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submitted 1 year ago by donut4ever@lemm.ee to c/linux@lemmy.ml

So, recently, I bought an nvme ssd to replace the very old ssd I have on my laptop. I don't know what the non-nvme is called. It shows as "sda" on the system. Anyway, doubled the storage. The new drive is an nvme WD black SN770. I have the same one running just fine on an optiplex dell mini running endeavourOS. Zero issues. I like to separate home and root partitions and have btrfs on root for snapshots. So, thinking it would behave the same on the laptop, I put the new drive in the laptop and did the same partitioning. Installed Fedora this time, since I like gnome on the laptop and plasma on desktop. Everything went fine. Laptop was responsive and all until I was done and closed the lid. Came back a while later to use it again, black screen and nothing revives it. No key combo or anything works except holding down the power button to shut it off. This kept happening every single time I closed and opened the lid after a while. Thought it might be the distro/DE. Removed fedora and slapped endeavourOS with plasma on it. Same shit happens now. Black screen every time I open the lid after a suspend. So, I decided fuck it, let me juse use ext4 since it happens on every distro. Removed btrfs and used ext4 on all partions, and now this issue never happens. Not even once. Is this a known issue with btrfs and nvmes? Do they not like each other? Just wanted to share this little dilemma I had to deal with the last couple of days.

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[-] donut4ever@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago

I used timeshift. I don't remember if the freeze happened before or after I used it. The whole point of me using btrfs is to use timeshift and snapshots. I was never able to figure out snapper

[-] bazsy@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah it's disappointing that such an annoying bug is still present and quotas are enabled without warnings. You could continue using Timeshift, the only feature quotas provide is the individual disk usage of the snapshots.

Anyone looking for the solution: https://www.suse.com/support/kb/doc/?id=000020696

[-] donut4ever@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago

Damn, where were you before I nuked the whole system and installed ext4? I mean, I can still try it since I'd only need to reinstall the system onto the root partition after changing it to btrfs. But my system now works flawlessly with no issue. Also, I hate anaconda with a passion. It never works when I manually partition and then reinstall the system on the root partition. It always creates failure. I don't know why fedora uses this ass installer. Just fucking use calameres and call it a day

[-] donut4ever@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago

So you really think disabling quotas would fix the freezing issue? Man, I'd love that. Btrfs/timeshift/snapshots JUST saved my ass on the desktop where an update got fucked in the middle of a kernel update and there was nothing to boot into after that. I have snapshots added to grub and I just rolled back and saved my fucking system. Now I REALLY want to try that quotas option if you think it'll fix the issue

[-] bazsy@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I'm not 100% sure, but for me it caused a similar "freezing" or unresponsive experience when the daily cleanups run in the morning. If there was a freeze after every (even short) sleep and resume that might be a different issue.

[-] donut4ever@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago

Man, I really hate these little vague issues. Fuck it. I'll just keep ext4. I'm going to sacrifice snapshots for my sanity. I spent like 4 days troubleshooting this shit until I found out it was btrfs. If I fuck up the system I'll just reinstall since I have the home partition separate

this post was submitted on 08 Aug 2023
56 points (96.7% liked)

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