Hi folks,

I got a new notebook with an NVME drive. 

As all my BIOS never needed UEFI, my installation dula boot of Windows and 
Debian are all without UEFI.

Thus, it was easy for me, cloning debian to any other hardware in the past to 
a ssd drive.

Now I heard of, that a NVME drive will only get to full speed, if UEFI is 
activated in BIOS. Is this correct?

I am asking, because if NOT, than it would spare me a lot of work, to create 
an UEFI partituion, rewrite the bootloaders, fstab, configurations and so on.

Speed of Windows is not so important for me, but speed of debian is more 
important for me.

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Another question, not really important: The device names, like "/dev/hdX", "/
dev/sdX" and now "/dev/nvmeX" - who is creating these? The kernel? Must /etc/
fstab be manually changed, when changing the kind of harddrive?

---

A short answer is very enough!

Thanks and best regards

Hans   


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