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eatmoreoats
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btw these disks are OEM from Newegg
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Paul
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eatmoreoats wrote:
> Hi, > > I just replaced my hard drives with 2 new Western Digital Caviar SE16 > WD3200AAKS 320GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb drives from Newegg. > They are installed as a RAID 0 mirror pair using the mobo's nVidia > Chipset RAID controller. During XP install I hit f6, stuff my floppy > with the raid drivers in etc and the install works fine. Then when I > come to boot XP I get a blue screen of death with a STOP 0x0000007B > error (about removing any newly installed hard drives or hard drive > controllers etc). > > Whats the most likely cause ? Is it a h/w incompatibility issue ? > Driver issue ? A bad drive ? > > I've a ASUS P5N32-SLI SE Deluxe mobo. Prior to these WD3200AAKS > disks, I had a pair of Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD3200KS 320GB > 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb disks in raid 0 which worked ok. > > Any help would be much appreciated. > > Thanks > Dom You can: 1) Get the disk drive manufacturer's test software, and test each drive individually. The software may fit on a floppy or a USB stick. This will give you some idea if each drive is OK. 2) When connecting a new set of disks, if you want to RAID two drives, enter the RAID BIOS (go to BIOS and use the magic key press to enter the RAID subsection). Declare the array in there. That will install metadata (reserved sector) declaring that the disks are an array. The Nvidia RAID driver and the BIOS INT 0x13 will read the reserved sector on each disk on subsequent boots, and know what to do. 3) RAID 1 is a mirror. RAID 0 is a stripe for speed (double bandwidth). In RAID 0, if one of two drives fail, the data is lost. In RAID 1, if a single drive is lost, the other one still works (redundancy). Make sure you're declaring the array type you actually want. 4) Nvidia Mediashield supports "migration" from one array type to another. You could, for example, install one hard drive, set the ports to RAID mode in the BIOS. You don't need to declare an array type for the single drive (and if doing this now, you'd need to "Delete" the existing array while the two disks are still connected). Press F6 and install RAID driver. Install the OS. Reboot at least once to prove it all works. Shut down and install the second disk. Boot up into Windows. Use the RAID management software in Windows to perform a migration. Then, the data from the one drive, will be copied to the second for a mirror. If going from single drive to RAID 1 mirror, the size will not be an issue (same available storage space as before, as it is a mirror). The Mediashield manual should have a table of allowed migration types. (I think there is also a 6.1 version of manual on the site as well.) NVMediaShield_UGv6.pdf `1.64MB http://www.nvidia.com/object/IO_32130.html Inaccessible boot volume 0x0000007B could mean a couple of things. A mismatch between what is in boot.ini and where the array is located. Or a problem with the driver not being the right type for the disk setup (RAID versus non-RAID driver). That kind of thing. Your problem probably is not a hardware problem, but something like that. I'm guessing, that perhaps you forgot to set up the array, and have only installed to a single disk or something. But you can still do a quick test with the hard drive diagnostic software anyway, if you want. Once you start using RAID, if you want to use the disks independently at some point in the future, you need to remove the reserved sector information. "Delete array" in the RAID BIOS, would be one way of doing that. Occasionally, a poster installs disks in a computer, and cannot understand why they are operating strangely. It turns out, that some experiment they did last year, left RAID reserved sector information on the disk, and the driver or BIOS can pick that up and use it. "Delete array" can return the disks to operating singly again. HTH, Paul |
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eatmoreoats
Guest
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On May 10, 1:03 pm, Paul <nos...@needed.com> wrote:
