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    Please do not post a support request without first reading and following the advice in https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

    how do you get faster write speeds to SSD only getting 24mb/s

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    • mituM
      mitu Global Moderator
      last edited by mitu

      @comet424 said in how do you get faster write speeds to SSD only getting 24mb/s:

      none of them mounted.. unless i change the fstab uuid

      My example was without the UUID, just using the partition inode directly. If you re-format the drive, it's label may change, so the UUID may not match.

      EDIT: add the entry to /etc/fstab, then try running

      mount -a -t exfat
      

      and if the drive is mounted (mount -t exfat).

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      • C
        comet424 @mitu
        last edited by comet424

        @mitu

        ok so not sure what to change in my fstab

        proc            /proc           proc    defaults          0       0
        PARTUUID=e22bcd10-01  /boot           vfat    defaults          0       2
        PARTUUID=e22bcd10-02  /               ext4    defaults,noatime  0       1
        # a swapfile is not a swap partition, no line here
        #   use  dphys-swapfile swap[on|off]  for that
        UUID=3FDD-79EC  /home/pi/RetroPie       vfat    nofail,user,uid=pi,gid=pi 0     2
        

        is my current Fat32 for the 2TB drive
        everytime i format it changes the UUID so then i re change it in the fstab

        and what i was meaning is /home/pi/RetroPie vfat
        i changed the vfat to "ext4" "exfat" "exfat4"
        when i had it formated as exFat or whatever the proper wording is for it

        to see if it would mount.. it would sometimes mount as /media/usb0

        so wehre in the fstab do i add /etc/fstab

        and i guess reformat the drive to exfat right?

        and i did try where vfat is when i had "ntfs" i tried changing it to "ntfs-3g" but that didnt help either as i read that in a different retropie article someone said worked but didnt work for me
        when i had it as ntfs

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        • mituM
          mitu Global Moderator
          last edited by

          Sorry, but it's getting difficult to follow your replies without any phrasing or punctuation. Can you make an effort and organize your replies better ? I understand English may not be your native language, but try to make an effort and put some structure into it.

          • First, make sure you format your drive as exfat, use the mkfs.exfat command I've mentioned. Use cfdisk /dev/sda or fdisk -l /dev/sda to confirm the drive is properly formatted.

          • 2nd, modify /etc/fstab and replace the last line with the entry I mentioned a couple of replies ago:

          /dev/sda1  /home/pi/RetroPie       exfat   nofail,user,uid=pi,gid=pi	0	2
          
          • 3rd, try the mount commands from my previous reply to make sure that you've correctly modified /etc/fstab and mounting works. If none of the commands fail, then you can disable the usbmount service and reboot to see if the external disc is mounted correctly (to /home/pi/RetroPie).
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            comet424 @mitu
            last edited by comet424

            @mitu
            sorry try my best as i have dislexia and its sounds clear to me

            what i was say
            in fstab file
            vfat line i changed it to "ext4" "exfat" "exfat4" for Exfat
            non of these settings "mounted" the drive tp /home/pi/RetroPie
            only to /media/usb0 and you had to have the Auto USBmount service Enabled in the Menu.. Disabled wouldnt mount

            when it was ntfs i treid "ntfs" and "ntfs-3g"

            and i was sayin since its in Fat32 i guess i have to reformat it

            and i said i had to change the UUID in the Fstab every single time when i formated the drive

            pi@retropie:/etc $ sudo mkfs.exfat /dev/sda1
            mkexfatfs 1.3.0
            Creating... done.
            Flushing... done.
            File system created successfully.
            pi@retropie:/etc $ cfdisk /dev/sda
            cfdisk: cannot open /dev/sda: Permission denied
            pi@retropie:/etc $ cfdisk /dev/sda1
            cfdisk: cannot open /dev/sda1: Permission denied
            pi@retropie:/etc $ fdisk -l /dev/sda
            fdisk: cannot open /dev/sda: Permission denied
            pi@retropie:/etc $ ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid/
            total 0
            lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 15 Feb 28 16:34 8988cf8f-d459-476f-9a4a-16c56702dc40 -> ../../mmcblk0p2
            lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Feb 28 17:51 B862-4CA4 -> ../../sda1
            lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 15 Feb 28 16:34 C367-3F28 -> ../../mmcblk0p1
            pi@retropie:/etc $ sudo nano fstab
            pi@retropie:/etc $
            pi@retropie:/etc $ fdisk -l /dev/sda1
            fdisk: cannot open /dev/sda1: Permission denied
            

