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by InternetOfStuff
2168 days ago
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> ECC is not officially supported on Ryzen. If it works on your particular board/BIOS, great, but it's not officially validated or tested The Asus Pro X570 ACE (or similar name) explicitly offers ECC support though, not just unofficially. |
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In the case of MSI, those boards reportedly also don't support the ECC reporting function. They will try to correct them but they don't actually report them to the OS. MSI's answer: "wow, sucks to be you". AMD’s answer: “wow, sucks to be you”. That's what you get from "unofficial support", just a halfhearted level of effort all around.
https://hardwarecanucks.com/forum/threads/ecc-memory-amds-ry...
(there are really multiple levels of functionality here, "boots with ECC in non-ECC mode", "corrects ECC silently", and "behaves like a server and reports ECC to the OS or lets you reboot the system". You'll note that nobody ever commits to a particular level of support on AM4 based products...)
Furthermore, AMD doesn't support it at a processor level, so they apply no pressure to the mobo companies to actually test the features they claim they support, nor will they fix it if there is ever a critical functionality bug. An AGESA update could break or remove ECC and welp, sucks to be you, they never advertised that as an actual feature.
That is why I think it is a little ridiculous that people phrase that as "supported". Nobody is validating that it actually works, nobody at AMD will stand behind the feature, and will in fact tell you that they don't support it.
It works, probably, on certain combinations of hardware and BIOS. It is not supported by anyone other than yourself and your own time.