![]() ![]() I highly recommend doing this on a completely new install. In this guide I’ll show you a workaround to use USB devices as your rootfs device and use a Micro SD card as bootloader only which gives us full SSD performance after boot! To see exactly how much of a performance difference this makes (spoiler: it’s gigantic) check out the Raspberry Pi Storage Benchmarks. Most of my projects heavily depend on having good performing storage so sitting and waiting was not an acceptable solution. No timeline has been given yet for that to happen but they state it’s one of their top priorities. ![]() The Raspberry Pi foundation states that it is being worked on and will be added back with a future update. One very major downside is that it doesn’t support true USB booting yet out of the box (like the 3 series did). The Raspberry Pi 4* is finally here and has a lot of exciting changes. View the Raspberry Pi Bootloader Configuration Guide here!** ** The new Raspberry Pi bootloader is out which makes these instructions only necessary if you want to continue to use the SD card as a bootloader. ![]() Raspberry Pi 4 with Samsung 950 Pro NVME SSD ![]()
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