ubuntu installation
    – merocom
    Apr 21 at 8:07











  • Any suggestions ??
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:44










  • Nothing happened, i'm feeling bored with my laptop
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 4:55










  • this link for laptop System76 : system76.com/laptops/bonobo. same my laptop specification specially M.2 PCI/SSD and hold Linux ????
    – merocom
    Apr 22 at 11:16
















CloneZilla didn’t detected my SSD or RAID
– merocom
Apr 21 at 6:39




CloneZilla didn’t detected my SSD or RAID
– merocom
Apr 21 at 6:39












I delete RAID 0 from bios and now it’s separate 2 NVME ssd also not detected by ubuntu installation
– merocom
Apr 21 at 8:07





I delete RAID 0 from bios and now it’s separate 2 NVME ssd also not detected by ubuntu installation
– merocom
Apr 21 at 8:07













Any suggestions ??
– merocom
Apr 22 at 4:44




Any suggestions ??
– merocom
Apr 22 at 4:44












Nothing happened, i'm feeling bored with my laptop
– merocom
Apr 22 at 4:55




Nothing happened, i'm feeling bored with my laptop
– merocom
Apr 22 at 4:55












this link for laptop System76 : system76.com/laptops/bonobo. same my laptop specification specially M.2 PCI/SSD and hold Linux ????
– merocom
Apr 22 at 11:16





this link for laptop System76 : system76.com/laptops/bonobo. same my laptop specification specially M.2 PCI/SSD and hold Linux ????
– merocom
Apr 22 at 11:16


















 

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