            i rebooted and ran your 2 commands again

                 `"""'     The RetroPie Project, https://retropie.org.uk
            
            pi@retropie:~ $ ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid/
            total 0
            lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 15 Feb 28 17:58 8988cf8f-d459-476f-9a4a-16c56702dc40 -> ../../mmcblk0p2
            lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Feb 28 17:58 B862-4CA4 -> ../../sda1
            lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 15 Feb 28 17:58 C367-3F28 -> ../../mmcblk0p1
            pi@retropie:~ $ df -h -T
            Filesystem     Type      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
            /dev/root      ext4      117G  4.5G  108G   4% /
            devtmpfs       devtmpfs  1.8G     0  1.8G   0% /dev
            tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /dev/shm
            tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G  9.4M  1.9G   1% /run
            tmpfs          tmpfs     5.0M  4.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock
            tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
            /dev/mmcblk0p1 vfat      256M   49M  207M  20% /boot
            tmpfs          tmpfs     384M     0  384M   0% /run/user/1000
            pi@retropie:~ $ cfdisk /dev/sda1
            cfdisk: cannot open /dev/sda1: Permission denied
            pi@retropie:~ $ fdisk -l /dev/sda
            fdisk: cannot open /dev/sda: Permission denied
            pi@retropie:~ $ fdisk -l /dev/sda1
            fdisk: cannot open /dev/sda1: Permission denied
            pi@retropie:~ $
            
            proc            /proc           proc    defaults          0       0
            PARTUUID=e22bcd10-01  /boot           vfat    defaults          0       2
            PARTUUID=e22bcd10-02  /               ext4    defaults,noatime  0       1
            # a swapfile is not a swap partition, no line here
            #   use  dphys-swapfile swap[on|off]  for that
            UUID=B862-4CA4  /home/pi/RetroPie       exfat   nofail,user,uid=pi,gid=pi 0     2
            
            pi@retropie:/etc $ mount -a -t exfat
            mount: only root can use "--all" option
            pi@retropie:/etc $ sudo mount -a -t exfat
            FUSE exfat 1.3.0
            WARN: volume was not unmounted cleanly.
            fuse: mountpoint is not empty
            fuse: if you are sure this is safe, use the 'nonempty' mount option
            pi@retropie:/etc $
            
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            • mituM
              mitu Global Moderator
              last edited by

              The errors below

              cfdisk: cannot open /dev/sda1: Permission denied
              pi@retropie:~ $ fdisk -l /dev/sda
              fdisk: cannot open /dev/sda: Permission denied
              pi@retropie:~ $ fdisk -l /dev/sda1
              fdisk: cannot open /dev/sda1: Permission denied

              are because I forgot to prefix them with sudo (they need root access). Try

              sudo fdisk -l /dev/sda
              

              and check if the /dev/sda1 partition is reported as NTFS/exFAT.

              The same with the mount commands.

              sudo mount -a -t exfat
              FUSE exfat 1.3.0
              WARN: volume was not unmounted cleanly.
              fuse: mountpoint is not empty
              fuse: if you are sure this is safe, use the 'nonempty' mount option

              The first message is because the fuse variant is installed, though it shouldn't interfere. You can uninstall it first by running

              sudo apt remove exfat-fuse
              

              and the mounting will use the native Linux exfat support. Re-try then to run

              > sudo mount -a -t exfat -o nonempty
              

              and then check by running mount that /home/pi/RetroPie is mounted using exfat.

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              • C
                comet424 @mitu
                last edited by

                @mitu

                pi@retropie:~ $ sudo fdisk -l /dev/sda1
                Disk /dev/sda1: 1.8 TiB, 2000397795328 bytes, 3907026944 sectors
                Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
                Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
                I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
                Disklabel type: dos
                Disk identifier: 0x00000000
                pi@retropie:~ $ sudo apt remove exfat-fuse
                Reading package lists... Done
                Building dependency tree
                Reading state information... Done
                The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer required:
                  libmicrodns0 rpi-eeprom-images
                Use 'sudo apt autoremove' to remove them.
                The following packages will be REMOVED:
                  exfat-fuse
                0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 1 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
                After this operation, 64.5 kB disk space will be freed.
                Do you want to continue? [Y/n] Y
                (Reading database ... 130482 files and directories currently installed.)
                Removing exfat-fuse (1.3.0-1) ...
                Processing triggers for man-db (2.8.5-2) ...
                pi@retropie:~ $ sudo mount -a -t exfat -o nonempty
                pi@retropie:~ $ df -h -T
                Filesystem     Type      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
                /dev/root      ext4      117G  4.5G  108G   4% /
                devtmpfs       devtmpfs  1.8G     0  1.8G   0% /dev
                tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /dev/shm
                tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G   26M  1.9G   2% /run
                tmpfs          tmpfs     5.0M  4.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock
                tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
                /dev/mmcblk0p1 vfat      256M   49M  207M  20% /boot
                tmpfs          tmpfs     384M     0  384M   0% /run/user/1000
                /dev/sda1      exfat     1.9T  2.2M  1.9T   1% /home/pi/RetroPie
                pi@retropie:~ $ sudo hdparm -Tt /dev/sda1
                
