comp2000 Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Good morning I have a BPI M1 and M1+ currently running an image from https://banana-pi.org/. Everything works, except it's Ubuntu 16.04. Since yesterday, I've been testing the Armbian images, which are great and up-to-date, but none of them recognize the SATA connection on my SSD. ` fdisk -l ` shows no SATA SSD. Since I absolutely need this connection, I'm stuck. What am I doing wrong, or where do I need to activate the SATA connection? The SATA connection is what makes the BPI M1+ unique. With Ubuntu 16.04, the SATA connection is recognized with both SSD and HDD on the BPI M3. Can someone please help me? I'm completely lost. Regards, Henry 0 Quote
Igor Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Feature regressions are sadly something that happens all the time. There are many variants out there and (part of) Armbian OS is different for every board ... First resolve confusion - do you have M1 (we call it just bananapi) or M3. You mention M3 in the text, while title says M1+. Those are totally different boards. Proceed from older images and find out when this feature stopped working: https://fi.mirror.armbian.de/archive/ https://fi.mirror.armbian.de/oldarchive/ 0 Quote
comp2000 Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago For your information, I have a BPI M1 BPI M1+ BPI M3 All three are currently running Ubuntu 16.04, where SATA works, but it's a very old version. All tests with Armbian were performed using the BPI M1+, although SATA did not work. 0 Quote
comp2000 Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago BPI M1+ tested with: Armbian_23.8.1_Bananapim1plus_jammy Armbian_24.11.1_Bananapi_noble Armbian_26.2.0-trunk.342_Bananapi_noble and the SATA interface doesn't work on any of the three. Does nobody use a BPI M1+ with an Armbian image where the SATA interface works? 0 Quote
comp2000 Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago fdisk -l Disk /dev/ram0: 4 MiB, 4194304 bytes, 8192 sectors Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 4096 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes Disk /dev/ram1: 4 MiB, 4194304 bytes, 8192 sectors Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 4096 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes Disk /dev/ram2: 4 MiB, 4194304 bytes, 8192 sectors Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 4096 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes Disk /dev/ram3: 4 MiB, 4194304 bytes, 8192 sectors Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 4096 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes Disk /dev/mmcblk0: 14.84 GiB, 15931539456 bytes, 31116288 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: 0x4c58faaa Device Boot Start End Sectors Size Id Type /dev/mmcblk0p1 8192 30801920 30793729 14.7G 83 Linux Disk /dev/zram0: 483.1 MiB, 506564608 bytes, 123673 sectors Units: sectors of 1 * 4096 = 4096 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes Disk /dev/zram1: 50 MiB, 52428800 bytes, 12800 sectors Units: sectors of 1 * 4096 = 4096 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes Out of desperation, I plugged in an SSD via USB adapter, and it is recognized as: /dev/sda: Detected One might think the SATA connection is defective, but when I boot with the Ubuntu 16.04 image without changing anything, the SATA SSD is recognized! So the SATA connection on the BPI M1+ works, and so does the SSD. It's definitely the Armbian image that's the problem, but where exactly is it? 0 Quote
Igor Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 1 hour ago, comp2000 said: but where exactly is it? Probably, my guess, issue with a boot loader - fail to / disabled by mistake power SATA port? We don't have anyone actively maintaining this kind of (10+years) hardware anymore. Support is "community / upstream" maintained "as is". But this forum / community can provide assistance to fix this. I gave a tip - where I think is the problem. Not working feature on particular hardware is not Armbian problem. This is custom hardware world and our work is tooling https://github.com/armbian/build and best effort hardware maintenance on this principle https://docs.armbian.com/User-Guide_Board-Support-Rules/ If we try to fix everything, everyone would be long burned out ... 0 Quote