> eatmoreoats wrote: > > Hi, > > > I just replaced my hard drives with 2 new Western Digital Caviar SE16 > > WD3200AAKS 320GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb drives from Newegg. > > They are installed as a RAID 0 mirror pair using the mobo's nVidia > > Chipset RAID controller. During XP install I hit f6, stuff my floppy > > with the raid drivers in etc and the install works fine. Then when I > > come to boot XP I get a blue screen of death with a STOP 0x0000007B > > error (about removing any newly installed hard drives or hard drive > > controllers etc). > > > Whats the most likely cause ? Is it a h/w incompatibility issue ? > > Driver issue ? A bad drive ? > > > I've a ASUS P5N32-SLI SE Deluxe mobo. Prior to these WD3200AAKS > > disks, I had a pair of Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD3200KS 320GB > > 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb disks in raid 0 which worked ok. > > > Any help would be much appreciated. > > > Thanks > > Dom > > You can: > > 1) Get the disk drive manufacturer's test software, and test each > drive individually. The software may fit on a floppy or a USB > stick. This will give you some idea if each drive is OK. > > 2) When connecting a new set of disks, if you want to RAID two > drives, enter the RAID BIOS (go to BIOS and use the magic > key press to enter the RAID subsection). Declare the array > in there. That will install metadata (reserved sector) declaring > that the disks are an array. The Nvidia RAID driver and the BIOS > INT 0x13 will read the reserved sector on each disk on subsequent > boots, and know what to do. > > 3) RAID 1 is a mirror. RAID 0 is a stripe for speed (double bandwidth). > In RAID 0, if one of two drives fail, the data is lost. In RAID 1, > if a single drive is lost, the other one still works (redundancy). > Make sure you're declaring the array type you actually want. > > 4) Nvidia Mediashield supports "migration" from one array type to another. > You could, for example, install one hard drive, set the ports to RAID > mode in the BIOS. You don't need to declare an array type for the single > drive (and if doing this now, you'd need to "Delete" the existing array > while the two disks are still connected). Press F6 and install RAID driver. > Install the OS. Reboot at least once to prove it all works. Shut down > and install the second disk. Boot up into Windows. Use the RAID management > software in Windows to perform a migration. Then, the data from the one > drive, will be copied to the second for a mirror. If going from single drive > to RAID 1 mirror, the size will not be an issue (same available storage > space as before, as it is a mirror). The Mediashield manual should have > a table of allowed migration types. (I think there is also a 6.1 version > of manual on the site as well.) > > NVMediaShield_UGv6.pdf `1.64MB > http://www.nvidia.com/object/IO_32130.html > > Inaccessible boot volume 0x0000007B could mean a couple of things. A mismatch > between what is in boot.ini and where the array is located. Or a problem > with the driver not being the right type for the disk setup (RAID versus > non-RAID driver). That kind of thing. Your problem probably is not a > hardware problem, but something like that. I'm guessing, that perhaps you > forgot to set up the array, and have only installed to a single disk or > something. But you can still do a quick test with the hard drive > diagnostic software anyway, if you want. > > Once you start using RAID, if you want to use the disks independently at > some point in the future, you need to remove the reserved sector information. > "Delete array" in the RAID BIOS, would be one way of doing that. Occasionally, > a poster installs disks in a computer, and cannot understand why they > are operating strangely. It turns out, that some experiment they did last > year, left RAID reserved sector information on the disk, and the driver > or BIOS can pick that up and use it. "Delete array" can return the disks > to operating singly again. > > HTH, > Paul Hi thanks Paul very much for your excellent reply. 1. I downloaded the WD Data Lifeguard Diagnostics tool and they both checked out as ok, with quick and extended tests. 2. Yup, I set up the raid array (F10 to set it up and created it in there by adding the two disk etc). On boot, it says the array is there and in good condition 3. I meant to say raid 1 - mirror 4. I'm going to try installing to just one disk and then add the other in later. What I don't get tho is why this all worked fine with the pair of WD3200KS 's I had before. Is there something special about these new disks ? I'll try the single disk install and see how that goes. Stay tuned and thanks again for the help with this! |