                /dev/sda1:
                 Timing cached reads:   1608 MB in  2.00 seconds = 804.45 MB/sec
                 Timing buffered disk reads: 866 MB in  3.00 seconds = 288.37 MB/sec
                pi@retropie:~ $
                
                pi@retropie:~ $ dd if=/dev/urandom of=/home/pi/RetroPie/test.file bs=1M count=1024
                1024+0 records in
                1024+0 records out
                1073741824 bytes (1.1 GB, 1.0 GiB) copied, 58.2039 s, 18.4 MB/s
                pi@retropie:~ $
                

                copying over network from windows still get 2-10mb/s

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                • mituM
                  mitu Global Moderator
                  last edited by

                  OK, so the disc is not formated as exfat and mounted via the native kernel support, without fuse. This should take out the extra CPU consumed by using fuse and ntfs.

                  If you're copying just a large file over the network, do you get the same - low - speed ? Is this over a wired or wireless conenction ?

                  I know the NesPi case - the older versions ? - had an issue with the SATA controller used in the case (see this topic), it might be worth checking if the case you're using falls has the SATA controller that is problematic.

                  Just

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                  • C
                    comet424 @mitu
                    last edited by comet424

                    @mitu
                    i thought the disk got formated as exfat

                    /dev/sda1      exfat     1.9T  2.2M  1.9T   1% /home/pi/RetroPie
                    

                    so what do you mean exactly by "OK, so the disc is not formated as exfat and mounted via the native kernel support, without fuse. This should take out the extra CPU consumed by using fuse and ntfs."

                    explain it for someone that doesnt know the fuse and the native kernel support or the extra cpu consummed etc

                    network is cabled 1gb connection..
                    its copying any file.. that i getting only 2-10mbs the dd command shows 18mb/s is that saying its only read writting? large or small just doesnt matter ):

                    im using the nespi 4 from my how to guide i made
                    https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/28848/guide-how-to-setup-nespi-4?_=1646095106362

                    so i dont know if it falls under that i thought i solved the slow problem speeds with my article about mounting the sata controller as i think i read that article and thats how i made my article from it

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                    • mituM
                      mitu Global Moderator
                      last edited by mitu

                      @comet424 said in how do you get faster write speeds to SSD only getting 24mb/s:

                      explain it for someone that doesnt know the fuse and the native kernel support or the extra cpu consummed etc

                      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS-3G#Performance

                      so i dont know if it falls under that i thought i solved the slow problem speeds with my article about mounting the sata controller as i think i read that article and thats how i made my article from it

                      Did you add the quirks configuration to /boot/cmdline.txt ? Can you try without it ?

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                        comet424 @mitu
                        last edited by

                        @mitu
                        yes and no

                        i actually still running the same nintendo nesp case you see in the article i made.. all i did for myself was upgrade from 250gb to a 2tb and i use the 250gb in a new system for a friend.. and speeds were fine for it..

                        so i didnt need to change the cmdline as i made thes changes back in 2020 .. but ill try removing the part in the cmdline to see if it works for a 2tb i had to add it for the 250 and 500gb

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                          comet424 @comet424
                          last edited by comet424

                           `*****@@**'  IP Address.........: 192.168.0.52
                            `*******'   Temperature........: CPU: 52°C/125°F GPU: 52°C/125°F
                              `"""'     The RetroPie Project, https://retropie.org.uk
                          
                          pi@retropie:~ $ df -h -T
                          Filesystem     Type      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
                          /dev/root      ext4      117G  4.5G  108G   4% /
                          devtmpfs       devtmpfs  1.8G     0  1.8G   0% /dev
                          tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /dev/shm
                          tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G  9.4M  1.9G   1% /run
                          tmpfs          tmpfs     5.0M  4.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock
                          tmpfs          tmpfs     1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
                          /dev/mmcblk0p1 vfat      256M   49M  207M  20% /boot
                          /dev/sda1      exfat     1.9T   18G  1.9T   1% /home/pi/RetroPie
                          tmpfs          tmpfs     384M     0  384M   0% /run/user/1000
                          pi@retropie:~ $ sudo hdparm -Tt /dev/sda1
                          
                          /dev/sda1:
                          Timing cached reads:   1546 MB in  2.00 seconds = 772.88 MB/sec
                          Timing buffered disk reads: 1088 MB in  3.00 seconds = 362.55 MB/sec
                          pi@retropie:~ $ dd if=/dev/urandom of=/home/pi/RetroPie/test.file bs=1M count=1024
                          1024+0 records in
                          1024+0 records out
                          1073741824 bytes (1.1 GB, 1.0 GiB) copied, 58.393 s, 18.4 MB/s
                          pi@retropie:~ $
                          

                          so windows shows now anywhere from 2-50mbs its better that way but i dunno... is there a test file size that you copy from windows to find out the actually speed?