eselarm Posted 50 minutes ago Posted 50 minutes ago I have this SBC and it is still nice one as it includes LiPo charging/operation and SATA. I changed Armbian OS drastically, such that the raw SD-card as blockdevice/image also runs as KVM on my ROCK3A or ROCK5B for example as standard UEFI machine. I have not tested that yet, but done several similar for NanoPi-NEO and some RPi3. Last thing done was use kernel 6.18 as default. Had not tested/connected a SATA recently, so good time to do it now; It works, see below: root@banlipi:~# lsblk NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTS sda 8:0 0 119.2G 0 disk ├─sda1 8:1 0 512M 0 part └─sda2 8:2 0 118.7G 0 part mmcblk0 179:0 0 59.6G 0 disk ├─mmcblk0p1 179:1 0 256M 0 part /boot/efi ├─mmcblk0p2 179:2 0 6G 0 part /.snapshots │ /local/fsroot │ / ├─mmcblk0p3 179:3 0 1G 0 part [SWAP] └─mmcblk0p4 179:4 0 52.4G 0 part /local/sdata root@banlipi:~# dmesg | grep ata [ 0.000000] CPU: PIPT / VIPT nonaliasing data cache, VIPT aliasing instruction cache [ 0.000000] Memory policy: Data cache writealloc [ 0.000000] printk: log buffer data + meta data: 131072 + 409600 = 540672 bytes [ 0.045731] Memory: 859656K/1015868K available (11264K kernel code, 1761K rwdata, 9604K rodata, 1024K init, 377K bss, 53644K reserved, 98304K cma-r eserved, 229436K highmem) [ 0.742930] libata version 3.00 loaded. [ 1.268996] ahci-sunxi 1c18000.sata: supply ahci not found, using dummy regulator [ 1.269351] ahci-sunxi 1c18000.sata: supply phy not found, using dummy regulator [ 1.269470] ahci-sunxi 1c18000.sata: supply target not found, using dummy regulator [ 1.311601] ahci-sunxi 1c18000.sata: controller can't do PMP, turning off CAP_PMP [ 1.311632] ahci-sunxi 1c18000.sata: forcing PORTS_IMPL to 0x1 [ 1.311727] ahci-sunxi 1c18000.sata: AHCI vers 0001.0100, 32 command slots, 3 Gbps, platform mode [ 1.311748] ahci-sunxi 1c18000.sata: 1/1 ports implemented (port mask 0x1) [ 1.311762] ahci-sunxi 1c18000.sata: flags: ncq sntf pm led clo only pio slum part ccc [ 1.316206] ata1: SATA max UDMA/133 mmio [mem 0x01c18000-0x01c18fff] port 0x100 irq 34 lpm-pol 0 [ 1.630949] ata1: SATA link up 3.0 Gbps (SStatus 123 SControl 300) [ 1.632905] ata1.00: ATA-9: SanDisk SDSSDP128G, 1.0.0, max UDMA/133 [ 1.632934] ata1.00: 250069680 sectors, multi 1: LBA48 NCQ (depth 32) [ 1.633567] ata1.00: configured for UDMA/133 [ 11.515496] systemd[1]: Expecting device dev-disk-by\x2dlabel-sdata.device - /dev/disk/by-label/sdata... [ 22.764093] BTRFS: device label sdata devid 1 transid 36 /dev/mmcblk0p4 (179:4) scanned by mount (378) [ 23.002238] FAT-fs (mmcblk0p1): Volume was not properly unmounted. Some data may be corrupt. Please run fsck. root@banlipi:~# uname -a Linux banlipi 6.18.2-edge-sunxi #1 SMP Thu Dec 18 13:03:43 UTC 2025 armv7l GNU/Linux root@banlipi:~# cd /tmp root@banlipi:/tmp# mkdir 1 2 root@banlipi:/tmp# mount /dev/sda1 1 root@banlipi:/tmp# mount /dev/sda2 2 -osubvolid=0 root@banlipi:/tmp# ddrescue -f /dev/sda /dev/null GNU ddrescue 1.29 Press Ctrl-C to interrupt ipos: 1731 MB, non-trimmed: 0 B, current rate: 75366 kB/s opos: 1731 MB, non-scraped: 0 B, average rate: 133 MB/s non-tried: 126304 MB, bad-sector: 0 B, error rate: 0 B/s rescued: 1731 MB, bad areas: 0, run time: 12s pct rescued: 1.35%, read errors: 0, remaining time: 15m time since last successful read: n/a Copying non-tried blocks... Pass 1 (forwards)^C Interrupted by user So I can browse the filesystems on the SSD, seems I had used it for conversion of RPi Trixie Ext4 to Btrfs. Raw speed is fine I see. So I still can use it also with large 3.5inch HDDs, that is what I prepared the surrounding 12V powersupply for. 0 Quote
eselarm Posted 38 minutes ago Posted 38 minutes ago (edited) 2 hours ago, comp2000 said: BPI M1+ tested with: Armbian_23.8.1_Bananapim1plus_jammy Armbian_24.11.1_Bananapi_noble Armbian_26.2.0-trunk.342_Bananapi_noble and the SATA interface doesn't work on any of the three. Does nobody use a BPI M1+ with an Armbian image where the SATA interface works? Just to note some more: I use none of those images, instead is it in-place upgraded Armbian, originally: root@banlipi:/tmp# grep VERSION /etc/armbian-image-release VERSION=23.11.1 Now Trixie: root@banlipi:/tmp# cat /etc/os-release PRETTY_NAME="Armbian 25.8.1 trixie" NAME="Debian GNU/Linux" VERSION_ID="13" VERSION="13 (trixie)" VERSION_CODENAME=trixie DEBIAN_VERSION_FULL=13.0 ID=debian HOME_URL="https://www.armbian.com/" SUPPORT_URL="https://forum.armbian.com" BUG_REPORT_URL="https://www.armbian.com/bugs" ARMBIAN_PRETTY_NAME="Armbian 25.8.1 trixie" I log some stuff to terminal in my backup script; I see: U-Boot SPL 2024.01-armbian-2024.01-S866c-P7738-Hb9d3-Vf23c-Bb703-R448a (Jun 21 2025 - 02:53:13 +0000) Maybe also good to know, I use extlinux on real HW, grub on KVM root@banlipi:/boot/efi/extlinux# cat extlinux.conf menu title Select the kernel variant DEFAULT default TIMEOUT 80 LABEL default KERNEL zImage INITRD uInitrd FDT sun7i-a20-bananapi.dtb FDTOVERLAYS sun7i-a20-analog-codec.dtbo APPEND root=LABEL=armbianrfs rootwait rw earlyprintk console=ttyS0,115200 But I am not sure how valid the release info is, will need to look at lists files etc and also run update to it is latest Debian 13.3 I think. I just ran apt update && apt full-upgrade and now it is 'latest debian trixie' but I use apt pinning and I see it is too strict and also an error, so os-release not changed It is essentially Debian Trixie armhf up to date with manually written U-Boot and manually copied sunxi kernel. Edited 15 minutes ago by eselarm 0 Quote
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