Point Rufus to your Windows Server ISO.
There are lots of guides on how to do this but I will show how I did it. The first step is to create your Windows Server Installation USB Stick. It comes with regular and low profile PCIe bracket:Īnd here is the unit installed in the PowerEdge R310 with the heatsink and thermal pad applied: Create your bootable Windows Server Installation Here is the unit before I installed it into the server without the heatsink applied. I used this cheap adapter from Amazon and a 500Gb Samsung 970 Evo Plus. Install the NVMe Adapter and Driveįirst install the NVMe adapter and drive into your Dell PowerEdge server. If your server has internal SD card storage, you could boot from that instead. Clover will contain the NVMe boot driver and boot the installed operating system from the NVMe storage. When this procedure is complete, the PowerEdge server will boot from the internal USB storage and run the Clover EFI Bootloader.
With a Samsung 970 Evo Plus also from Amazon.I used this cheap NVMe to PCIe adapter from Amazon.I used this tiny Sandisk Ultra Fit Flash Drive. In this post I am going to explain how it’s done and show the benchmarks from both a Dell PowerEdge R310 and T320. This procedure should work on any Dell PowerEdge Server that can boot from a USB device.īooting from NVMe storage is simple to do. PCIe NVMe storage can provide an incredible speed boost to any server but booting from it is not natively supported on some older Dell PowerEdge servers.ġ1th and 12th generation servers like the Dell PowerEdge R710 and R720 are very popular amongst the home lab community and could benefit from a fast boot device.