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eatmoreoats
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On May 12, 7:38 am, eatmoreoats <eatmoreo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 10, 1:03 pm, Paul <nos...@needed.com> wrote: > > > > > eatmoreoats wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > I just replaced my hard drives with 2 new Western Digital Caviar SE16 > > > WD3200AAKS 320GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb drives from Newegg. > > > They are installed as a RAID 0 mirror pair using the mobo's nVidia > > > Chipset RAID controller. During XP install I hit f6, stuff my floppy > > > with the raid drivers in etc and the install works fine. Then when I > > > come to boot XP I get a blue screen of death with a STOP 0x0000007B > > > error (about removing any newly installed hard drives or hard drive > > > controllers etc). > > > > Whats the most likely cause ? Is it a h/w incompatibility issue ? > > > Driver issue ? A bad drive ? > > > > I've a ASUS P5N32-SLI SE Deluxe mobo. Prior to these WD3200AAKS > > > disks, I had a pair of Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD3200KS 320GB > > > 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb disks in raid 0 which worked ok. > > > > Any help would be much appreciated. > > > > Thanks > > > Dom > > > You can: > > > 1) Get the disk drive manufacturer's test software, and test each > > drive individually. The software may fit on a floppy or a USB > > stick. This will give you some idea if each drive is OK. > > > 2) When connecting a new set of disks, if you want to RAID two > > drives, enter the RAID BIOS (go to BIOS and use the magic > > key press to enter the RAID subsection). Declare the array > > in there. That will install metadata (reserved sector) declaring > > that the disks are an array. The Nvidia RAID driver and the BIOS > > INT 0x13 will read the reserved sector on each disk on subsequent > > boots, and know what to do. > > > 3) RAID 1 is a mirror. RAID 0 is a stripe for speed (double bandwidth). > > In RAID 0, if one of two drives fail, the data is lost. In RAID 1, > > if a single drive is lost, the other one still works (redundancy). > > Make sure you're declaring the array type you actually want. > > > 4) Nvidia Mediashield supports "migration" from one array type to another. > > You could, for example, install one hard drive, set the ports to RAID > > mode in the BIOS. You don't need to declare an array type for the single > > drive (and if doing this now, you'd need to "Delete" the existing array > > while the two disks are still connected). Press F6 and install RAID driver. > > Install the OS. Reboot at least once to prove it all works. Shut down > > and install the second disk. Boot up into Windows. Use the RAID management > > software in Windows to perform a migration. Then, the data from the one > > drive, will be copied to the second for a mirror. If going from single drive > > to RAID 1 mirror, the size will not be an issue (same available storage > > space as before, as it is a mirror). The Mediashield manual should have > > a table of allowed migration types. (I think there is also a 6.1 version > > of manual on the site as well.) > > > NVMediaShield_UGv6.pdf `1.64MB > > http://www.nvidia.com/object/IO_32130.html > > > Inaccessible boot volume 0x0000007B could mean a couple of things. A mismatch > > between what is in boot.ini and where the array is located. Or a problem > > with the driver not being the right type for the disk setup (RAID versus > > non-RAID driver). That kind of thing. Your problem probably is not a > > hardware problem, but something like that. I'm guessing, that perhaps you > > forgot to set up the array, and have only installed to a single disk or > > something. But you can still do a quick test with the hard drive > > diagnostic software anyway, if you want. > > > Once you start using RAID, if you want to use the disks independently at > > some point in the future, you need to remove the reserved sector information. > > "Delete array" in the RAID BIOS, would be one way of doing that. Occasionally, > > a poster installs disks in a computer, and cannot understand why they > > are operating strangely. It turns out, that some experiment they did last > > year, left RAID reserved sector information on the disk, and the driver > > or BIOS can pick that up and use it. "Delete array" can return the disks > > to operating singly again. > > > HTH, > > Paul > > Hi thanks