figleaf7 wrote:
Thanks so far all your advice I will do and in the mean time since this was a new laptop I had nothing to worry about to reinstall. The reinstall was also surprising. Here's the print out from DriveDX. I just hope after reinstall I'll watch for any changes and this may just be a software issue in upgrading macOS. So SMART works and its a 100%.not like before.
<DriveDX.log>
The SSD looks fine.
FYI, most SSD failures are due to the SSD's controller no longer communicating with the system so the physical SSD disappears completely from the system which tends to be noticed when powering on the computer/SSD & when waking from sleep. Sometimes an SSD may just be a bit slow to go ready so it may reappear after a warm reboot, but it is a sign of imminent SSD failure. Most SSD failures give you very little if any warning. There are no SMART health attributes for the SSD's controller.
Sometimes I have found an Apple PCIe NVMe SSD may report "Media & Data Integrity Errors" which can lead to macOS boot issues or performance issues (it may also show an increase in the "Error Information Log Entries"). On Intel Macs I can usually reset the SSD to resolve those errors (the error count remains, but the SSD no longer has the glitch), but I have no idea if there is any way to do the same on an M-series Mac since I haven't encountered such an issue yet. Otherwise only the "Available Spare" and "Life Percentage Used" are useful, but most people will never see those values move very much....it would take writing 100's of TB to make a significant change there & even if those values are exhausted & report bad, the SSD is likely to function for much longer since the better SSDs typically can write PBs of data before they fail completely due to worn out NAND memory cells.
Since you are able to boot the laptop, the issue is most likely due to file system corruption, or an issue with third party software, or possibly an externally connected device.