                          i gonna try to copy over some couple gig files

                          so copying just random files i get 3-5mbs
                          random files of 159gb i jsut sliding over is going to take 8hours

                          so removing the cmdline info i added didnt help ):

                          but its a limit with this usb hot swap and 2TB maybe its only good for 1TB and less?

                          i dont have a smaller SSD anymore to test it ):

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                            comet424
                            last edited by comet424

                            so selecting 4 files all together 8 gb
                            it started at 90mbs then dropped down to 2mb then up and down but finished

                            thats with the removal of the extra for the the cmdline.txt

                            but the other file copying of smaller more files is at 2.38mb/s saying going to take 15 hours now to copy 156gb

                            i selected 73 files that equaled 159gb to test to copy.... it peaks at 90mbs/ averages like 60mb and says takes 35min to transfer 159gb not the 15 hours for the smaller files ...

                            should i re add the info to the cmdline.txt and see what happens ..

                            is it an issue then for small files? and if so anyway to improve speeds for small files

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                              comet424
                              last edited by comet424

                              had to re add

                              usb-storage.quirks=152d:0562:u

                              to the cmdline.txt when you did a reboot was ok.

                              but when you turned it off.. and turned back on... the usb drive wouldnt not mount

                              so i re added

                              usb-storage.quirks=152d:0562:u

                              then rebooted then the drive mounted..

                              it can copy big files like 70 meg/s but small files etc slow and takes forever i dont get it.. but if i copy to my windows to unraid server is faster for small files is it possibly not fast cpu?

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                              • mituM
                                mitu Global Moderator
                                last edited by

                                Multiple small files will always be slower to copy than larger files. The CPU should be plenty fast, but I/O (disc/network/internal PCI bus) is not the same as on PC, plus the quirks added which disable UAS in favor of the slower USB mas-storage driver have also an impact.

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                                  comet424 @mitu
                                  last edited by

                                  @mitu

                                  oh so the quirks whatever that is slows the usb port down? or the transfering...

                                  so i wonder if newer nespi4 have it fixed the usb mass storage

                                  does it impact using retropie then loading roms or what not.. or just mainly over network..

                                  and do you guys run the retropie OS on the SD card or do you run it on the SSD

                                  mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • mituM
                                    mitu Global Moderator @comet424
                                    last edited by

                                    @comet424 said in how do you get faster write speeds to SSD only getting 24mb/s:

                                    @mitu

                                    oh so the quirks whatever that is slows the usb port down? or the transfering...

                                    Yes, using UAS would allow for faster disc operations, this is noted in the troubleshooting topic on the RPI forums:

                                    UAS is an upgraded transport protocol compared to USB mass-storage - commands and data are separated into different queues and multiple outstanding commands can be in flight at the same time, as opposed to USB mass-storage's lock-step relationship between commands and data. This allows better saturation of the 4GBps USB3.0 transport as there can be a continuous stream of data to and from a device

                                    so i wonder if newer nespi4 have it fixed the usb mass storage

                                    I don't know and their web site doesn't have an easy to find changelog, but you can send them an email and ask about it.

                                    does it impact using retropie then loading roms or what not.. or just mainly over network..

                                    I don't think so, even with the USB storage quirks the disc should be faster than a regular SDcard.

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                                      comet424 @mitu
                                      last edited by

                                      @mitu

                                      oh ok.. learn something new everyday
                                      i guess once the roms are on the disk its fast enough

                                      and do you recommend putting retropie OS on the SSD to as well? as 1 i do not know how to do that.. havent googled.. as i know the sd cards only last so long

                                      or is it just ok to leave the os on the SD card?

                                      mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • mituM
                                        mitu Global Moderator @comet424
                                        last edited by

                                        @comet424 You can use the SSD for OS also, but it will be formatted with a Linux filesystem and you'll not be able to read it from Windows/macOS. Using a sdcard for the OS/RetroPie is easier for upgrades, since you'll write the new OS release (when upgrade will require it a full re-image), but you'd still have the ROMs on your external SSD. Using the SSD with a Windows friendly filesystem will also make it easier to copy your games to/from it on another PC running Windows/macOS.

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