Paul very much for your excellent reply. > > 1. I downloaded the WD Data Lifeguard Diagnostics tool and they both > checked out as ok, with quick and extended tests. > > 2. Yup, I set up the raid array (F10 to set it up and created it in > there by adding the two disk etc). On boot, it says the array is there > and in good condition > > 3. I meant to say raid 1 - mirror > > 4. I'm going to try installing to just one disk and then add the other > in later. What I don't get tho is why this all worked fine with the > pair of WD3200KS 's I had before. Is there something special about > these new disks ? > > I'll try the single disk install and see how that goes. Stay tuned and > thanks again for the help with this! Hi again, I was able to install and start XP normally on one disk (while the other was disconnected and RAID is disabled). Where I'm having problems now is adding the second one back in. I created a new RAID mirror and enabled RAID in the BIOS for the two disks. Booting then would hang with a blank screen just before where you'd expect XP to start. A single underline flashing cursor was at the top of the screen, and I could only power off (ctrl-alt-del wouldn't work). So what I'm trying now is this elete the RAID array and disable raidin the bios. Then I've Installed XP on just one of the disks and installed all of the drivers for this mobo, including any nvidia drivers., from a disk that came with the mobo. So far so good. XP is working on the one disk w/o raid. Then I turned to the mediashield pdf. One thing I noticed is that my version of mediashield when I hit f10 during boot, is different. For example, when I Clear the disk, I do not get the option to clear the MBR. Another thing is I don't appear to have an nvidia control panel installed, or the mediashield software so am unclear on the "Use the RAID management software in Windows to perform a migration" steps. Can you outline the steps for now going from my single disk install to raid 1 mirror given this info ? For ex, how do I upgrade so that I can the latest mediashield controller (when I press f10 - that bit) ? Also where do I get the nvidia control panel etc ? Thanks again! |
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eatmoreoats
Guest
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On May 12, 11:31 am, eatmoreoats <eatmoreo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 12, 7:38 am, eatmoreoats <eatmoreo...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On May 10, 1:03 pm, Paul <nos...@needed.com> wrote: > > > > eatmoreoats wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > > I just replaced my hard drives with 2 new Western Digital Caviar SE16 > > > > WD3200AAKS 320GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb drives from Newegg. > > > > They are installed as a RAID 0 mirror pair using the mobo's nVidia > > > > Chipset RAID controller. During XP install I hit f6, stuff my floppy > > > > with the raid drivers in etc and the install works fine. Then when I > > > > come to boot XP I get a blue screen of death with a STOP 0x0000007B > > > > error (about removing any newly installed hard drives or hard drive > > > > controllers etc). > > > > > Whats the most likely cause ? Is it a h/w incompatibility issue ? > > > > Driver issue ? A bad drive ? > > > > > I've a ASUS P5N32-SLI SE Deluxe mobo. Prior to these WD3200AAKS > > > > disks, I had a pair of Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD3200KS 320GB > > > > 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb disks in raid 0 which worked ok. > > > > > Any help would be much appreciated. > > > > > Thanks > > > > Dom > > > > You can: > > > > 1) Get the disk drive manufacturer's test software, and test each > > > drive individually. The software may fit on a floppy or a USB > > > stick. This will give you some idea if each drive is OK. > > > > 2) When connecting a new set of disks, if you want to RAID two > > > drives, enter the RAID BIOS (go to BIOS and use the magic > > > key press to enter the RAID subsection). Declare the array > > > in there. That will install metadata (reserved sector) declaring > > > that the disks are an array. The Nvidia RAID driver and the BIOS > > > INT 0x13 will read the reserved sector on each disk on subsequent > > > boots, and know what to do. > > > > 3) RAID 1 is a mirror. RAID 0 is a stripe for speed (double bandwidth). > > > In RAID 0, if one of two drives fail, the data is lost. In RAID 1, > > > if a single drive is lost, the other one still works (redundancy). > > > Make sure you're declaring the array type you actually want. > > > > 4) Nvidia Mediashield supports "migration" from one array type to another. > > > You could, for example, install one hard drive, set the ports to RAID > > > mode in the BIOS. You don't need to declare an array type for the single > > > drive (and if doing this now, you'd need to "Delete" the existing array > > > while the two disks are still connected). Press F6 and install RAID driver. > > > Install the OS. Reboot at least once to prove it all works. Shut down > > > and install the second disk. Boot up into Windows. Use the RAID management > > > software in Windows to perform a migration. Then, the data from the one > > > drive, will be copied to the second for a mirror. If going from single drive > > > to RAID 1 mirror, the size will not be an issue (same available storage > > > space as before, as it is a mirror). The Mediashield manual should have > > > a table of allowed migration types. (I think there is also a 6.1 version > > > of manual on the site as well.) > > > > NVMediaShield_UGv6.pdf `1.64MB > > > http://www.nvidia.com/object/IO_32130.html > > > > Inaccessible boot volume 0x0000007B could mean a couple of things. A mismatch > > > between what is in boot.ini and where the array is located. Or a problem > > > with the driver not being the right type for the disk setup (RAID versus > > > non-RAID driver). That kind of thing. Your problem probably is not a > > > hardware problem, but something like that. I'm guessing, that perhaps you > > > forgot to set up the array, and have only installed to a single disk or > > > something. But you can still do a quick test with the hard drive > > > diagnostic software anyway, if you want. > > > > Once you start using RAID, if you want to use the disks independently at > > > some point in the future, you need to remove the reserved sector information. > > > "Delete array" in the RAID BIOS, would be one way of doing that. Occasionally, > > > a poster installs disks in a computer, and cannot understand why they > > > are operating strangely. It turns out, that some experiment they did last > > > year, left RAID reserved sector information on the disk, and the driver > > > or BIOS can pick that up and use it. "Delete array" can return the disks > > > to operating singly again. > > > > HTH, > > > Paul > > > Hi thanks Paul very much for your excellent reply. > > > 1. I downloaded the WD Data Lifeguard Diagnostics tool and they both > > checked out as ok, with quick and extended tests. > > > 2. Yup, I set up the raid array (F10 to set it up and created it in > > there by adding the two disk etc). On boot, it says the array is there > > and in good condition > > > 3. I meant to say raid 1 - mirror > > > 4. I'm going to try installing to just one disk and then add the other > > in later. What I don't get tho is why this all worked fine with the > > pair of WD3200KS 's I had before. Is there something special about > > these new disks ? > > > I'll try the single disk install and see how that goes. Stay tuned and > > thanks again for the help with this! > > Hi again, > > I was able to install and start XP normally on one disk (while the > other was disconnected and RAID is disabled). Where I'm having > problems now is adding the second one back in. I created a new RAID > mirror and enabled RAID in the BIOS for the two disks. Booting then > would hang with a blank screen just before where you'd expect XP to > start. A single underline flashing cursor was at the top of the > screen, and I could only power off (ctrl-alt-del wouldn't work). > So what I'm trying now is this elete the RAID array and disable raid> in the bios. Then I've Installed XP on just one of the disks and > installed all of the drivers for this mobo, including any nvidia > drivers., from a disk that came with the mobo. So far so good. XP is > working on the one disk w/o raid. Then I turned to the mediashield > pdf. > One thing I noticed is that my version of mediashield when I hit f10 > during boot, is different. For example, when I Clear the disk, I do > not get the option to clear the MBR. Another thing is I don't appear > to have an nvidia control panel installed, or the mediashield software > so am unclear on the "Use the RAID management software in Windows to > perform a migration" steps. > > Can you outline the steps for now going from my single disk install to > raid 1 mirror given this info ? For ex, how do I upgrade so that I > can the latest mediashield controller (when I press f10 - that bit) ? > Also where do I get the nvidia control panel etc ? > > Thanks again! Oh one other thing - after I posted this I tried adding the second disk back in , creating the raid 1 array, telling the bios to boot from it and rebooted. The result was a message telling me to insert something to boot from. I then removed the second disk and tried to reboot and I was back at the original problem where XP wants to reboot itself during startup. Could it be that one of these disk's mbrs is broken somehow and for some reason that isn't picked up by the diags s/w ? |
