Intel RST on Creators Update

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  1. Posts : 77
    Win 10 Pro 64-bit [1809]
    Thread Starter
       #11

    My XPS 9360 has Intel i7-7500U processor, and this platform is listed on the compatible devices on Intel's webpage. Given you say IRST runs on your NVMe drivers, I'd expect mine to run as well.

    The BIOS settings are in ACHI mode, they originally were set to RAID mode, but with this one the setup didn't detect my drive when installing Windows, so I've changed RAID into AHCI. This is the standard setting I'm using over all my machines, as on none of them I'm actually using any matrix.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 2,832
    Windows 10 Pro X64
       #12

    Hi,

    When the controller is set to RAID mode and you perform a clean install you're likely going to have a USB stick ready with the RST drivers on it so they can be installed.
    After that W10 should recognize the drive and install itself on it.

    As for the drivers refusing to install, I'm assuming you want to replace the Intel or MS AHCI driver with the latest Intel one, correct ?
    If so, go into Device Manager, right click the controller, properties, Update, Browse My Computer...., Let me pick from..., Have disk.
    Browse to wherever you have these drivers and it should install. Reboot.

    Cheers,
      My Computers


  3. Posts : 41,460
    windows 10 professional version 1607 build 14393.969 64 bit
       #13

    Intel has software: Intel driver update utility.
    Download and install it and see what it comes up with.
    IntelĀ® Driver Update Utility
      My Computer


  4. TV2
    Posts : 2,221
    W10 Pro 22H2
       #14

    mikolajek said:
    Given you say IRST runs on your NVMe drivers, I'd expect mine to run as well.
    I did not say this.

    NVMe is a M.2 SSD reference.
    There are specific drivers for that. I don't know if this will work for you. Haven't played with an M.2 drive yet.
    NVM Express
      My Computers


  5. Posts : 2,832
    Windows 10 Pro X64
       #15

    Hi,

    If you're trying this on an (Toshiba?) NVMe drive then the NVME driver from OCZ (Toshiba) is what you need or at least W10 built in NVMe driver. Not sure what's in that laptop, Dell says a Toshiba M2 card.

    Now, should you want to build a raid with this and another drive then you should create the volume(s) in EFI/Bios first switching from AHCI to RAID and so on.
    If you include the system drive then you will need to reinstall W10.

    I'll post a screenshot of my setup if you like, I'm using a dual boot, one using a NVMe drive and the other a RAID using two SSDs and RST.
    Should I remove the RAID0 drives and switch back to AHCI in EFI then I can still load Intel's latest RST AHCI controller driver or MS standard one.


    Either way, what you're trying to do should work if I read you correctly.


    Cheers,
      My Computers


  6. Posts : 77
    Win 10 Pro 64-bit [1809]
    Thread Starter
       #16

    Yeah. that's Toshiba THNSN5512GPUK that currently runs on a Windows driver. And I indeed seek to replace the default driver with the Intel one, as Toshiba doesn't seem to provide the dedicated one (many people ask for it at OCZ forums).

    I tried to extract the IRST package and run its files directly, but the archive contains files of no direct use and the 64-bit msi package claims to have insufficient rights.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 2,832
    Windows 10 Pro X64
       #17

    Hi,

    But RST itself (the GUI app) is of no use to you. All you need are the storage drivers from Intel of the same architecture as your system (probably x64).
    You can't replace the NVMe driver with this one though, but you can update the AHCI controller with that Intel driver.

    Return to the Intel site, linked posted in a prior post, and download and unpack the so called floppy install drivers.
    Then proceed as I described above.

    Cheers,
      My Computers


  8. Posts : 77
    Win 10 Pro 64-bit [1809]
    Thread Starter
       #18

    Wow, then I'm getting confused about all this... I understand I don't need RAID driver as such as I'm just using one HDD. I do presume though I can replace the default MS AHCI driver with Intel's one as it should offer better performance.

    But given I won't run any RAID, why would I want to use the RAID over AHCI option in BIOS?

    And - would you be so kind and advise me which device I should seek the driver for in case of AHCI? Would that be a storage controller? I have currently two listed: MS Storage Spaces Controller and Standard NVM Express Controller. I don't seem to have the expected IDE ATA / ATAPI controller in my Device Manager!
    Last edited by mikolajek; 02 Jul 2017 at 15:27.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 2,832
    Windows 10 Pro X64
       #19

    Hi,

    If that Toshiba NVME drive is the only drive in your laptop then that MS Storage NVMe driver is all you need.
    I get beter benchmark results using non MS drivers but benchmarks are just that.

    Now, imagine you'd add a second drive inside your laptop using a SATA port. (No idea if that's at all possible but I assume so given that your EFI supports RAID) then you'll see the AHCI controller appear under device management using MS standard AHCI driver. Then that's the one you can replace with Intel's driver should you want to.
    Although I don't see why you'd want to.
    Your laptop does no longer support IDE but uses SATA protocol instead which can run in IDE mode (you do not want that) or much better AHCI mode (Advanced Host Controller Interface) or RAID (even when there's only one drive present.


    Since your Toshiba drive is NVMe it uses it's own protocol, bypassing the SATA protocol and using PCIe bus Gen 3 in your case which allows I/O speeds about 6 times faster than SATA.


    So, all in all, forget about these RST things, they're of no use for your laptop at the time being.

    Dell often sets the UEFI settings to RAID instead of AHCI for some reason unknown to me.
    Furthermore, I know for a fact that Intel's AHCI drivers won't bring a gain in performance. I've never been able to measure any performance gain. MS drivers are quite probably based on Intel's to begin with. Just a deal between the two companies, I guess.

    Should you have any further questions, I'll gladly reply.

    Cheers,
      My Computers


  10. Posts : 77
    Win 10 Pro 64-bit [1809]
    Thread Starter
       #20

    OK, I keep fighting

    I've changed the BIOS setting to RAID and now under Storage Controllers instead of Standard NVM Express Controller I have Intel Chipster SATA RAID Controller. Still no IDE ATA / ATAPI section in the Device Manager...

    Now I can't really say - is it better / worse / the same?
      My Computer


 

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