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Paul
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eatmoreoats wrote:
> On May 12, 11:31 am, eatmoreoats <eatmoreo...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On May 12, 7:38 am, eatmoreoats <eatmoreo...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> >> >>> On May 10, 1:03 pm, Paul <nos...@needed.com> wrote: >>>> eatmoreoats wrote: >>>>> Hi, >>>>> I just replaced my hard drives with 2 new Western Digital Caviar SE16 >>>>> WD3200AAKS 320GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb drives from Newegg. >>>>> They are installed as a RAID 0 mirror pair using the mobo's nVidia >>>>> Chipset RAID controller. During XP install I hit f6, stuff my floppy >>>>> with the raid drivers in etc and the install works fine. Then when I >>>>> come to boot XP I get a blue screen of death with a STOP 0x0000007B >>>>> error (about removing any newly installed hard drives or hard drive >>>>> controllers etc). >>>>> Whats the most likely cause ? Is it a h/w incompatibility issue ? >>>>> Driver issue ? A bad drive ? >>>>> I've a ASUS P5N32-SLI SE Deluxe mobo. Prior to these WD3200AAKS >>>>> disks, I had a pair of Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD3200KS 320GB >>>>> 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb disks in raid 0 which worked ok. >>>>> Any help would be much appreciated. >>>>> Thanks >>>>> Dom >>>> You can: >>>> 1) Get the disk drive manufacturer's test software, and test each >>>> drive individually. The software may fit on a floppy or a USB >>>> stick. This will give you some idea if each drive is OK. >>>> 2) When connecting a new set of disks, if you want to RAID two >>>> drives, enter the RAID BIOS (go to BIOS and use the magic >>>> key press to enter the RAID subsection). Declare the array >>>> in there. That will install metadata (reserved sector) declaring >>>> that the disks are an array. The Nvidia RAID driver and the BIOS >>>> INT 0x13 will read the reserved sector on each disk on subsequent >>>> boots, and know what to do. >>>> 3) RAID 1 is a mirror. RAID 0 is a stripe for speed (double bandwidth). >>>> In RAID 0, if one of two drives fail, the data is lost. In RAID 1, >>>> if a single drive is lost, the other one still works (redundancy). >>>> Make sure you're declaring the array type you actually want. >>>> 4) Nvidia Mediashield supports "migration" from one array type to another. >>>> You could, for example, install one hard drive, set the ports to RAID >>>> mode in the BIOS. You don't need to declare an array type for the single >>>> drive (and if doing this now, you'd need to "Delete" the existing array >>>> while the two disks are still connected). Press F6 and install RAID driver. >>>> Install the OS. Reboot at least once to prove it all works. Shut down >>>> and install the second disk. Boot up into Windows. Use the RAID management >>>> software in Windows to perform a migration. Then, the data from the one >>>> drive, will be copied to the second for a mirror. If going from single drive >>>> to RAID 1 mirror, the size will not be an issue (same available storage >>>> space as before, as it is a mirror). The Mediashield manual should have >>>> a table of allowed migration types. (I think there is also a 6.1 version >>>> of manual on the site as well.) >>>> NVMediaShield_UGv6.pdf `1.64MB >>>> http://www.nvidia.com/object/IO_32130.html >>>> Inaccessible boot volume 0x0000007B could mean a couple of things. A mismatch >>>> between what is in boot.ini and where the array is located. Or a problem >>>> with the driver not being the right type for the disk setup (RAID versus >>>> non-RAID driver). That kind of thing. Your problem probably is not a >>>> hardware problem, but something like that. I'm guessing, that perhaps you >>>> forgot to set up the array, and have only installed to a single disk or >>>> something. But you can still do a quick test with the hard drive >>>> diagnostic software anyway, if you want. >>>> Once you start using RAID, if you want to use the disks independently at >>>> some point in the future, you need to remove the reserved sector information. >>>> "Delete array" in the RAID BIOS, would be one way of doing that. Occasionally, >>>> a poster installs disks in a computer, and cannot understand why they >>>> are operating strangely. It turns out, that some experiment they did last >>>> year, left RAID reserved sector information on the disk, and the driver >>>> or BIOS can pick that up and use it. "Delete array" can return the disks >>>> to operating singly again. >>>> HTH, >>>> Paul >>> Hi thanks Paul very much for your excellent reply. >>> 1. I downloaded the WD Data Lifeguard Diagnostics tool and they both >>> checked out as ok, with quick and extended tests. >>> 2. Yup, I set up the raid array (F10 to set it up and created it in >>> there by adding the two disk etc). On boot, it says the array is there >>> and in good condition >>> 3. I meant to say raid 1 - mirror >>> 4. I'm going to try installing to just one disk and then add the other >>> in later. What I don't get tho is why this all worked fine with the >>> pair of WD3200KS 's I had before. Is there something special about >>> these new disks ? >>> I'll try the single disk install and see how that goes. Stay tuned and >>> thanks again for the help with this! >> Hi again, >> >> I was able to install and start XP normally on one disk (while the >> other was disconnected and RAID is disabled). Where I'm having >> problems now is adding the second one back in. I created a new RAID >> mirror and enabled RAID in the BIOS for the two disks. Booting then >> would hang with a blank screen just before where you'd expect XP to >> start. A single underline flashing cursor was at the top of the >> screen, and I could only power off (ctrl-alt-del wouldn't work). >> So what I'm trying now is this elete the RAID array and disable raid>> in the bios. Then I've Installed XP on just one of the disks and >> installed all of the drivers for this mobo, including any nvidia >> drivers., from a disk that came with the mobo. So far so good. XP is >> working on the one disk w/o raid. Then I turned to the mediashield >> pdf. >> One thing I noticed is that my version of mediashield when I hit f10 >> during boot, is different. For example, when I Clear the disk, I do >> not get the option to clear the MBR. Another thing is I don't appear >> to have an nvidia control panel installed, or the mediashield software >> so am unclear on the "Use the RAID management software in Windows to >> perform a migration" steps. >> >> Can you outline the steps for now going from my single disk install to >> raid 1 mirror given this info ? For ex, how do I upgrade so that I >> can the latest mediashield controller (when I press f10 - that bit) ? >> Also where do I get the nvidia control panel etc ? >> >> Thanks again! > > Oh one other thing - after I posted this I tried adding the second > disk back in , creating the raid 1 array, telling the bios to boot > from it and rebooted. The result was a message telling me to insert > something to boot from. I then removed the second disk and tried to > reboot and I was back at the original problem where XP wants to reboot > itself during startup. Could it be that one of these disk's mbrs is > broken somehow and for some reason that isn't picked up by the diags > s/w ? > As far as I know, when doing RAID migration, the single disk you install, would need the RAID driver installed too. Even though no array has been declared on the single drive. At least with Intel RAID, when you change between vanilla mode and RAID mode, in the BIOS, it actually changes the device enumeration. That, in turn, prevents the old driver from loading. If you had an IDE driver loaded, then switched the chip to RAID mode, then tried to boot the computer, the driver will refuse to load, because the enumeration is no longer correct for that driver. So you need to install using F6 and a RAID driver, with your single drive. And then you should be able to migrate later, to some array type. (I don't know if all RAIDs work like the Intel does, but it is something to be aware of as a possible reason for not being able to boot.) Sorry I could not get back to you sooner - my "free" USENET server appears to be dead. I allowed a day, to see if anything would happen, and so far it is still broken. So I had to find another server. Paul |
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